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big-list-of-naughty-strings
The Big List of Naughty Strings is a list of strings which have a high probability of causing issues when used as user-input data.
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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FizzBuzz Enterprise Edition
FizzBuzz Enterprise Edition is a no-nonsense implementation of FizzBuzz made by serious businessmen for serious business purposes.
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pullstate
Simple state stores using immer and React hooks - re-use parts of your state by pulling it anywhere you like!
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spring-boot-boilerplate
Spring Boot Boilerplate is a starter kit. This project includes : Spring Boot(v2.7.10), Spring Data JPA, Spring Validation, Spring Security + JWT Token, PostgreSQL, Mapstruct, Lombok, Swagger (Open API) (by Genc)
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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Twitter Text Obj
Twitter Text Libraries. This code is used at Twitter to tokenize and parse text to meet the expectations for what can be used on the platform.
No, you can make FizzBuzz amazing and clean and perfect! Just look at FizzBuzz Enterprise, for the enterprise-level solution to your FizzBuzz problem.
Sounds like you're on the right track. React is very hire-able. Try out multiple store systems. The big one is react + redux. Then after you have some experience with that, try a simpler one like pullstate.
You may find that after getting a good amount of foundational knowledge or experience, books are only good for author perspective. In the wild, maybe you'll benefit more from a boilerplate / starter repo like this or this. Those are called starters / boilerplate repos. That's a good way to get started if the getting started docs of your chosen tech is intimidating or confusing. Here's the one for spring boot.
You may find that after getting a good amount of foundational knowledge or experience, books are only good for author perspective. In the wild, maybe you'll benefit more from a boilerplate / starter repo like this or this. Those are called starters / boilerplate repos. That's a good way to get started if the getting started docs of your chosen tech is intimidating or confusing. Here's the one for spring boot.
I opened up an online Java editor (I think repl.it) and told him to define a class called Rectangle and implement some really simple methods like "isSquare()".