rehype
cross-env
rehype | cross-env | |
---|---|---|
17 | 22 | |
1,624 | 5,156 | |
2.2% | - | |
6.6 | 5.6 | |
15 days ago | over 3 years ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
rehype
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I built an Markdown editor using Next.js and TailwindCss 🔥
Add Remark and Rehype plugins
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Building an Astro Blog with View Transitions
Astro content collection are as simple as a folder containing a bunch of Markdown (or Markdoc or MDX) files if that's the only thing you need, but they can also do relationship matching between different collections, frontmatter validation using zod and you can also customize how the markdown is parsed and translated to html using rehype and remark and their plugin ecosystem.
- Example of Powerful Markdown Editor combining Svelte-Exmarkdown and Skeleton
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How to integrate your blog with dev.to API Next.js 13
That's all to render the post as HTML, there are lots of things you can do to customize the results, you can check the remark plugins and rehype plugins to pass as props to and you can also take a look at some other bloggers if you're looking for different styles for example Lee Robinson's or if you liked mine.
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Serving Docusaurus images with Cloudinary
Now we have our Cloudinary account set up, we can use it with Docusaurus. To do so, we need to create a rehype plugin. This is a plugin for the rehype HTML processor. It's a plugin that will transform the HTML image syntax into a Cloudinary URL.
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Contentlayer with next/image
The next idea was to use normal markdown images and to place the images in the public folder. This eliminates the need for static import and treats our image like a remote image. But in order to make this work, we have to tell next/image the dimensions of the image. If we would use a static import for the image, the import magic would provide the dimensions for us. To pass the width and height to the image component we use a rehype plugin called rehype-img-size.
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Creating a blog with Astro and MDX
Astro makes it easy to add Remark or Rehype plugins to your markdown. You can extend add a markdown property to the Astro config file, an add a function/plugin to the remarkPlugins property (the extendDefaultPlugins property is added to make sure the default plugins aren't overwritten by this config change):
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Converting and customizing Markdown files to HTML with Unified, remark & rehype
rehype: "rehype is a tool that transforms HTML with plugins. These plugins can inspect and change the HTML. You can use rehype on the server, the client, CLIs, deno, etc."
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Render Markdown from a string in Svelte (mdsvex / SvelteKit)
This means that you can transform your HTML with tools like rehype or remark. You can find out more about the available options here.
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Building React Components from headless CMS markdown
The HTML syntax tree is transformed through rehype, and rendered to React components.
cross-env
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A webpack.config.js for WordPress Projects
cross-env
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A better way to use Dotenv
or if we care about cross-platform compatibility (i.e. Windows support), we can use cross-env (which I also recommend to install as a dev dependency):
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To use multiple env files for each environment or not? What is your take on this? How are you implementing this?
i like to use dotenv-flow and dynamically load it into node process. it's framework agnostic and can be combined with vaious other strategies, like explicitly set NODE_ENV with cross-env. all you need is the right command in your package.json, see a sample here.
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20 Best Libraries and Tools for React Developers
Cross-env runs scripts that set and use environment variables across various platforms.
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Serving Docusaurus images with Cloudinary
You will also need to disable the url-loader in your Docusaurus build which transforms images into base64 strings, as this will conflict with the plugin. There isn't a first class way to do this in Docusaurus at present. However by setting the environment variable WEBPACK_URL_LOADER_LIMIT to 0 you can disable it. You can see an implementation example in this pull request. It amounts to adding the cross-env package and then adding the following to your package.json:
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Developing and testing sortable Drag and Drop components. Part 2 - Testing.
Using the cross-env library, you'll tell the React Testing Library to skip auto cleanup after each test. More info and ways to configure here: Skipping Auto Cleanup. Now your configuration is enough to start writing tests, let's get started.
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Multiple Environment in NodeJS Application
Now we need to load the files during the bootup. Windows environments sometimes face issues with loading the environments. To take care of that, let's install a package named cross-env
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Improving developer experience as well as front-end performance with webpack.
build; sets and enviroment valiable of NODE_ENV=production using cross-env lib and builds the production bundle, minified and without source-maps as set in the webpack.config.js file.
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is NODE_ENV variable check needed for this scenario?
I'd suggest the cross-env NPM package which is used a lot (4M downlaods/week). Then you can just change it to the following:
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How to start with Cypress Debugging
Debugging Cypress tests using Visual Studio Code was possible earlier but with the latest version of Cypress, there is no direct way to do so. Even with the latest version of Cypress, a workaround was possible using Debugger for Chrome – a Visual Studio Code Extension and cross-env npm package. However, the Debugger for Chrome Extension for Visual Studio Code is deprecated and the cross-env npm package has gone into maintenance mode.
What are some alternatives?
remark - markdown processor powered by plugins part of the @unifiedjs collective
dotenv - Loads environment variables from .env for nodejs projects.
next-mdx-remote - Load mdx content from anywhere through getStaticProps in next.js
concurrently - Run commands concurrently. Like `npm run watch-js & npm run watch-less` but better.
rehype-toc - A rehype plugin that adds a table of contents (TOC) to the page
electron-builder - A complete solution to package and build a ready for distribution Electron app with “auto update” support out of the box
remark-directive - remark plugin to support directives
shelljs - :shell: Portable Unix shell commands for Node.js
remark-extended-table - remark plugin to support table syntax allowing colspan / rowspan
node-config - Node.js Application Configuration
prism-react-renderer - 🖌️ Renders highlighted Prism output to React (+ theming & vendored Prism)
nvm - Node Version Manager - POSIX-compliant bash script to manage multiple active node.js versions