It works on any React or TypeScript component — hooks, utilities, classes — and generates a props table, README section, and a complete Storybook story file in about 10 seconds. Not a big story here. I was documenting a component for a design system at work and spent about 15 minutes cleaning up what Claude gave me. Structured it into a proper props table, extracted the Storybook argTypes, reforma
Show HN: Let – Offline-first life events tracker (React Native, SQLite)
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We're all learning how to ship more side projects. If you're "in the bubble" it can feel like everyone is repo-maxxing. Shipping weekly. Spinning up agents to scaffold full apps overnight. New OSS dropped every Friday. The reality I see with most developers is much more normal: They have six or seven repos sitting in various states of half-attention. A side project from last year that still gets a
I have a confession: I used react-i18next for years and genuinely never questioned it. It worked. It was everywhere. Every project I joined during my internships at DNB had it set up. You install it, you configure it, you wrap your app in a provider, and you ship. Done. But then I started building more things on my own, projects where I got to choose the stack from scratch, and I started noticing
Exemplo mínimo de uso com Bun (baseado na documentação oficial) Aviso: Este exemplo é puramente acadêmico, baseado na documentação oficial do Next.js. Para um ambiente de produção real, ajustes adicionais de segurança, performance e monitoramento são necessários. 1 - Ajustar o next.config.ts para "Standalone": import type { NextConfig } from "next"; const nextConfig: NextConfig = { output: "