Email graphic traceroute Paste an email with full headers (we need the 'Received' lines -- we don't need your email addresses, digg). The app will (we hope) trace the path your email message took as it passed through various servers, on Google maps.
We have been using Vue instead of Angular for nearly a year now. In this article, I will highlight my impressions on Vue and differences compared to Angular.
Once we were over the infamous Haskell learning-curve, we began looking for functional programming, immutability, and types everywhere! Given that one-third of our code runs in the browser (via Angular v1 — for now!), it is only a matter of time before we make the switch to typed-FP for front-end development as well.
We will be building a user authentication in a single page application with Node, React, Redux and Koa combined with Passport. We will implement local authentication, where users can log in using an email and passport, and authentication with Facebook, which can be used with other social networks and OAuth providers.
Riot lets you build user interfaces with custom tags using simple and enjoyable syntax. It uses a virtual DOM similar to React but faster. Riot is very tiny compared to industry standards. We think there is a clear need for another UI library.
React is incredible because it allows you to build your UI using a declarative API. You tell React what you want the interface to look like, and it handles the rest. As users interact with the…
JS Bin is a tool for experimenting with web languages. In particular HTML, CSS and JavaScript, but JS Bin also supports other languages too (like Markdown, Jade and Sass).
It has come time to read the liner notes and write some conclusions. When we started writing this blog series, we knew that JavaScript/web application frameworks were not easy to summarize.
In 2016 React cemented its position as king of the Javascript web frameworks. This year saw rapid growth of both its web and native mobile libraries, and a comfortable lead over main rival Angular…
This lesson shows what can be learned next as a continuation of this course, and gives a recap on the core concepts: main for pure logic, drivers for side effects, run() to connect main and drivers, sources for read effects, sinks for write effects, and nesting Cycle.js apps to work as components.