sharp
foundation
sharp | foundation | |
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97 | 210 | |
27,943 | 86 | |
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9.4 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | 4 months ago | |
JavaScript | ||
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
sharp
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Next.js and Bunny CDN: Complete Guide to Image Uploading with Server Actions
Last thing left is to use our new upload function in our server action. Since I like to upload images in single format and have some more control over them, I will additionally use sharp library. For file name, I'll generate some random string using nanoid:
- Sharp – fast image conversion in Node.js
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Optimizing Image Display with Blur Placeholder and Lazyload
blur is a technique to blur images while reducing the file size surprisingly. blur works by enlarging the pixels of the image, which reduces the details of the image, and the number of colors also decreases, thus saving storage space. Sharp is a popular image processing library in Node.js, and it supports the blur function. After going through the blur function, the image size at this point is only a few KB, which is reasonable for an image placeholder in the article.
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Organize the mess of your photo folders with Node
sharp
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Creating Chess Board SVGs, PNGs, and GIFs
For simplicity, I will be generating PNGs with JavaScript/Node and the Sharp image library. Any library that can convert between pixel arrays and image files will make the process quite straightforward.
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My Journey to Accelerate Load Times in Heavy Frontend
There is also a library that Next.js itself uses: sharp. It can be setup as Node.js service. I even played around a little: image-proxy-service
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Automated Image Compression: A Vite Plugin Using Sharp
Sharp Documentation: Link
- Using SVG to create simple sparkline charts
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JavaScript Gom Jabbar
ESLint does an amazing job in detecting floating promises. I've not had it miss one, ever. When adding this to a project, I've discovered multiple accidental bugs due to a missing "await" keyword--bugs that were extremely subtle and intermittent in many cases.
The only thing it can't do is determine that you actually did handle the promise later. Which is fine. It's a LINTING RULE, and false positives are the name of the game.
What's BAD is when you accidentally miss handling a promise at all. It's an invisible error without the linting rule.
Your other comments...don't even make sense. You're going to build a Lanczos filter by hand? Or you're only going to ... compile ImageMagick to WebAssembly?!, ... an implementation which is tremendously slower (nearly unusably so for large images) than that of Sharp:
https://www.npmjs.com/package/sharp
... which is simply an import away?
No, what you're doing is called "motivated reasoning." You've concluded that Deno is the best, and you're reinterpreting all of my complaints in convoluted ways to support your predetermined conclusion.
Standard fanboy behavior. Or troll behavior. I cite Poe's Law as why it's impossible to tell the difference.
- How does next/image work?
foundation
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Building Scalable GraphQL Microservices With Node.js and Docker: A Comprehensive Guide
GraphQL is a query language and runtime for APIs. It provides a flexible and efficient way for clients to request and retrieve specific data from a server using a single API endpoint.
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Type-Safe Fetch with Next.js, Strapi, and OpenAPI
When you use technologies like GraphQL, it is trivial to derive TypeScript types. A GraphQL API is created by implementing a schema. Generating the TypeScript type definitions from this schema is simple, and you do not have to do any more work than just making the GraphQL API. This is one reason why I like GraphQL so much.
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REST vs. GraphQL: A Detailed Comparison of API Architectures for Developers
REST and GraphQL have advantages, drawbacks, and use cases for different environments. REST is for simple logic and a more structured architecture, while GraphQL is for a more tailored response and flexible request.
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Gatsby tutorial: Build a static site with a headless CMS
A Gatsby site uses Gatsby, which leverages React and GraphQL to create fast and optimized web experiences. Gatsby is often used for building static websites, progressive web apps (PWAs), and even full-blown dynamic web applications.
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Rust GraphQL APIs for NodeJS Developers: Introduction
In my usual NodeJS tech stack, which includes GraphQL, NestJS, SQL (predominantly PostgreSQL with MikroORM), I encountered these limitations. To overcome them, I've developed a new stack utilizing Rust, which still offers some ease of development:
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How to convert a TypeScript built-in enum to a GraphQL enum
At Woovi we are GraphQL lovers, hence we develop many helpers around this tool to bring a good developer experience.
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How to Build & Deploy Scalable Microservices with NodeJS, TypeScript and Docker || A Comprehesive Guide
A query language for APIs that allows clients to request only the data they need. It provides a more flexible and efficient alternative to RESTful APIs. GraphQL provides a single endpoint for multiple data sources, making it efficient for clients to retrieve only the necessary information forexample if a Node.js microservice uses GraphQL, a client can send a query to request specific data, and the GraphQL service will fetch the required information from the underlying data sources and respond accordingly.
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Embracing the Headless Channel in Xperience by Kentico
This approach is particularly beneficial for teams looking to enhance their digital presence without the need for extensive coding or software development. By leveraging the GraphQL API endpoint, developers can prepare and execute queries to retrieve the desired content. This makes the Headless Channel a valuable tool 🔨 for content managers and developers, offering ease of use and practicality.
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Building a CRUD application with React, TypeScript, TypeORM, MySQL, GraphQL, and NodeJs | Part A
To know about Graphql and why it's being used head over to for more details, Now let's cut to the chase.
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Supercharging Your App Development: Unleashing the Full Potential of React Native
GraphQL is an excellent choice for real-time data synchronization in React Native apps. By using GraphQL, you can retrieve precisely the data you need and receive updates in real-time, reducing network usage and providing a seamless user experience.
What are some alternatives?
jimp - An image processing library written entirely in JavaScript for Node, with zero external or native dependencies.
MongoDB - The MongoDB Database
squoosh - Make images smaller using best-in-class codecs, right in the browser.
reddit-clone-with-redwoodjs
gm - GraphicsMagick for node
Hasura - Blazing fast, instant realtime GraphQL APIs on your DB with fine grained access control, also trigger webhooks on database events.
Next.js - The React Framework
Apache Cassandra - Mirror of Apache Cassandra
pica - Resize image in browser with high quality and high speed
React - The library for web and native user interfaces.
sveltekit-image-plugin - SvelteKit demo code for using vite-imagetools to add cached, responsive, Next-Gen images to a SvelteKit site with no cumulative layout shift.
Materialize - Materialize, a CSS Framework based on Material Design