typometer
WHATWG HTML Standard
typometer | WHATWG HTML Standard | |
---|---|---|
10 | 137 | |
355 | 7,695 | |
- | 1.0% | |
0.0 | 9.4 | |
over 3 years ago | 7 days ago | |
Java | HTML | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
typometer
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Custom-built Emacs vs Pre-built Emacs benchmarks (v30.0.50) and current Emacs performance on Windows
You can download the tool here: https://github.com/pavelfatin/typometer
- Typing latency on wayland
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Did anyone discover a way to reduce typing latency?
Thanks, that's a really nice offer. Well, if your pi can run typometer that would be an ideal thing to test. Use an editor that has good typing latency. That is nothing based on electron or java. Geany or Kate should work. Don't use vim or emans on a terminal as most terminals have terrible typing latency (except xterm and mlterm)
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Terminal / Editor benchmarks on 16" M1 Macbook
Typometer with 200 characters
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Microsoft Dev Box
There is a great comparison between various terminals' latency https://danluu.com/term-latency/ (it comes up periodically on HN too - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19443076), so once when I was curious if it was just me or if RDP was indeed slower, I did a quick test using the same toolset - https://github.com/pavelfatin/typometer
It is not a super-scientific test since:
0) I didn't spend too much time on this
- Ask HN: Is there any tool for benchmarking responsiveness for Linux?
- Popular 'coa' NPM library hijacked to steal user passwords
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RenderingNG: An architecture that makes and keeps Chrome fast for the long term
open -a Spotify --args --disable-smooth-scrolling
You used to be able to disable Chrome's smooth scrolling with chrome://flags/#disable-smooth-scrolling, but that flag was removed for whatever reason.
I'm also surprised by how much faster Firefox's builtin middle mouse click autoscroll is compared to Chrome's ersatz AutoScroll[2] extension.
[0]: https://download.developer.apple.com/Developer_Tools/Additio...
[1]: https://pavelfatin.com/typometer/
[2]: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/autoscroll/occjjkg...
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What UI do you use? And why?
First, about the methodology: I took all my measurements with typometer on an Ubuntu 18.04 computer running X11. I tried Firenvim (both in Firefox and Chrome), Fvim, Gnvim, Goneovim, Neovim-Gtk, Nvim-Qt, Nwin and Uivonim. I couldn't try Neovide because it didn't run on my computer. The terminal I tried was Kitty, which has better latency than Alacritty.
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Neovim slow?
The first thing to do is to try and measure latency to confirm your feeling. You can use something like typometer ( https://github.com/pavelfatin/typometer ) to do that.
WHATWG HTML Standard
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Here are the 10 projects I am contributing to over the next 6 months. Share yours
WHAT-WG HTML
- Add Writingsuggestions="" Attribute
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Streaming HTML out of order without JavaScript
There's a long-standing WHATWG feature request open for it here: https://github.com/whatwg/html/issues/2791
And several userland custom element implementation, like https://www.npmjs.com/package//html-include-element
One of the cool things that you can do with client-side includes and shadow DOM is render the included HTML into a shadow root that has s, so that the child content of the include element is slotted into a shell implemented by the included HTML.
This lets you do things like have the main page be the pre-page content and the included HTML be a heavily cached site-wide shell, and then another per-user include with personalized HTML - all cached appropriately.
- An HTML Switch Control
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YouTube video embedding harm reduction
The `allow` attribute on iframes is a relatively recent API addition from 2017
https://github.com/whatwg/html/pull/3287
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Htmz – a low power tool for HTML
I think there's a pretty strong argument at this point for this kind of replacing DOM with a response behavior being part of the platform.
I think the first step would be an element that lets you load external content into the page declaratively. There's a spec issue open for this: https://github.com/whatwg/html/issues/2791
And my custom element implementation of the idea: https://www.npmjs.com/package/html-include-element
Then HTML could support these elements being targets of links.
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The Ladybird Browser Project
> Consider https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1866.txt vs https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/
I thought, oh, that's not so bad. Then I realized what I was looking at was a 10 page index.
- HTML Living Standard
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Is Htmx Just Another JavaScript Framework?
I'd love to see something like HTMX get standardized, but I'm extremely pessimistic for HTMX's prospects for standardization in HTML.
In talking to a few standards folks about it, they've all said, "oh, yeah, you want declarative AJAX; people have tried and failed to get that standardized for years." Even just trying to get
to target a section of the page that isn't an has been argued about and hashed out for years.<p>Why is that? Well, for example, here's the form you have to fill out to start standardizing a front-end feature. <a href="https://github.com/whatwg/html/issues/new?assignees=&labels=addition%2Fproposal%2Cneeds+implementer+interest&projects=&template=1-new-feature.yml">https://github.com/whatwg/html/issues/new?assignees=&labels=...</a><p>It asks three main questions:<p>* What problem are you trying to solve? -
New in Chrome 120 back button detection
The issue with a single global event handler is discussed here: https://github.com/WICG/close-watcher#a-single-event
If you use popover="", you get the kind of functionality you're discussing for free. For
, the discussion is in progress and reaching a conclusion: https://github.com/whatwg/html/issues/9373
What are some alternatives?
feedback - Public feedback discussions for npm
caniuse - Raw browser/feature support data from caniuse.com
vim-tmux-navigator - Seamless navigation between tmux panes and vim splits
WebKit - Home of the WebKit project, the browser engine used by Safari, Mail, App Store and many other applications on macOS, iOS and Linux.
feedback - Public feedback discussions for: GitHub for Mobile, GitHub Discussions, GitHub Codespaces, GitHub Sponsors, GitHub Issues and more! [Moved to: https://github.com/github-community/community]
standards-positions
zen-kernel - Zen Patched Kernel Sources
Retroactive - Retroactive only receives limited support. Run Aperture, iPhoto, and iTunes on macOS Sonoma, macOS Ventura, macOS Monterey, macOS Big Sur, and macOS Catalina. Xcode 11.7 on macOS Mojave. Final Cut Pro 7, Logic Pro 9, and iWork ’09 on macOS Mojave or macOS High Sierra.
mpv - 🎥 Command line video player
browser
gpuweb - Where the GPU for the Web work happens!
exploits