Some locale issues (errors, warnings or notices) might bug you on a linux box (in my case Ubuntu) when executing various commands:
Continue reading “Quick Tip: Fixing Locale Warnings/Notices Issues on Linux Server (or Desktop)”
Web and Mobile Development articles
Some locale issues (errors, warnings or notices) might bug you on a linux box (in my case Ubuntu) when executing various commands:
Continue reading “Quick Tip: Fixing Locale Warnings/Notices Issues on Linux Server (or Desktop)”
This is more of a snippet extracted from one of my recent projects where I had to sort a list/grid of div’s. Yeah, I didn’t use tables for tabular data this time, but plain divs, although this snippet will work just fine with html table rows too.
Continue reading “Simple and Lightweight JavaScript Table/Grid/List Sorter”
I’m not going to dive deep into what Binary Search Tree is because this tutorial and Wikipedia does an excellent job at that. Instead I’ll mostly dicuss about a neat JS implementation that I came across recently, usable on the server side with Node.js and client-side as well.
Continue reading “Binary and Red Black Search Tree Implementation in JavaScript”
If you’re a browserify user, then beefy might help you bundle your JavaScript file automatically. It is a command line tool that runs a local node server which accepts a path to the JS file (with all your require()
calls) and serves the bundled asset via browserify.
Continue reading “Fast Automatic Browserify Bundling with Beefy”
Using the node-open module you can open files or URLs in the user’s preferred application.
Continue reading “Quick Tip: Node.js Open URL in User’s Preferred Application/Browser”
If you’re using Browserify to bundle assets in an Express or Connect application then you may want to consider using node-enchilada middleware to faciliate your bundling process.
Continue reading “Serve Your JavaScript Files Bundled using Browserify with Node Enchilada”
Browserify is an excellent tool that lets you use CommonJS modules right in the browser by bundling them up into a single large file. If you are well acquainted with Node and it’s way of loading modules via require('module')
and exporting them using module.exports = ...
, this is the exact pattern browserify brings to the browser. Not only can you write your own modules in this format and load/export them, but you can also use those installed via npm!
Continue reading “Browser-Side Node.js Style Modules require() and exports with Browserify”