shaders@npm_i_shaders
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✨ Introducing Shaders A first-of-it's-kind component library for jaw-dropping effects and frontend magic, shipping soon for @vuejs, @reactjs & @sveltejs.

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#shaders
pinned 09 OCT 24· backfill

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@Nomandsign@ctatedev@codetaur make it public on https://github.com/devallibus/shaderbase ?@de_vallibus@meodai@grimcodes2@CollectUI@haydenbleaselLow-key websites I quietly rely on 1) http://roadmap.sh Gives you a brutally clear learning path for roles like frontend, backend, DevOps, etc No fluff, just “learn this → then this → then this”. 2) http://playcode.io An online playground to quickly test HTML, CSS, JS without setting up anything locally Perfect for quick experiments and debugging ideas 3) http://usehooks.com A collection of reusable React hooks with real use cases Saves time and helps you avoid rewriting the same logic again and again 4) http://devhints.io Concise cheat sheets for languages, frameworks, and tools. Ideal when you forget syntax and don’t want to read a 20-minute blog 5) http://jsoncrack.com Turns messy JSON into a clean visual tree Makes understanding large APIs and configs way easier than staring at raw text 6) http://realtimecolors.com Lets you generate and preview color palettes instantly Useful when you want decent UI colors without guessing or copying blindly 7) http://regex101.com Build, test, and debug regex step by step with explanations Honestly, the fastest way to stop hating regex 8) http://bundlephobia.com Shows how big an npm package really is before you install it Helps you avoid bloating your app with “tiny” libraries 9) http://caniuse.com Tells you which CSS/JS features actually work across browsers Essential before using shiny new features in production 10) http://toolbox.googleapps.com Google’s own diagnostics tools for DNS, email, headers, and network issues Surprisingly useful for debugging real-world problems 👉 Which one of these do you already use and which one did you not know existed?@shekhu04@bnj