vite-imagetools
giscus
vite-imagetools | giscus | |
---|---|---|
8 | 16 | |
845 | 7,244 | |
- | 2.7% | |
8.9 | 8.3 | |
9 days ago | 6 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
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.
vite-imagetools
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how to integrate vite-imagetools into sveltekit 1.0
The first thing is to install vite-imagetools from https://github.com/JonasKruckenberg/imagetools
- Do you know a package that could do that ? POSTCSS ?
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QWER : Simply Awesome Blog Starter built with SvelteKit and Love
Automatic image optimization via vite-imagetools.
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Next.js image alternative in Svelte
The closest solution I’ve found is hacking something together yourself with vite-imagetools
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What are the weirdest CMS you've seen used to host content?
The projects this solutions works with are customised Sveltekit projects I made. It has everything: markdown parser using Mdsvex, image converting tool using vite-imagetools, it has toml parser, and of course live preview and lots of other smaller things like markdown directives.
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From PHP to SvelteKit - scanning directories
#2 - I'm not sure about the performance and/or resource usage implication around importing over 100 images like this. Would all of these images get bundled and included in the production build? The upside here is that something like vite-imagetools could be used if/when needed.
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Show HN: I hype drivingly recreated my website and it was awesome
Hello HN,
I had some christmas free time over the last two weeks (Merry Christmas btw ;-)) and used that time to completely recreate the website of my app[1]. I used all the fancy new tools. I didn't know some of them when I started.
What was my goal?
* Pretty website
* Blazing fast
* Mobile first
* SSR
* Webp support
* Generally all the best website practices (high lighthouse score)
What did I use?
* Tailwindcss (https://tailwindcss.com/)
* Tailwind Components (https://tailwindui.com/)
* React (https://reactjs.org/)
* ViteJs (https://vitejs.dev/)
* Kubernetes (https://kubernetes.io/)
Well what can I say. I hate creating websites, but this was an awesome experience. Never have I created a website more efficiently. Tailwindcss + Components is just the best. ViteJS is so so so much easier to setup compared to webpack and has SSR support on top of it. React has been around somewhat longer and I did a lot of projects with it, so that was a nobrainer. Special thanks to all the people who created these awesome tools.
PS: If you work with lots of images, do yourself a favor and use something like https://github.com/JonasKruckenberg/imagetools. It saved me hours of dreadful work.
[1] https://stockevents.app
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Using vite-imagetools with SvelteKit
Spent the better part of today attempting to find a working alternative to svelte-images, which I had been using in Sapper, but found was not working in SvelteKit. Was referred to [vite-imagetools](https://github.com/JonasKruckenberg/vite-imagetools) on discord, which is a vite plugin that dynamically import and transform images (srcset). Here are the steps required to integrate vite-imagetools with SvelteKit:
giscus
- Leaving Substack
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How exactly do I self-host Giscus?
That project also has Github issues and discussions pages to ask questions and get help.
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Add reactivity to your Next.js blog using giscus
When creating my blog-centric personal portfolio, I had a goal of launching it as soon as possible. However, considering including a comment feature, the implementation process could be time-consuming. That's when I started looking for a solution that was easy to set up yet provided essential commenting functionalities. It was during this search that I stumbled upon Giscus.
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To use Disqus or Giscus (Github Discussions) for comments is the conundrum
But now, a new fellow named giscus commenting system has entered the town, it's basically powered by github. Since I already host my blog on github pages, this should be a natural choice for me, right? Many bloggers seem to be migrating to this new system and I might too soon. The downsides however are as follows:
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4 Surprising uses for GitHub as a cloud datastore
Get Giscus here.
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QWER : Simply Awesome Blog Starter built with SvelteKit and Love
Supports Giscus - a comments system powerd by Github Discussions.
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ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ Bear. A privacy-first, no-nonsense, super-fast blogging platform
I've encountered https://github.com/utterance/utterances, which relies on github issues for providing a blog comments system of a sort.
Alternatively there's https://github.com/giscus/giscus, which instead uses github discussions.
Haven't used either so can't comment (heh) on their "performance".
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Comment system for a personal blog?
There's also a recent similar tool called https://github.com/giscus/giscus that uses Github Discussions as the backing system, rather than Issues.
- giscus: A comments system powered by GitHub Discussions.
- Giscus: A comments system powered by GitHub Discussions
What are some alternatives?
vike - 🔨 Like Next.js / Nuxt but as do-one-thing-do-it-well Vite plugin.
utterances - :crystal_ball: A lightweight comments widget built on GitHub issues
unplugin-vue-components - 📲 On-demand components auto importing for Vue
python-semantic-release - Automatic semantic versioning for python projects
js-image-carver - 🌅 Content-aware image resizer and object remover based on Seam Carving algorithm
Pelican - Static site generator that supports Markdown and reST syntax. Powered by Python.
vite-aliases - Alias auto generation for Vite
bearblog - Free, no-nonsense, super fast blogging.
vite-plugin-inline-css-modules - Write CSS modules without leaving your javascript!
tree-sitter-comment - Tree-sitter grammar for comment tags like TODO, FIXME(user).
vite-plugin-rsw - 🦞 wasm-pack plugin for Vite
github-search-graphql-SWR - Utilizing @graphql-codegen/SWR with GraphQL Request + a Global SWR config to explore the pros and cons of replacing apollo with a more lightweight SWR