1610677980
Hope you enjoy this tutorial using GSAP and React.js. Feel free to check out the repo below!
Code: https://github.com/wrongakram/GSAP-imageReveal
Image Used: https://unsplash.com/photos/l_YNobbDYJk
Dribbble post: https://dribbble.com/shots/7041414-Tokyo-guide
đź”” Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqrxiLP9RHz2GxDJaZuTRBw
#react #javascript
1653123600
This repository is a fork of SimpleMDE, made by Sparksuite. Go to the dedicated section for more information.
A drop-in JavaScript text area replacement for writing beautiful and understandable Markdown. EasyMDE allows users who may be less experienced with Markdown to use familiar toolbar buttons and shortcuts.
In addition, the syntax is rendered while editing to clearly show the expected result. Headings are larger, emphasized words are italicized, links are underlined, etc.
EasyMDE also features both built-in auto saving and spell checking. The editor is entirely customizable, from theming to toolbar buttons and javascript hooks.
Via npm:
npm install easymde
Via the UNPKG CDN:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://unpkg.com/easymde/dist/easymde.min.css">
<script src="https://unpkg.com/easymde/dist/easymde.min.js"></script>
Or jsDelivr:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/easymde/dist/easymde.min.css">
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/easymde/dist/easymde.min.js"></script>
After installing and/or importing the module, you can load EasyMDE onto the first textarea
element on the web page:
<textarea></textarea>
<script>
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE();
</script>
Alternatively you can select a specific textarea
, via JavaScript:
<textarea id="my-text-area"></textarea>
<script>
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE({element: document.getElementById('my-text-area')});
</script>
Use easyMDE.value()
to get the content of the editor:
<script>
easyMDE.value();
</script>
Use easyMDE.value(val)
to set the content of the editor:
<script>
easyMDE.value('New input for **EasyMDE**');
</script>
true
, force downloads Font Awesome (used for icons). If set to false
, prevents downloading. Defaults to undefined
, which will intelligently check whether Font Awesome has already been included, then download accordingly.true
, focuses the editor automatically. Defaults to false
.true
, saves the text automatically. Defaults to false
.10000
(10 seconds).autosave.delay
or 10000
(10 seconds).locale: en-US, format: hour:minute
.{ delay: 300 }
, it will check every 300 ms if the editor is visible and if positive, call CodeMirror's refresh()
.**
or __
. Defaults to **
.```
or ~~~
. Defaults to ```
.*
or _
. Defaults to *
.*
, -
or +
. Defaults to *
.textarea
element to use. Defaults to the first textarea
element on the page.true
, force text changes made in EasyMDE to be immediately stored in original text area. Defaults to false
.false
, indent using spaces instead of tabs. Defaults to true
.false
by default, preview for images will appear only for images on separate lines.
as argument and returns a string that serves as the src
attribute of the <img>
tag in the preview. Enables dynamic previewing of images in the frontend without having to upload them to a server, allows copy-pasting of images to the editor with preview.["[", "](http://)"]
.true
, enables line numbers in the editor.false
, disable line wrapping. Defaults to true
."500px"
. Defaults to "300px"
.minHeight
option will be ignored. Should be a string containing a valid CSS value like "500px"
. Defaults to undefined
.true
when the editor is currently going into full screen mode, or false
.true
, will render headers without a space after the #
. Defaults to false
.false
, will not process GFM strikethrough syntax. Defaults to true
.true
, let underscores be a delimiter for separating words. Defaults to false
.false
, will replace CSS classes returned by the default Markdown mode. Otherwise the classes returned by the custom mode will be combined with the classes returned by the default mode. Defaults to true
."editor-preview"
.true
, a JS alert window appears asking for the link or image URL. Defaults to false
.URL of the image:
.URL for the link:
.true
, enables the image upload functionality, which can be triggered by drag and drop, copy-paste and through the browse-file window (opened when the user click on the upload-image icon). Defaults to false
.1024 * 1024 * 2
(2 MB).image/png, image/jpeg
.imageMaxSize
, imageAccept
, imageUploadEndpoint
and imageCSRFToken
ineffective.onSuccess
and onError
callback functions as parameters. onSuccess(imageUrl: string)
and onError(errorMessage: string)
{"data": {"filePath": "<filePath>"}}
where filePath is the path of the image (absolute if imagePathAbsolute
is set to true, relative if otherwise);{"error": "<errorCode>"}
, where errorCode can be noFileGiven
(HTTP 400 Bad Request), typeNotAllowed
(HTTP 415 Unsupported Media Type), fileTooLarge
(HTTP 413 Payload Too Large) or importError
(see errorMessages below). If errorCode is not one of the errorMessages, it is alerted unchanged to the user. This allows for server-side error messages. No default value.true
, will treat imageUrl
from imageUploadFunction
and filePath returned from imageUploadEndpoint
as an absolute rather than relative path, i.e. not prepend window.location.origin
to it.imageCSRFToken
has value, defaults to csrfmiddlewaretoken
.true
, passing CSRF token via header. Defaults to false
, which pass CSRF through request body.#image_name#
, #image_size#
and #image_max_size#
will replaced by their respective values, that can be used for customization or internationalization:uploadImage
is set to true
. Defaults to Attach files by drag and dropping or pasting from clipboard.
.Drop image to upload it.
.Uploading images #images_names#
.Uploading #file_name#: #progress#%
.Uploaded #image_name#
.B, KB, MB
(example: 218 KB
). You can use B,KB,MB
instead if you prefer without whitespaces (218KB
).errorCallback
option, where #image_name#
, #image_size#
and #image_max_size#
will replaced by their respective values, that can be used for customization or internationalization:You must select a file.
.imageAccept
list, or the server returned this error code. Defaults to This image type is not allowed.
.imageMaxSize
, or if the server returned this error code. Defaults to Image #image_name# is too big (#image_size#).\nMaximum file size is #image_max_size#.
.Something went wrong when uploading the image #image_name#.
.(errorMessage) => alert(errorMessage)
.true
, will highlight using highlight.js. Defaults to false
. To use this feature you must include highlight.js on your page or pass in using the hljs
option. For example, include the script and the CSS files like:<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/highlight.js/latest/highlight.min.js"></script>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/highlight.js/latest/styles/github.min.css">
window.hljs
), you can provide an instance here. Defaults to undefined
.renderingConfig
options will take precedence.false
, disable parsing GitHub Flavored Markdown (GFM) single line breaks. Defaults to true
.false
, disable the spell checker. Defaults to true
. Optionally pass a CodeMirrorSpellChecker-compliant function.textarea
or contenteditable
. Defaults to textarea
for desktop and contenteditable
for mobile. contenteditable
option is necessary to enable nativeSpellcheck.false
, disable native spell checker. Defaults to true
.false
, allows side-by-side editing without going into fullscreen. Defaults to true
.false
, hide the status bar. Defaults to the array of built-in status bar items.false
, remove the CodeMirror-selectedtext
class from selected lines. Defaults to true
.false
, disable syncing scroll in side by side mode. Defaults to true
.2
.easymde
.false
, hide the toolbar. Defaults to the array of icons.false
, disable toolbar button tips. Defaults to true
.rtl
or ltr
. Changes text direction to support right-to-left languages. Defaults to ltr
.Most options demonstrate the non-default behavior:
const editor = new EasyMDE({
autofocus: true,
autosave: {
enabled: true,
uniqueId: "MyUniqueID",
delay: 1000,
submit_delay: 5000,
timeFormat: {
locale: 'en-US',
format: {
year: 'numeric',
month: 'long',
day: '2-digit',
hour: '2-digit',
minute: '2-digit',
},
},
text: "Autosaved: "
},
blockStyles: {
bold: "__",
italic: "_",
},
unorderedListStyle: "-",
element: document.getElementById("MyID"),
forceSync: true,
hideIcons: ["guide", "heading"],
indentWithTabs: false,
initialValue: "Hello world!",
insertTexts: {
horizontalRule: ["", "\n\n-----\n\n"],
image: [""],
link: ["[", "](https://)"],
table: ["", "\n\n| Column 1 | Column 2 | Column 3 |\n| -------- | -------- | -------- |\n| Text | Text | Text |\n\n"],
},
lineWrapping: false,
minHeight: "500px",
parsingConfig: {
allowAtxHeaderWithoutSpace: true,
strikethrough: false,
underscoresBreakWords: true,
},
placeholder: "Type here...",
previewClass: "my-custom-styling",
previewClass: ["my-custom-styling", "more-custom-styling"],
previewRender: (plainText) => customMarkdownParser(plainText), // Returns HTML from a custom parser
previewRender: (plainText, preview) => { // Async method
setTimeout(() => {
preview.innerHTML = customMarkdownParser(plainText);
}, 250);
return "Loading...";
},
promptURLs: true,
promptTexts: {
image: "Custom prompt for URL:",
link: "Custom prompt for URL:",
},
renderingConfig: {
singleLineBreaks: false,
codeSyntaxHighlighting: true,
sanitizerFunction: (renderedHTML) => {
// Using DOMPurify and only allowing <b> tags
return DOMPurify.sanitize(renderedHTML, {ALLOWED_TAGS: ['b']})
},
},
shortcuts: {
drawTable: "Cmd-Alt-T"
},
showIcons: ["code", "table"],
spellChecker: false,
status: false,
status: ["autosave", "lines", "words", "cursor"], // Optional usage
status: ["autosave", "lines", "words", "cursor", {
className: "keystrokes",
defaultValue: (el) => {
el.setAttribute('data-keystrokes', 0);
},
onUpdate: (el) => {
const keystrokes = Number(el.getAttribute('data-keystrokes')) + 1;
el.innerHTML = `${keystrokes} Keystrokes`;
el.setAttribute('data-keystrokes', keystrokes);
},
}], // Another optional usage, with a custom status bar item that counts keystrokes
styleSelectedText: false,
sideBySideFullscreen: false,
syncSideBySidePreviewScroll: false,
tabSize: 4,
toolbar: false,
toolbarTips: false,
});
Below are the built-in toolbar icons (only some of which are enabled by default), which can be reorganized however you like. "Name" is the name of the icon, referenced in the JavaScript. "Action" is either a function or a URL to open. "Class" is the class given to the icon. "Tooltip" is the small tooltip that appears via the title=""
attribute. Note that shortcut hints are added automatically and reflect the specified action if it has a key bind assigned to it (i.e. with the value of action
set to bold
and that of tooltip
set to Bold
, the final text the user will see would be "Bold (Ctrl-B)").
Additionally, you can add a separator between any icons by adding "|"
to the toolbar array.
Name | Action | Tooltip Class |
---|---|---|
bold | toggleBold | Bold fa fa-bold |
italic | toggleItalic | Italic fa fa-italic |
strikethrough | toggleStrikethrough | Strikethrough fa fa-strikethrough |
heading | toggleHeadingSmaller | Heading fa fa-header |
heading-smaller | toggleHeadingSmaller | Smaller Heading fa fa-header |
heading-bigger | toggleHeadingBigger | Bigger Heading fa fa-lg fa-header |
heading-1 | toggleHeading1 | Big Heading fa fa-header header-1 |
heading-2 | toggleHeading2 | Medium Heading fa fa-header header-2 |
heading-3 | toggleHeading3 | Small Heading fa fa-header header-3 |
code | toggleCodeBlock | Code fa fa-code |
quote | toggleBlockquote | Quote fa fa-quote-left |
unordered-list | toggleUnorderedList | Generic List fa fa-list-ul |
ordered-list | toggleOrderedList | Numbered List fa fa-list-ol |
clean-block | cleanBlock | Clean block fa fa-eraser |
link | drawLink | Create Link fa fa-link |
image | drawImage | Insert Image fa fa-picture-o |
table | drawTable | Insert Table fa fa-table |
horizontal-rule | drawHorizontalRule | Insert Horizontal Line fa fa-minus |
preview | togglePreview | Toggle Preview fa fa-eye no-disable |
side-by-side | toggleSideBySide | Toggle Side by Side fa fa-columns no-disable no-mobile |
fullscreen | toggleFullScreen | Toggle Fullscreen fa fa-arrows-alt no-disable no-mobile |
guide | This link | Markdown Guide fa fa-question-circle |
undo | undo | Undo fa fa-undo |
redo | redo | Redo fa fa-redo |
Customize the toolbar using the toolbar
option.
Only the order of existing buttons:
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE({
toolbar: ["bold", "italic", "heading", "|", "quote"]
});
All information and/or add your own icons
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE({
toolbar: [
{
name: "bold",
action: EasyMDE.toggleBold,
className: "fa fa-bold",
title: "Bold",
},
"italics", // shortcut to pre-made button
{
name: "custom",
action: (editor) => {
// Add your own code
},
className: "fa fa-star",
title: "Custom Button",
attributes: { // for custom attributes
id: "custom-id",
"data-value": "custom value" // HTML5 data-* attributes need to be enclosed in quotation marks ("") because of the dash (-) in its name.
}
},
"|" // Separator
// [, ...]
]
});
Put some buttons on dropdown menu
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE({
toolbar: [{
name: "heading",
action: EasyMDE.toggleHeadingSmaller,
className: "fa fa-header",
title: "Headers",
},
"|",
{
name: "others",
className: "fa fa-blind",
title: "others buttons",
children: [
{
name: "image",
action: EasyMDE.drawImage,
className: "fa fa-picture-o",
title: "Image",
},
{
name: "quote",
action: EasyMDE.toggleBlockquote,
className: "fa fa-percent",
title: "Quote",
},
{
name: "link",
action: EasyMDE.drawLink,
className: "fa fa-link",
title: "Link",
}
]
},
// [, ...]
]
});
EasyMDE comes with an array of predefined keyboard shortcuts, but they can be altered with a configuration option. The list of default ones is as follows:
Shortcut (Windows / Linux) | Shortcut (macOS) | Action |
---|---|---|
Ctrl-' | Cmd-' | "toggleBlockquote" |
Ctrl-B | Cmd-B | "toggleBold" |
Ctrl-E | Cmd-E | "cleanBlock" |
Ctrl-H | Cmd-H | "toggleHeadingSmaller" |
Ctrl-I | Cmd-I | "toggleItalic" |
Ctrl-K | Cmd-K | "drawLink" |
Ctrl-L | Cmd-L | "toggleUnorderedList" |
Ctrl-P | Cmd-P | "togglePreview" |
Ctrl-Alt-C | Cmd-Alt-C | "toggleCodeBlock" |
Ctrl-Alt-I | Cmd-Alt-I | "drawImage" |
Ctrl-Alt-L | Cmd-Alt-L | "toggleOrderedList" |
Shift-Ctrl-H | Shift-Cmd-H | "toggleHeadingBigger" |
F9 | F9 | "toggleSideBySide" |
F11 | F11 | "toggleFullScreen" |
Here is how you can change a few, while leaving others untouched:
const editor = new EasyMDE({
shortcuts: {
"toggleOrderedList": "Ctrl-Alt-K", // alter the shortcut for toggleOrderedList
"toggleCodeBlock": null, // unbind Ctrl-Alt-C
"drawTable": "Cmd-Alt-T", // bind Cmd-Alt-T to drawTable action, which doesn't come with a default shortcut
}
});
Shortcuts are automatically converted between platforms. If you define a shortcut as "Cmd-B", on PC that shortcut will be changed to "Ctrl-B". Conversely, a shortcut defined as "Ctrl-B" will become "Cmd-B" for Mac users.
The list of actions that can be bound is the same as the list of built-in actions available for toolbar buttons.
You can catch the following list of events: https://codemirror.net/doc/manual.html#events
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE();
easyMDE.codemirror.on("change", () => {
console.log(easyMDE.value());
});
You can revert to the initial text area by calling the toTextArea
method. Note that this clears up the autosave (if enabled) associated with it. The text area will retain any text from the destroyed EasyMDE instance.
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE();
// ...
easyMDE.toTextArea();
easyMDE = null;
If you need to remove registered event listeners (when the editor is not needed anymore), call easyMDE.cleanup()
.
The following self-explanatory methods may be of use while developing with EasyMDE.
const easyMDE = new EasyMDE();
easyMDE.isPreviewActive(); // returns boolean
easyMDE.isSideBySideActive(); // returns boolean
easyMDE.isFullscreenActive(); // returns boolean
easyMDE.clearAutosavedValue(); // no returned value
EasyMDE is a continuation of SimpleMDE.
SimpleMDE began as an improvement of lepture's Editor project, but has now taken on an identity of its own. It is bundled with CodeMirror and depends on Font Awesome.
CodeMirror is the backbone of the project and parses much of the Markdown syntax as it's being written. This allows us to add styles to the Markdown that's being written. Additionally, a toolbar and status bar have been added to the top and bottom, respectively. Previews are rendered by Marked using GitHub Flavored Markdown (GFM).
I originally made this fork to implement FontAwesome 5 compatibility into SimpleMDE. When that was done I submitted a pull request, which has not been accepted yet. This, and the project being inactive since May 2017, triggered me to make more changes and try to put new life into the project.
Changes include:
https://
by defaultMy intention is to continue development on this project, improving it and keeping it alive.
You may want to edit this library to adapt its behavior to your needs. This can be done in some quick steps:
gulp
command, which will generate files: dist/easymde.min.css
and dist/easymde.min.js
;Want to contribute to EasyMDE? Thank you! We have a contribution guide just for you!
Author: Ionaru
Source Code: https://github.com/Ionaru/easy-markdown-editor
License: MIT license
1598839687
If you are undertaking a mobile app development for your start-up or enterprise, you are likely wondering whether to use React Native. As a popular development framework, React Native helps you to develop near-native mobile apps. However, you are probably also wondering how close you can get to a native app by using React Native. How native is React Native?
In the article, we discuss the similarities between native mobile development and development using React Native. We also touch upon where they differ and how to bridge the gaps. Read on.
Let’s briefly set the context first. We will briefly touch upon what React Native is and how it differs from earlier hybrid frameworks.
React Native is a popular JavaScript framework that Facebook has created. You can use this open-source framework to code natively rendering Android and iOS mobile apps. You can use it to develop web apps too.
Facebook has developed React Native based on React, its JavaScript library. The first release of React Native came in March 2015. At the time of writing this article, the latest stable release of React Native is 0.62.0, and it was released in March 2020.
Although relatively new, React Native has acquired a high degree of popularity. The “Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2019” report identifies it as the 8th most loved framework. Facebook, Walmart, and Bloomberg are some of the top companies that use React Native.
The popularity of React Native comes from its advantages. Some of its advantages are as follows:
Are you wondering whether React Native is just another of those hybrid frameworks like Ionic or Cordova? It’s not! React Native is fundamentally different from these earlier hybrid frameworks.
React Native is very close to native. Consider the following aspects as described on the React Native website:
Due to these factors, React Native offers many more advantages compared to those earlier hybrid frameworks. We now review them.
#android app #frontend #ios app #mobile app development #benefits of react native #is react native good for mobile app development #native vs #pros and cons of react native #react mobile development #react native development #react native experience #react native framework #react native ios vs android #react native pros and cons #react native vs android #react native vs native #react native vs native performance #react vs native #why react native #why use react native
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1632537859
Not babashka. Node.js babashka!?
Ad-hoc CLJS scripting on Node.js.
Experimental. Please report issues here.
Nbb's main goal is to make it easy to get started with ad hoc CLJS scripting on Node.js.
Additional goals and features are:
Nbb requires Node.js v12 or newer.
CLJS code is evaluated through SCI, the same interpreter that powers babashka. Because SCI works with advanced compilation, the bundle size, especially when combined with other dependencies, is smaller than what you get with self-hosted CLJS. That makes startup faster. The trade-off is that execution is less performant and that only a subset of CLJS is available (e.g. no deftype, yet).
Install nbb
from NPM:
$ npm install nbb -g
Omit -g
for a local install.
Try out an expression:
$ nbb -e '(+ 1 2 3)'
6
And then install some other NPM libraries to use in the script. E.g.:
$ npm install csv-parse shelljs zx
Create a script which uses the NPM libraries:
(ns script
(:require ["csv-parse/lib/sync$default" :as csv-parse]
["fs" :as fs]
["path" :as path]
["shelljs$default" :as sh]
["term-size$default" :as term-size]
["zx$default" :as zx]
["zx$fs" :as zxfs]
[nbb.core :refer [*file*]]))
(prn (path/resolve "."))
(prn (term-size))
(println (count (str (fs/readFileSync *file*))))
(prn (sh/ls "."))
(prn (csv-parse "foo,bar"))
(prn (zxfs/existsSync *file*))
(zx/$ #js ["ls"])
Call the script:
$ nbb script.cljs
"/private/tmp/test-script"
#js {:columns 216, :rows 47}
510
#js ["node_modules" "package-lock.json" "package.json" "script.cljs"]
#js [#js ["foo" "bar"]]
true
$ ls
node_modules
package-lock.json
package.json
script.cljs
Nbb has first class support for macros: you can define them right inside your .cljs
file, like you are used to from JVM Clojure. Consider the plet
macro to make working with promises more palatable:
(defmacro plet
[bindings & body]
(let [binding-pairs (reverse (partition 2 bindings))
body (cons 'do body)]
(reduce (fn [body [sym expr]]
(let [expr (list '.resolve 'js/Promise expr)]
(list '.then expr (list 'clojure.core/fn (vector sym)
body))))
body
binding-pairs)))
Using this macro we can look async code more like sync code. Consider this puppeteer example:
(-> (.launch puppeteer)
(.then (fn [browser]
(-> (.newPage browser)
(.then (fn [page]
(-> (.goto page "https://clojure.org")
(.then #(.screenshot page #js{:path "screenshot.png"}))
(.catch #(js/console.log %))
(.then #(.close browser)))))))))
Using plet
this becomes:
(plet [browser (.launch puppeteer)
page (.newPage browser)
_ (.goto page "https://clojure.org")
_ (-> (.screenshot page #js{:path "screenshot.png"})
(.catch #(js/console.log %)))]
(.close browser))
See the puppeteer example for the full code.
Since v0.0.36, nbb includes promesa which is a library to deal with promises. The above plet
macro is similar to promesa.core/let
.
$ time nbb -e '(+ 1 2 3)'
6
nbb -e '(+ 1 2 3)' 0.17s user 0.02s system 109% cpu 0.168 total
The baseline startup time for a script is about 170ms seconds on my laptop. When invoked via npx
this adds another 300ms or so, so for faster startup, either use a globally installed nbb
or use $(npm bin)/nbb script.cljs
to bypass npx
.
Nbb does not depend on any NPM dependencies. All NPM libraries loaded by a script are resolved relative to that script. When using the Reagent module, React is resolved in the same way as any other NPM library.
To load .cljs
files from local paths or dependencies, you can use the --classpath
argument. The current dir is added to the classpath automatically. So if there is a file foo/bar.cljs
relative to your current dir, then you can load it via (:require [foo.bar :as fb])
. Note that nbb
uses the same naming conventions for namespaces and directories as other Clojure tools: foo-bar
in the namespace name becomes foo_bar
in the directory name.
To load dependencies from the Clojure ecosystem, you can use the Clojure CLI or babashka to download them and produce a classpath:
$ classpath="$(clojure -A:nbb -Spath -Sdeps '{:aliases {:nbb {:replace-deps {com.github.seancorfield/honeysql {:git/tag "v2.0.0-rc5" :git/sha "01c3a55"}}}}}')"
and then feed it to the --classpath
argument:
$ nbb --classpath "$classpath" -e "(require '[honey.sql :as sql]) (sql/format {:select :foo :from :bar :where [:= :baz 2]})"
["SELECT foo FROM bar WHERE baz = ?" 2]
Currently nbb
only reads from directories, not jar files, so you are encouraged to use git libs. Support for .jar
files will be added later.
The name of the file that is currently being executed is available via nbb.core/*file*
or on the metadata of vars:
(ns foo
(:require [nbb.core :refer [*file*]]))
(prn *file*) ;; "/private/tmp/foo.cljs"
(defn f [])
(prn (:file (meta #'f))) ;; "/private/tmp/foo.cljs"
Nbb includes reagent.core
which will be lazily loaded when required. You can use this together with ink to create a TUI application:
$ npm install ink
ink-demo.cljs
:
(ns ink-demo
(:require ["ink" :refer [render Text]]
[reagent.core :as r]))
(defonce state (r/atom 0))
(doseq [n (range 1 11)]
(js/setTimeout #(swap! state inc) (* n 500)))
(defn hello []
[:> Text {:color "green"} "Hello, world! " @state])
(render (r/as-element [hello]))
Working with callbacks and promises can become tedious. Since nbb v0.0.36 the promesa.core
namespace is included with the let
and do!
macros. An example:
(ns prom
(:require [promesa.core :as p]))
(defn sleep [ms]
(js/Promise.
(fn [resolve _]
(js/setTimeout resolve ms))))
(defn do-stuff
[]
(p/do!
(println "Doing stuff which takes a while")
(sleep 1000)
1))
(p/let [a (do-stuff)
b (inc a)
c (do-stuff)
d (+ b c)]
(prn d))
$ nbb prom.cljs
Doing stuff which takes a while
Doing stuff which takes a while
3
Also see API docs.
Since nbb v0.0.75 applied-science/js-interop is available:
(ns example
(:require [applied-science.js-interop :as j]))
(def o (j/lit {:a 1 :b 2 :c {:d 1}}))
(prn (j/select-keys o [:a :b])) ;; #js {:a 1, :b 2}
(prn (j/get-in o [:c :d])) ;; 1
Most of this library is supported in nbb, except the following:
:syms
.-x
notation. In nbb, you must use keywords.See the example of what is currently supported.
See the examples directory for small examples.
Also check out these projects built with nbb:
See API documentation.
See this gist on how to convert an nbb script or project to shadow-cljs.
Prequisites:
To build:
bb release
Run bb tasks
for more project-related tasks.
Download Details:
Author: borkdude
Download Link: Download The Source Code
Official Website: https://github.com/borkdude/nbb
License: EPL-1.0
#node #javascript
1615544450
Since March 2020 reached 556 million monthly downloads have increased, It shows that React JS has been steadily growing. React.js also provides a desirable amount of pliancy and efficiency for developing innovative solutions with interactive user interfaces. It’s no surprise that an increasing number of businesses are adopting this technology. How do you select and recruit React.js developers who will propel your project forward? How much does a React developer make? We’ll bring you here all the details you need.
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