ads

New best story on Hacker News: Show HN: Haystack – an IDE for exploring and editing code on an infinite canvas

Show HN: Haystack – an IDE for exploring and editing code on an infinite canvas
521 by akshaysg | 197 comments on Hacker News.
Hi HN, we’re building Haystack Editor ( https://ift.tt/LoFwVmT ), a canvas-based IDE that automates the boring stuff (plumbing, refactoring, and finding code) so that you can focus on the exciting parts of software development! You can see a quick overview of Haystack at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2uZnR5D_cc ! (It's currently only on Mac OS but we're working on Linux and Windows. Edit: just added a Linux download!) Haystack was born out of our frustrations with working in large and mature codebases, specifically with navigating and editing functional flows (e.g. the code flow for adding an item to the Amazon shopping cart). Oftentimes dealing with such flows would involve navigating a maze of files and functions, and making any edits would involve a lengthy process of doing corresponding downstream/upstream plumbing. Haystack attempts to address this in the following ways: 1. It allows you to explore your codebase as a directed graph of functions, classes, etc on the canvas. We feel like this better fits how your mind understands your codebase and helps you find and alter functional flows more intuitively. We especially want to utilize this for pull request reviews! 2. It has a navigational copilot that makes edits across files or functions much easier. After you make some changes, Haystack will try to predict your next action and create functions/methods or refactor upstream/downstream code for you. Haystack will surface these speculative edits on the canvas in a way that you can easily dismiss or incorporate them, allowing you to make large changes with a few clicks or keystrokes. 3. Haystack will utilize natural language search so you don’t have to play “Where’s Waldo” to find a functional flow in your codebase. This is coming soon! We’re still pretty early in development and we really want to perfect the experience of navigating and editing code on a canvas. Any feedback would be much appreciated! PSA: Since Haystack is a VS Code fork, you should be able to move your extensions and keyboard shortcuts. Please let us know if you have any issues with this!

New best story on Hacker News: An experiment in UI density created with Svelte

An experiment in UI density created with Svelte
578 by 11001100 | 163 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Windows Bluescreen and Boot Loops (update: caused by a Crowdstrike update)

Windows Bluescreen and Boot Loops (update: caused by a Crowdstrike update)
601 by BLKNSLVR | 225 comments on Hacker News.
My workplace has a number of people reporting Windows blue-screening and going into a boot loop. The IT Department have a number of servers recently gone offline and have said there's a chance that the two issues are related, and potentially due to a Crowd Strike application update. My laptop blue-screened and rebooted, but is working fine after the reboot. A local radio station has also said they've got the same issues with their laptops and their phone system is down as a result. Not seeing anything on news sites yet. Anyone else seeing similar? Above is all based in Australia.

New best story on Hacker News: Supreme Court rules ex-presidents have immunity for official acts

Supreme Court rules ex-presidents have immunity for official acts
571 by _rend | 1073 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: RegreSSHion: RCE in OpenSSH's server, on glibc-based Linux systems

RegreSSHion: RCE in OpenSSH's server, on glibc-based Linux systems
533 by robinhoodexe | 208 comments on Hacker News.


New best story on Hacker News: Show HN: I created an After Effects alternative

Show HN: I created an After Effects alternative
556 by clementpiki | 160 comments on Hacker News.
Many years ago, I made VJ softwares (to mix live visuals in clubs) for unexpected platforms like the Game Boy Advance, the Playstation 2 and the Raspberry Pi. This year, I’m back with a new web-app: Pikimov. Inspired by Photopea (a free Photoshop clone), I created this web-based motion design & video editor as an alternative to After Effects, to fill empty void. It's free, without signup, without cloud uploads (your files stay on your machine), and your projects are not used for AI models training.

New best story on Hacker News: Show HN: Drop-in SQS replacement based on SQLite

Show HN: Drop-in SQS replacement based on SQLite
504 by memset | 122 comments on Hacker News.
Hi! I wanted to share an open source API-compatible replacement for SQS. It's written in Go, distributes as a single binary, and uses SQLite for underlying storage. I wrote this because I wanted a queue with all the bells and whistles - searching, scheduling into the future, observability, and rate limiting - all the things that many modern task queue systems have. But I didn't want to rewrite my app, which was already using SQS. And I was frustrated that many of the best solutions out there (BullMQ, Oban, Sidekiq) were language-specific. So I made an SQS-compatible replacement. All you have to do is replace the endpoint using AWS' native library in your language of choice. For example, the queue works with Celery - you just change the connection string. From there, you can see all of your messages and their status, which is hard today in the SQS console (and flower doesn't support SQS.) It is written to be pluggable. The queue implementation uses SQLite, but I've been experimenting with RocksDB as a backend and you could even write one that uses Postgres. Similarly, you could implement multiple protocols (AMQP, PubSub, etc) on top of the underlying queue. I started with SQS because it is simple and I use it a lot. It is written to be as easy to deploy as possible - a single go binary. I'm working on adding distributed and autoscale functionality as the next layer. Today I have search, observability (via prometheus), unlimited message sizes, and the ability to schedule messages arbitrarily in the future. In terms of monetization, the goal is to just have a hosted queue system. I believe this can be cheaper than SQS without sacrificing performance. Just as Backblaze and Minio have had success competing in the S3 space, I wanted to take a crack at queues. I'd love your feedback!