tw-classed
pashword
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tw-classed | pashword | |
---|---|---|
8 | 30 | |
505 | 265 | |
- | 1.9% | |
8.3 | 0.0 | |
3 months ago | 3 months ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
tw-classed
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I wrote a library to create reusable Tailwind components in React & Vanilla JS
TW Classed makes it super simple to create re-usable Tailwind components in both React and other frameworks. It ships with a React-specific library and a framework-agnostic core library. It takes a lot of ideas from Stitches.js and has most of the same functions (but with classes instead).
- Show HN: TW-Classed – Tailwind with the DX of CSS in JavaScript – TwClassed
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TW Classed - Make reusable Tailwind components
All this and more features like defaultVariants, compoundVariants, advanced class name merging, Tailwind Extension support and a framework agnostic library is available in the Documentation
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[AskJS] JavaScript Libraries
https://tw-classed.vercel.app/ lets you write reusable React components whose classes are toggled by props. It comes with full type safety, a framework agnostic core lib and is only 1kb.
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What working with Tailwind CSS every day for 2 years looks like
interesting take! I started using tailwind with the classnames library early on and found it to be a really nice fit for my purposes. Also very interested in more tailwind-specific tools like tw-classed[1]
[1]: https://tw-classed.vercel.app/
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Why Tailwindcss over styled-components?
TwClassed - Write Reusable Tailwind components
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Im merging css-in-js and Tailwind
Here is the GitHub
pashword
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Show HN: Pashword – Hashed Password Calculator
This is beautifully done, great design work.
Scrypt for password stretching seems good. I see you're using CPU cost of 2^15. When storing a password hash you'd want to use 2^17 (with agility to change algorithm or increase cost in the future) [1]. Since you're not storing the result, I suspect the lower number is reasonable.
I don't like simple concatenation when building a salt from two variable length fields. You'll get the same salt for `"foo" + "bar"` and `"foob" + "ar"`, but the salt should be unique. Although I don't think that's an issue for this project since the first is a website.
Using the website in the salt has some issues when there are multiple domains that use the same password. Do I use mail.google.com, auth.google.com, or google.com? trello.com or atlassian.net? What if the website it bought and the new owner changes the domain name? With a password manager, I can just look in my vault to figure out the old domain name.
Phishing is a major way passwords are stolen and this project doesn't seem to do anything to protect against that. A browser extension (and mobile app), that checks the domain name before showing/filling the password could help.
The secret key field let me use `1234` as the key, although the color of the field was red. I think this should either prevent obviously weak passphrases or show a much more obvious warning if when one is used. Using a password found in a breach is also a bad idea (even it the password looks strong). You don't have a way to check HIBP, so users will be vulnerable if they make that mistake. It's too easy to make a critical mistake with the current design.
A bug: I filled out the form but forgot to enable JavaScript. The form posted my passphrase back to the server (https://pashword.app/?website=google.com&username=me&passphr...). I'd recommend changing the form so the submit button doesn't do anything when JS isn't loaded, otherwise the server will learn users passphrases. This is also a good place to remember that the user fully trusts that you wont steal their info (I'm not sure why anyone should trust that).
Also check out other similar projects, lots of discussion which likely applies here as well. I believe one of these supports uses a counter to support password rotation. You'd just need to remember the counter value for each site.
* LessPass - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12889807
- Ask HN: Tools you have built for yourself?
- Hard reset every day
- Design-first open source softwares, is that a thing/possible?
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Why Tailwindcss over styled-components?
Just take a look here: https://github.com/pashword/pashword/blob/main/pages/index.tsx
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Good dark + gradients design systems?
I'm looking for something close to https://pashword.app
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My epic account just got hacked, I just lost over 500 dollars worth of games and accounts.
Password managers can be a bit hard to manage, people don't even bother using them. There's https://pashword.app that solves this but not many people know about it.
- Pashword - A password generator that generates passwords you don't have to remember and cannot ever forget
- Pashword – A Hashed Password Generator
What are some alternatives?
pechkin - Asynchronous Node.js file upload (multipart/form-data) handling.
zxcvbn - Low-Budget Password Strength Estimation
axios-cache-interceptor - 📬 Small and efficient cache interceptor for axios. Etag, Cache-Control, TTL, HTTP headers and more!
gitgrep - Lightning fast code searching made easy
open-props - CSS custom properties to help accelerate adaptive and consistent design.
hckrweb - Hcker News mobile web app
conclure - ConclureJS
rgca - Experiment in SSL CA management.
d3 - Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. :bar_chart::chart_with_upwards_trend::tada:
pwgen-for-bios - Password generator for BIOS
classnames - A simple javascript utility for conditionally joining classNames together
Qwickly - An easy to learn keyboard layout that's fast and comfortable to type.