JS Trace Table As JavaScript continues to dominate the global software landscape, a new specialized tool, JS to Trace Table, has launched to redefine how developers and students master logical execution. Developed by Md. Anisur Rahman, this interactive platform automates the traditionally manual process of "desk checking," offering a high-fidelity visual environment for real-time code analysis.
If you mostly live in .NET, the Java platform can look like a parallel universe: JVM, JDK, JARs, app servers, bytecode. The useful shortcut is to map each concept back to something you already know from C# and the CLR. This guide is a translation layer for .NET developers: what the JVM is, how the JDK compares to the .NET SDK, and what your real options are when a C# system needs to work with Java
I shipped Shin KoiKoi v0.1.0 two days ago — a free, polished hanafuda Koi-Koi card game built solo with Godot 4.6 .NET in 2 days. (Earlier post: the v0.1.0 release log) For v0.1.1 I added a 17-stage promotion exam system that turns the existing rank progression from "MMO experience grind" into something closer to the real Japanese kyū/dan exam tradition. Here's how I designed and shipped it in one
The Idea After deciding to build an iOS app using AI, the first thing I set out to create was a metronome app designed for dark stage environments. Back in college, I played drums — and while that was a while ago, there weren’t many metronome apps that felt both clean and professional. (Turns out, that’s still true today.) That’s what led me to the idea: a simple, black-and-white metronome where
For the longest time, I was the classic "builder who doesn't ship content." I'd ship features, take notes, have insights... but turning them into consistent posts on X, LinkedIn, or Threads? That part always felt like a chore. The context switching, reformatting, trying to sound natural on every platform — it killed my momentum. So I built Elevenwritt. You paste anything: A rough idea Meeting note
Hey Dev Community, Like many of you, I hit a wall with GA4. It’s powerful, sure—but it’s also cluttered, slow, and often feels like it was designed for a data scientist rather than a developer or a brand owner who just needs to see what’s working. I wanted something different. I wanted a platform that felt like a developer tool: minimalist, tech-oriented, and focused on actual insight rather than
TL;DR: I built ChessDada — a free multiplayer chess platform inspired by old Yahoo Chess. No signup, no download, just instant browser-based chess. Built with Node.js, Socket.IO, and chess.js. Modern chess sites are bloated. Chess.com forces you through signup. Lichess defaults to account creation. The "5-second click and play" experience that made Yahoo Chess legendary in the 2000s is essentially
Claude Code is powerful. Without structure around it, every session starts cold, plans live in chat history, and the spec you cared about is buried in a thread you will never re-read. I built Arness because I got tired of two things at once: the ad-hoc-prompting ceiling, and the ceremony every framework adds when it tries to fix it. It is an open-source Claude Code plugin marketplace, and you driv