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10 results for “haliphax”
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I've improved my "tail" #bookmarklet to target a specific element. Once targeted, the element's scroll bar will be positioned at the bottom of the region every second. Very useful for e.g. following log output in web consoles.
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So... I use #gitmoji for my #ConventionalCommits, and I absolutely love it. I've been using semantic-release-gitmoji [1] in order to build a `CHANGELOG.md` file out of the commit history, but it doesn't seem to be particularly well-maintained. I'm currently bumping up against a security vulnerability that I can't patch (reliably) because of a transient dependency, so I'm hoping somebody out there has an alternative approach. A cursory web search turned up bupkis.
I'm not necessarily married to semantic-release, but I like it quite a bit and would prefer to continue using it if possible. (I've used release-please in the past and thought it was decent, as well, so if there's a solution involving that, maybe I'd be up for it.)
Does anybody else build changelogs from conventional commits using gitmoji? If so, what's your stack?
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So... I use #gitmoji for my #ConventionalCommits, and I absolutely love it. I've been using semantic-release-gitmoji [1] in order to build a `CHANGELOG.md` file out of the commit history, but it doesn't seem to be particularly well-maintained. I'm currently bumping up against a security vulnerability that I can't patch (reliably) because of a transient dependency, so I'm hoping somebody out there has an alternative approach. A cursory web search turned up bupkis.
I'm not necessarily married to semantic-release, but I like it quite a bit and would prefer to continue using it if possible. (I've used release-please in the past and thought it was decent, as well, so if there's a solution involving that, maybe I'd be up for it.)
Does anybody else build changelogs from conventional commits using gitmoji? If so, what's your stack?
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So... I use #gitmoji for my #ConventionalCommits, and I absolutely love it. I've been using semantic-release-gitmoji [1] in order to build a `CHANGELOG.md` file out of the commit history, but it doesn't seem to be particularly well-maintained. I'm currently bumping up against a security vulnerability that I can't patch (reliably) because of a transient dependency, so I'm hoping somebody out there has an alternative approach. A cursory web search turned up bupkis.
I'm not necessarily married to semantic-release, but I like it quite a bit and would prefer to continue using it if possible. (I've used release-please in the past and thought it was decent, as well, so if there's a solution involving that, maybe I'd be up for it.)
Does anybody else build changelogs from conventional commits using gitmoji? If so, what's your stack?
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So... I use #gitmoji for my #ConventionalCommits, and I absolutely love it. I've been using semantic-release-gitmoji [1] in order to build a `CHANGELOG.md` file out of the commit history, but it doesn't seem to be particularly well-maintained. I'm currently bumping up against a security vulnerability that I can't patch (reliably) because of a transient dependency, so I'm hoping somebody out there has an alternative approach. A cursory web search turned up bupkis.
I'm not necessarily married to semantic-release, but I like it quite a bit and would prefer to continue using it if possible. (I've used release-please in the past and thought it was decent, as well, so if there's a solution involving that, maybe I'd be up for it.)
Does anybody else build changelogs from conventional commits using gitmoji? If so, what's your stack?
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So... I use #gitmoji for my #ConventionalCommits, and I absolutely love it. I've been using semantic-release-gitmoji [1] in order to build a `CHANGELOG.md` file out of the commit history, but it doesn't seem to be particularly well-maintained. I'm currently bumping up against a security vulnerability that I can't patch (reliably) because of a transient dependency, so I'm hoping somebody out there has an alternative approach. A cursory web search turned up bupkis.
I'm not necessarily married to semantic-release, but I like it quite a bit and would prefer to continue using it if possible. (I've used release-please in the past and thought it was decent, as well, so if there's a solution involving that, maybe I'd be up for it.)
Does anybody else build changelogs from conventional commits using gitmoji? If so, what's your stack?
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Fixed an issue where #textual was mangling the ANSI color of some artwork files if they were used in a `Static` widget... however, this required setting an `ansi_color` flag, which also affects the rendering of _all_ other widgets, so now things aren't quite as pretty vis a vis input prompts, etc. There's got to be a way to tell an individual widget to use ANSI colors while not affecting the entire app. Maybe a feature request is in order. 🤔
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Thanks to #v4l2loopback, #ffmpeg, and https://github.com/nhtua/greencam, I have finally managed to cobble together a GPU-powered virtual green screen effect in #OBS Studio for #Linux that doesn't sacrifice the ability to display the unaltered camera stream. 🤘
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wishing i was at #fosdem but 95% just so i could be incredibly annoying an pick the brains of the @p2panda people the way i've been annoying most of my alumni networks and @halihax #sideprojects residents this week.
the lowest-friction way to do last-writer-wins (no conflict detection, no crdts) #p2p #localfirst folder sync between devices on any native platform (linux, macos, windows, ios, android, etc.) still unsolved.
i'm looking for the most boring answer possible, not the most exciting one. would be nice if the answer also did nat hole-punching which, uh, i realize conflicts with the "not exciting" bit.
no, ipv6 not the answer. ;) i'm looking for a solution that works everywhere, today.