Optionals for JS - wrapper for possibly undefined values, inspired by Java Optional API
Nullable. Optional. The Maybe monad. Whatever you want to call it, it's for Javascript now.
Neo-brutalist UI kit. One CSS file + one optional JS runtime for interactive form components.
Include Foundation 5 SASS with optional JS into your Ember CLI application.
CSS module to render APRS symbol tables, with optional JS helpers
The legacy ESLintRC config file format for ESLint
Allow parsing of optional properties
core-js compat
A zero-dependency alternative to cosmiconfig
Allows you to optionally include modules without surrounding everything with 'try/catch'
simplified stream construction
Optional JS enhancers for Hydrateless components — focus traps, keyboard nav, ARIA wiring.
Allow parsing of optional catch bindings
NodeJS Require that let you handle module not found error without try/catch
Transform optional chaining operators into a series of nil checks
The option type, also known as the maybe type, for JavaScript
Transform optional chaining operators to workaround https://crbug.com/v8/11558
Compile optional catch bindings
Microsoft Application Insights CfgSync Plugin
OpenTelemetry B3 propagator provides context propagation for systems that are using the B3 header format
CSS-first UI components with optional JS enhancements. SSR-safe, Tailwind-compatible, AHA stack ready.
OpenTelemetry Collector Logs Exporter allows user to send collected logs to the OpenTelemetry Collector
create hashes for browserify
OpenTelemetry Collector Trace Exporter allows user to send collected traces to the OpenTelemetry Collector
A broken page and link checker for websites. Optionally uses phantomjs to render pages to check resource loading, links created by JS, and report any JS page load errors.
Render CoffeeScript files with the --bare option. Useful for JS spec helpers.
Compresses Javascript & CSS files on the terminal. Usage: wbdv_packer [options] [filename] -c, --charset [CHARSET] Sets the output charset (CSS & JS). Default: utf-8 -l, --line-break [NUMBER] Sets the max output line width (CSS & JS). Default: 1337 -o, --optimize Sets code optimization on compress (JS Only). Default: true -p, --preserve Sets preserved semi-colons (JS Only). Default: true -s, --short Sets shortened local variables (JS Only). Default: true -v, --version Print version -h, --help Display this screen
Compresses Javascript & CSS files on the command line interface with yui-compressor. Run `cli-yui-compressor` or its shorthand `cyc`. Usage: cli-yui-compressor | cyc [options] [filename] -c, --charset [CHARSET] Sets the output charset (CSS & JS). Default: utf-8 -l, --line-break [NUMBER] Sets the max output line width (CSS & JS). Default: 1337 -o, --optimize Sets code optimization on compress (JS Only). Default: true -p, --preserve Sets preserved semi-colons (JS Only). Default: true -s, --short Sets shortened local variables (JS Only). Default: true -v, --version Print version -h, --help Display this screen A
This plugin uses esbuild to process the targeted JavaScript static files in a Jekyll site whenever the site is built. By default, it targets all static files with .js extension, but it can be configured to target only the files specified in a list, which also allows including files of other content types supported by esbuild, such as TypeScript or JSX (still untested with this plugin, however). There are also other options to toggle bundling, minification, and source maps.
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=== What is GptHelpr? It is sometime necessary to provide context and explanations for your code. Instead of manually copying and formatting code snippets, GPT-Helpr automates the process with an interactive cli, generating a well-structured Markdown output, which can be copied to your clipboard or printed to file. === Example Usage # note lmk is an alias for gpt_helpr -i -ln $ lmk == 🏴☠️ GptHelpr 0.2.3 == Helping to dig your codebase and cook GPT-XX instructions [current directory /Users/etozzato/WorkSpace/_AINZ/pizzatarians.com] File Path (optional :start:end): TAB -> favicon.ico hey.md js random-acts-of-pizza.md _config.yml _site draft fonts images kneading-baking-academy.md _exe academy favicon.gif hands-in-dough.md index.md parties-and-events.md File Path (optional :start:end): hey.md 1:22 Instructions: can you improve this text? Do you see any issues with the template? File Path (optional :start:end): # this is the generated output (also copied to the clipboard) ==== file source `hey.md 1:22` 1: --- 2: title: Hey, hello! 3: layout: default 4: --- 5: 6: # {{ page.title }} 7: ---- 8: 9: <div class="row"> 10: <div class="col-md-12"> 11: <p class='justin'> 12: Nice to meet you, I am *Mek*! 13: </p> 14: <p class='listo'> 15: I am a self-proclaimed pizza guru and I am here to teach & learn. Originally from Venice, Italy you can find me in San Diego, CA. 16: </p> 17: <p class='listo'> 18: In my spare time, I write code @ PlayStation! 19: </p> 20: </div> 21: </div> 22: can you improve this text? Do you see any issues with the template? ==== end of `hey.md`
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# SecureDataBag / Knife Secure Bag Knife Secure Bag provides a consistent interface to DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem as well as the custom created SecureDataBagItem while also providing a few extra handy features to help in your DataBag workflows. SecureDataBagItem, can not only manage your existing DataBagItems and EncryptedDataBagItems, but it also provides you with a DataBag type which enables you to selectively encrypt only some of the fields in your DataBag thus allowing you to be able to search for the remaining fields. ## Installation To build and install the plugin add it your Gemfile or run: ```shell gem install secure_data_bag ``` ## Configuration #### Knife Secure Bag Defaults for the Knife command may be provided in your _knife.rb_ file. ```ruby knife[:secure_data_bag][:encrypted_keys] = %w( password ssh_keys ssh_ids public_keys private_keys keys secret ) knife[:secure_data_bag][:secret_file] = "#{local_dir}/secret.pem" knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_root] = "#{kitchen_dir}/data_bags" knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_on_upload] = true knife[:secure_data_bag][:defaults][:secrets][:export_format] = 'plain' ``` To break this up: `knife[:secure_data_bag][:encrypted_keys] = []` When Knife Secure Bag encrypts a hash with an _encryption format_ of *nested*, it will recursively walk through the hash from the bottom up and encrypt any key found within this array. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:secret_file]` When encryption is required, the shared secret found at this location will be loaded. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_root]` When exporting a data\_bag\_item, files will be created in below this root directory. Typically this would be the data\_bag folder located within your kitchen. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_on_upload]` When a data\_bag\_item is edited using `knife secure bag edit`, it may be automatically exported to the _export\_root_. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:defaults][:secrets][:export_format]` The configuration file additionally supports the _defaults_ hash which provides default values for all _command line arguments_ that one might use. Of all of them only the _export\_format_ key is likely to be of much use. ## Examples #### Chef cookbook recipe ```ruby metadata = {} # Define the keys we wish to encrypt metadata[:encrypted_keys] = %w(encoded) # Optionally load a specific shared secret. Otherwise, the global # encrypted\_data\_bag\_secret will be automatically used. secret_key = SecureDataBagItem.load_key("/path/to/secret") # Create a hash of data to use as an exampe raw_data = { id: "item", data_bag: "data_bag", encoded: "my string", unencoded: "other string" } # Instantiate a SecureDataBagItem from a hash item = SecureDataBagItem.from_hash(data, metadata) # Or more explicitely item = SecureDataBagItem.from_hash(data, encrypted_keys: %w(encoded)) # Or load from server item = SecureDataBagItem.load("data_bag", "item") # Print the un-encrypted raw data pp item.raw_data # Print the un-encrypted `encoded` key pp item['encoded'] # Print the encrypted hash as a data_bag_item hash pp item.to_hash =begin { id: "item", data_bag: "data_bag", encoded: { encrypted_data: "encoded", cipher: aes-256-cbc, iv: 13453453dkgfefg== version: 1 } unencoded: "other string", } =end ``` ## Usage #### Knife commands Print an DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or SecureDataBagItem, auto-detecting the encryption method used as plain text. ```shell knife secure bag show -F js secrets secret_item ``` Print an DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or SecureDataBagItem, auto-detecting the encryption method used as a SecureDataBagItem in encrypted format. ```shell knife secure bag show -F js secrets secret_item --enc-format nested ``` Edit an EncryptedDataBagItem, preserve it's encryption type, and export a copy to the _data\_bag_ folder in your kitchen. ```shell knife secure bag edit secrets secret_item --export ``` ## Knife SubCommands Most of the SubCommands support the following command-line options: `--enc-format [plain,encrypted,nested]` Ensure that, when displaying or uploading the data\_bag\_item, we forcibly encrypt the data\_bag\_item using the specified format instead of preserving the existing format. In this case: - plain: refers to a DataBagItem - encrypted: refers to an EnrytpedDataBagItem - nested: refers to a SecureDataBagItem `--dec-format [plain,encrypted,nested]` Attempt to decrypt the data\_bag\_item using the given format rather than the auto-detected one. The only real reason to use this is when you wish to specifically select _plain_ as the format so as to not decrypt the item. `--enc-keys key1,key2,key3` Provide a comma delimited list of hash keys which should be encrypted when encrypting the data\_bag\_item. This list will be concatenated with any key names listed in the configuration file or which were previously encrypted. `--export` Export the data\_bag\_item to json file in either of _export-format_ or _enc-format_. `--export-format` Overrides the encryption format only for the _export_ feature. `--export-root` Root directly under which a folder should exist for each _data_bag_ into which to export _data_bag_items_ as json files. When displaying the content of the _data\_bag\_item_, an additional key of *_secure_metadata* will be added to the output which contains gem specific metadata such as the encryption formats and any encrypted keys found. This key will _not_ be saved with the item, however it may be manipulated to alter the behavior of the _edit_ or _export_ commands. #### knife secure bag show DATA_BAG ITEM This command functions just like `knife data bag show` and is used to print out the content of either a DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or SecureDataBagItem. By default, it will auto-detect the Item type, and print it's unencrypted version to the terminal. This behavior, however, may be altered using the previously mentioned command line options. #### knife secure bag open PATH This commands functions much like `knife secure bag show`, however it is designed to load a _data\_bag\_item_ from disk as opposed to loading it from Chef server. This may be of use when view the content of an exported encrypted file. #### knife secure bag edit DATA_BAG DATA_BAG_ITEM This command functions just like `knife data bag edit` and is used to edit either a DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or a SecureDataBagItem. It supports all of the same options as `knife secure bag show`. #### knife secure bag from file DATA_BAG PATH This command functions just like `knife data bag from file` and is used to upload either a DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or a SecureDataBagItem. It supports all of the same options as `knife secure bag show`. ## Recipe DSL The gem additionally provides a few Recipe DSL methods which may be useful. ```ruby load_secure_item = secure_data_bag_item( data_bag_name, data_bag_item, cache: false ) load_plain_item = data_bag_item(data_bag_name, data_bag_item) convert_plain_to_secure = secure_data_bag_item!(load_plain_item) ```
== What's this? {ComicFury}[https://comicfury.com] is an excellent no-bullshit webcomic hosting site created and maintained by the legend Kyo. You should support them on {Patreon}[https://www.patreon.com/comicfury]! {Jekyll}[https://jekyllrb.com] is a highly regarded and widespread static site generator. It builds simple slowly-changing content into HTML files using templates. RageRender allows you to use your ComicFury templates to generate a static version of your webcomic site using Jekyll. You just supply your templates, comics and blogs, and RageRender will output a site that mimics your ComicFury site. Well, I say "mimics". Output is a static site, which means all of the interactive elements of ComicFury don't work. This includes comments, subscriptions, search, and comic management. === But why?! RageRender allows those of us who work on making changes to ComicFury site templates to test our changes before we put them live. With RageRender, you can edit your CSS, HTML templates and site settings before you upload them to ComicFury. This makes the process of testing changes quicker and makes it much more likely that you catch mistakes before any comic readers have a chance to see them. RageRender doesn't compete with the most excellent ComicFury (who's Patreon you should contribute to, as I do!) – you should continue to use ComicFury for all your day-to-day artistic rage management needs. But if you find yourself making changes to a site design, RageRender may be able to help you. == Getting started First, you need to have {Ruby}[https://www.ruby-lang.org/] and {Bundler}[https://bundle.io/] installed. The Jekyll site has {good guides on how to do that}[https://jekyllrb.com/docs/installation/] depending on your operating system. To set up a new site, open a terminal and type: mkdir mycomic && cd mycomic bundle init bundle add jekyll bundle add ragerender --group=jekyll_plugins Now you can add comics! Add the image into an <tt>images</tt> folder: mkdir images cp 'cool comic.jpg' 'images/My first page.jpg' The file name of the image will be the title of your comic page. And that's it, you added your first comic! If you want to add an author note, create a text file in a folder called <tt>_comics</tt> that has the same file name, but with a <tt>.txt</tt> extension: mkdir _comics echo "Check out my cool comic y'all!" > '_comics/My first page.txt' Or use HTML: echo "This is my <strong>first</strong> page!" > '_comics/My first page.html' Generate the site using: bundle exec jekyll build Or start a local website to see it in your browser: bundle exec jekyll serve # Now visit http://localhost:4000! === Customising your site You'll notice a few things that might be off about your site, including that the webcomic title and author name are probably not what you were expecting. You can create a configuration file to tell RageRender the important details. Put something like this in your webcomic folder and call it <tt>_config.yml</tt>: title: "My awesome webcomic!" slogan: "It's the best!" description: > My epic story about how him and her fell into a romantic polycule with they and them status: active genres: - Comedy - Romance defaults: - scope: path: '' values: author: "John smith" theme: ragerender Your webcomic now has its basic information set up. === Adding your layouts If you want to use your own layout code, then create a <tt>_layouts</tt> directory and put the contents of each of your ComicFury layout tabs in there, and then put your CSS in the main folder. The easiest way is to go to your Webcomic Management, click "Edit Layout", then in the box labelled "Useful", click "Download Layout Backup". Pass this file to RageRender, which will <tt>unpack</tt> it for you: bundle exec jekyll unpack mycomic-2025-09-13.cflxml You should end up with a full set of files like: _layouts archive.html blog-archive.html blog-display.html comic-page.html error-page.html overall.html overview.html search.html layout.css Now when you build your site, your custom templates and styles will be used instead. === Adding blogs Add your blogs into a folder called <tt>_posts</tt>: cat _posts/2025-05-29-my-new-comic.md Hey guys, welcome to my new comic! It's gonna be so sick! Note that the name of your blog post has to include the date and the title, or it'll be ignored. === Customising comics and blogs You can add {Front Matter}[https://jekyllrb.com/docs/front-matter/] to set the details of your author notes and blogs manually: --- title: "spooky comic page" date: "2025-03-05 16:20" image: "images/ghost.png" author: "Jane doe" description: "Some spooky mouseover text" keywords: [excellent, comic page, spooky] custom: # use yes and no for tickbox settings spooky: yes # use text in quotes for short texts mantra: "live long and prosper" # use indented text for long texts haiku: > Testing webcomics Now easier than ever Thanks to RageRender transcript: > The transcript contains a machine-readable version of all the text in your comic image. comments: - author: "Skippy" date: "13 Mar 2025, 3.45 PM" comment: "Wow this is so sick!" --- Your author note still goes at the end, like this! === Adding extra pages You can add extra pages just by adding new HTML files to your webcomic folder. The name of the file becomes the URL that it will use. Pages by default won't be embedded into your 'Overall' layout. You can change that and more with optional Front Matter: --- # Include this line to set the page title title: "Bonus content" # Include this line to hide the page from the navigation menu hidden: yes # Include this line to embed this page in the overall layout layout: Overall --- <h1>yo check out my bonus content!</h1> === Controlling the front page As on ComicFury you have a few options for setting the front page of you site. You control this by setting a <tt>frontpage</tt> key in your site config. - <tt>latest</tt> will display the latest comic (also the default) - <tt>first</tt> will display the first comic - <tt>chapter</tt> will display the first comic in the latest chapter - <tt>blog</tt> will display the list of blog posts - <tt>archive</tt> will display the comic archive - <tt>overview</tt> will display the comic overview (blogs and latest page) - anything else will display the extra page that has the matching <tt>slug</tt> in its Front Matter === Comics with custom HTML code You can use custom HTML code in place of an image for your comic page. Instead of creating an image, just create an HTML file in your <tt>images</tt> folder: cat '<video src="/files/my-animation.webm"></video>" > images/1.html === Multi-image comics You can add up to 12 images to each comic page on ComicFury. To do that in RageRender, add each image to an <tt>images</tt> key in your comic page: --- title: "Comic with many pages" date: "2026-04-20 16:20" images: - /images/first.png - /images/second.png - /images/third.png --- === Testing search pages Live search does not work in RageRender, as your site is statically built and can't respond to new data from the browser. However, you can simulate a search when you build the site to help test search results designs. To do that, add a `searchterm` to the search page using defaults in your `_config.yml`: defaults: - scope: path: '' layout: search values: searchterm: "my character" The search that gets performed will be somewhat similar to how ComicFury will search your comic, but may not be exactly the same. === Putting changes on ComicFury Once you're done making changes, you can <tt>pack</tt> your layout: bundle exec jekyll pack The resulting file can be uploaded to ComicFury by going to your Webcomic Management, clicking "Edit Layout", then in the box labelled "Useful", click "Restore Layout Backup". === Stuff that doesn't work Here is a probably incomplete list of things you can expect to be different about your local site compared to ComicFury: - Any comments you specify in Front Matter will be present, but you can't add new ones - Search doesn't do anything at all - Saving and loading your place in the comic isn't implemented - GET and POST variables in templates are ignored and will always be blank - Random numbers in templates will be random only once per site build, not once per page call == Without Jekyll RageRender can also be used without Jekyll to turn ComicFury templates into templates in other languages. E.g: gem install ragerender echo "[c:iscomicpage]<div>[f:js|v:comictitle]</div>[/]" > template.html ruby $(gem which ragerender/to_liquid) template.html # {% if iscomicpage %}<div>{{ comictitle | escape }}</div>{% endif %} ruby $(gem which ragerender/to_erb) template.html # <% if iscomicpage %><div><%= js(comictitle) %></div><% end %> You still need to pass the correct variables to these templates; browse {this unofficial documentation}[https://github.com/heyeinin/comicfury-documentation] or RageRender::ComicDrop etc. to see which variables work on which templates. == Get help That's not a proclamation but an invitation! Reach out if you're having trouble by {raising an issue}[https://github.com/simonwo/ragerender/issues] or posting in the ComicFury forums.
<div id="top"></div> <!-- *** Thanks for checking out the Best-README-Template. If you have a suggestion *** that would make this better, please fork the repo and create a pull request *** or simply open an issue with the tag "enhancement". *** Don't forget to give the project a star! *** Thanks again! Now go create something AMAZING! :D --> <!-- PROJECT SHIELDS --> <!-- *** I'm using markdown "reference style" links for readability. *** Reference links are enclosed in brackets [ ] instead of parentheses ( ). *** See the bottom of this document for the declaration of the reference variables *** for contributors-url, forks-url, etc. This is an optional, concise syntax you may use. *** https://www.markdownguide.org/basic-syntax/#reference-style-links --> [![Contributors][contributors-shield]][contributors-url] [![Forks][forks-shield]][forks-url] [![Stargazers][stars-shield]][stars-url] [![Issues][issues-shield]][issues-url] [![MIT License][license-shield]][license-url] [![LinkedIn][linkedin-shield]][linkedin-url] <!-- PROJECT LOGO --> <br /> <div align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template"> <img src="images/logo.png" alt="Logo" width="80" height="80"> </a> <h3 align="center">Best-README-Template</h3> <p align="center"> An awesome README template to jumpstart your projects! <br /> <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template"><strong>Explore the docs »</strong></a> <br /> <br /> <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template">View Demo</a> · <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues">Report Bug</a> · <a href="https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues">Request Feature</a> </p> </div> <!-- TABLE OF CONTENTS --> <details> <summary>Table of Contents</summary> <ol> <li> <a href="#about-the-project">About The Project</a> <ul> <li><a href="#built-with">Built With</a></li> </ul> </li> <li> <a href="#getting-started">Getting Started</a> <ul> <li><a href="#prerequisites">Prerequisites</a></li> <li><a href="#installation">Installation</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a href="#usage">Usage</a></li> <li><a href="#roadmap">Roadmap</a></li> <li><a href="#contributing">Contributing</a></li> <li><a href="#license">License</a></li> <li><a href="#contact">Contact</a></li> <li><a href="#acknowledgments">Acknowledgments</a></li> </ol> </details> <!-- ABOUT THE PROJECT --> ## About The Project [![Product Name Screen Shot][product-screenshot]](https://example.com) There are many great README templates available on GitHub; however, I didn't find one that really suited my needs so I created this enhanced one. I want to create a README template so amazing that it'll be the last one you ever need -- I think this is it. Here's why: * Your time should be focused on creating something amazing. A project that solves a problem and helps others * You shouldn't be doing the same tasks over and over like creating a README from scratch * You should implement DRY principles to the rest of your life :smile: Of course, no one template will serve all projects since your needs may be different. So I'll be adding more in the near future. You may also suggest changes by forking this repo and creating a pull request or opening an issue. Thanks to all the people have contributed to expanding this template! Use the `BLANK_README.md` to get started. <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> ### Built With This section should list any major frameworks/libraries used to bootstrap your project. Leave any add-ons/plugins for the acknowledgements section. Here are a few examples. * [Next.js](https://nextjs.org/) * [React.js](https://reactjs.org/) * [Vue.js](https://vuejs.org/) * [Angular](https://angular.io/) * [Svelte](https://svelte.dev/) * [Laravel](https://laravel.com) * [Bootstrap](https://getbootstrap.com) * [JQuery](https://jquery.com) <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- GETTING STARTED --> ## Getting Started This is an example of how you may give instructions on setting up your project locally. To get a local copy up and running follow these simple example steps. ### Prerequisites This is an example of how to list things you need to use the software and how to install them. * npm ```sh npm install npm@latest -g ``` ### Installation _Below is an example of how you can instruct your audience on installing and setting up your app. This template doesn't rely on any external dependencies or services._ 1. Get a free API Key at [https://example.com](https://example.com) 2. Clone the repo ```sh git clone https://github.com/your_username_/Project-Name.git ``` 3. Install NPM packages ```sh npm install ``` 4. Enter your API in `config.js` ```js const API_KEY = 'ENTER YOUR API'; ``` <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- USAGE EXAMPLES --> ## Usage Use this space to show useful examples of how a project can be used. Additional screenshots, code examples and demos work well in this space. You may also link to more resources. _For more examples, please refer to the [Documentation](https://example.com)_ <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- ROADMAP --> ## Roadmap - [x] Add Changelog - [x] Add back to top links - [ ] Add Additional Templates w/ Examples - [ ] Add "components" document to easily copy & paste sections of the readme - [ ] Multi-language Support - [ ] Chinese - [ ] Spanish See the [open issues](https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues) for a full list of proposed features (and known issues). <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- CONTRIBUTING --> ## Contributing Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are **greatly appreciated**. If you have a suggestion that would make this better, please fork the repo and create a pull request. You can also simply open an issue with the tag "enhancement". Don't forget to give the project a star! Thanks again! 1. Fork the Project 2. Create your Feature Branch (`git checkout -b feature/AmazingFeature`) 3. Commit your Changes (`git commit -m 'Add some AmazingFeature'`) 4. Push to the Branch (`git push origin feature/AmazingFeature`) 5. Open a Pull Request <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- LICENSE --> ## License Distributed under the MIT License. See `LICENSE.txt` for more information. <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- CONTACT --> ## Contact Your Name - [@your_twitter](https://twitter.com/your_username) - email@example.com Project Link: [https://github.com/your_username/repo_name](https://github.com/your_username/repo_name) <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS --> ## Acknowledgments Use this space to list resources you find helpful and would like to give credit to. I've included a few of my favorites to kick things off! * [Choose an Open Source License](https://choosealicense.com) * [GitHub Emoji Cheat Sheet](https://www.webpagefx.com/tools/emoji-cheat-sheet) * [Malven's Flexbox Cheatsheet](https://flexbox.malven.co/) * [Malven's Grid Cheatsheet](https://grid.malven.co/) * [Img Shields](https://shields.io) * [GitHub Pages](https://pages.github.com) * [Font Awesome](https://fontawesome.com) * [React Icons](https://react-icons.github.io/react-icons/search) <p align="right">(<a href="#top">back to top</a>)</p> <!-- MARKDOWN LINKS & IMAGES --> <!-- https://www.markdownguide.org/basic-syntax/#reference-style-links --> [contributors-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/contributors/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [contributors-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/graphs/contributors [forks-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/forks/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [forks-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/network/members [stars-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/stars/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [stars-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/stargazers [issues-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/issues/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [issues-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/issues [license-shield]: https://img.shields.io/github/license/othneildrew/Best-README-Template.svg?style=for-the-badge [license-url]: https://github.com/othneildrew/Best-README-Template/blob/master/LICENSE.txt [linkedin-shield]: https://img.shields.io/badge/-LinkedIn-black.svg?style=for-the-badge&logo=linkedin&colorB=555 [linkedin-url]: https://linkedin.com/in/othneildrew [product-screenshot]: images/screenshot.png
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