wordsandbuttons
Flutter
wordsandbuttons | Flutter | |
---|---|---|
12 | 1,204 | |
482 | 161,934 | |
- | 0.5% | |
8.4 | 10.0 | |
7 days ago | 6 days ago | |
HTML | Dart | |
The Unlicense | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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wordsandbuttons
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JavaScript Bloat in 2024
Meanwhile, all the pages on https://wordsandbuttons.online/ with all the animation and interactivity are still below 64 KB.
This one, for example, https://wordsandbuttons.online/trippy_polynomials_in_arctang... is 51 KB.
And the code is not at all economical. It's 80% copy-paste with little deviations. There is no attempt to save by being clever either, it's all just good old vanilla JS. And no zipping, no space reduction. The code is perfectly readable when opened with the "View page source" button.
The trick is - zero dependency policy. No third party, no internal. All the code you need, you get along with the HTML file. Paradoxically, in the long run, copy-paste is a bloat preventor, not a bloat cause.
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Writing HTML by Hand
I do all the https://wordsandbuttons.online/ by hand, and this is my top 10:
2527 p
- Homebrew Website Club
- Words and Buttons
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Rule of Three
Cloning things makes maintenance harder linearly. Generalizing things makes maintenance harder exponentially. Counterintuitively, generalization only makes sense on small numbers or reiterations, not the vice-versa.
I started https://wordsandbuttons.online as an experiment in zero-dependencies architecture. No third-party, no self-reference. Every page is completely independent. I was told, that as it grew, it would inevitably become impossible to maintain.
Five years passed, including a two-year pause for writing a book. I did more than half a hundred interactive tutorials and quizzes, and continue to add them when I have time. The thing simply refuses to go "too complex to maintain". All the maintenance problems I ever faced with this design were handled within minutes. If there is too much typing, I write a Python script. If not, I do the change manually, replicate it in a few pages, and go on.
As a free bonus, since all my pages are essentially hand-written, no dependencies = no uncontrolled growth, they are all fewer than 64 KB each. Ultra-fast to load, and I never get a "Reddit effect" since even 1000 requests a second is only 64 MB of data. It's green then tea too. I usually have a few hundred thousand visitors a year, and they barely consume enough electricity to boil a kettle of water.
I think this rule of three, like many others is just an attempt to escape well-known complexity issues by putting them under a carpet of less known complexity issues. I'm very happy to have ignored it when considering design for my site.
- Visualization of Common Algorithms
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If you can't write assembly like a poet, you can read disassembly like a hunter
Done! All the expandables have background colors now. https://github.com/akalenuk/wordsandbuttons/commit/22ef6295c... Thanks for the idea!
- Words and Buttons Online
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Ask HN: How to you monetize a tech blog?
Very indirectly. My https://wordsandbuttons.online/ helped me cement a publishing deal with Manning, and the book I wrote for them (https://www.manning.com/books/geometry-for-programmers) works as a hourly rate magnifier in contract work negotiations.
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Ask HN: What has your personal website/blog done for you?
I do https://wordsandbuttons.online/ as a personal-ish website. I don't append my face to every page but a visitor is usually a few clicks away from my other works so the site is de-facto more or less personal.
First of all, it's a nice hobby. No bullshit programming, no frameworks, no dependencies, no annoying editors. I just write my code and text and enjoy doing so.
Second, it gives powerful motivation to study. I'm now writing a new page on rational interpolation and just yesterday I accidentally found a very simple way to avoid the Runge effect. I was just playing with interactives and it came out of the blue. There is no way I would have learned it otherwise.
Third, it helped me cement a publishing deal with Manning. They came to me and proposed to propose them a book on geometry. And so I did. The book is called Geometry for Programmers and it's coming this summer.
Fourth, I do public lectures (or at least I used to before the war), and the audience loves interactive illustrations. So I usually turn my site pages into presentation-like pages and do lectures with them.
So for me, having a website pays off in multiple ways.
Flutter
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How to Deploy Dart Functions to AWS Lambda
Deploying Dart functions to AWS Lambda enables you to utilize them not only within AWS Lambda but also integrate them with services like Amazon API Gateway, allowing you to leverage them in Flutter applications as well. This unified codebase in Dart offers great convenience.
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Show HN: Shorebird 1.0, Flutter Code Push
[3]: https://github.com/flutter/flutter/tree/master/packages/flut...
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3D and 2D: Testing out my cross-platform graphics engine
Thanks - that link does not appear to be open access, anyways I don't think I've seen it. I'm familiar with Flutter at a high-level (Kevin Moore gave a great talk on it at Wasm I/O), and I think other than requiring users to work in Dart, it is probably one of the most powerful ways to do cross-platform UI today.
Worth noting that their original GPU backend was Skia, and now they are retooling around Flutter GPU (Impeller)[0], which is kind of designed similarly as an abstract rendering interface over platform-specific GPU APIs.
[0]https://github.com/flutter/flutter/wiki/Flutter-GPU
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Python dev considering Electron vs. Kivy for desktop app UI
If you are considering Electron/React then I would suggest adding Flutter to your list of technologies to consider. It uses Dart (a language similar to C#) and has a lot going for it… relatively quick to get up to speed with, fantastic developer experience (e.g., hot reload, great IDE support, good development tools) and very strong cross-platform support: it generates native iOS, Android, MacOS, Windows and Linux executables. Check it out: https://flutter.dev/
- Lançamento do App Edudu
- Android 12+: Changing wallpaper or dark theme breaks Flutter and Jetpack Apps
- Android 12: Changing wallpaper or dark theme breaks Flutter and Jetpack Compose
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React Native and Flutter: A Developer's Dilemma
You can find the React Native documentation here and Flutter Documentation here.
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Ente: Open-Source, E2E Encrypted, Google Photos Alternative
[1]https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/55092#issuecomment...
- Reusing state logic is either too verbose or too difficult #51752
What are some alternatives?
hiccup - Fast library for rendering HTML in Clojure
Introducing .NET Multi-platform App UI (MAUI) - .NET MAUI is the .NET Multi-platform App UI, a framework for building native device applications spanning mobile, tablet, and desktop.
org-clive
flet - Flet enables developers to easily build realtime web, mobile and desktop apps in Python. No frontend experience required.
rednafi.com - Musings & rants on software
WPF - WPF is a .NET Core UI framework for building Windows desktop applications.
vscode-didact - Framework and tools for providing interactive tutorials with active links that call VS Code commands
Uno Platform - Build Mobile, Desktop and WebAssembly apps with C# and XAML. Today. Open source and professionally supported.
handbook - The Jitsi Handbook
kivy - Open source UI framework written in Python, running on Windows, Linux, macOS, Android and iOS
love - LÖVE is an awesome 2D game framework for Lua.
Quasar Framework - Quasar Framework - Build high-performance VueJS user interfaces in record time