lang | 78 languages for Laravel Framework | Web Framework library

 by   Laravel-Lang PHP Version: 12.21.9 License: MIT

kandi X-RAY | lang Summary

kandi X-RAY | lang Summary

lang is a PHP library typically used in Server, Web Framework, Laravel applications. lang has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities, it has a Permissive License and it has medium support. You can download it from GitHub.

In this repository, you can find the lang files for the Laravel Framework 4-9, Laravel Jetstream , Laravel Fortify, Laravel Cashier, Laravel Breeze , Laravel Nova, Laravel Spark and Laravel UI. [ Documentation | Translations Status ].
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            kandi-support Support

              lang has a medium active ecosystem.
              It has 7073 star(s) with 3135 fork(s). There are 160 watchers for this library.
              There were 5 major release(s) in the last 12 months.
              There are 0 open issues and 133 have been closed. On average issues are closed in 7 days. There are 1 open pull requests and 0 closed requests.
              It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
              The latest version of lang is 12.21.9

            kandi-Quality Quality

              lang has 0 bugs and 0 code smells.

            kandi-Security Security

              lang has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.
              lang code analysis shows 0 unresolved vulnerabilities.
              There are 0 security hotspots that need review.

            kandi-License License

              lang is licensed under the MIT License. This license is Permissive.
              Permissive licenses have the least restrictions, and you can use them in most projects.

            kandi-Reuse Reuse

              lang releases are available to install and integrate.
              lang saves you 9667 person hours of effort in developing the same functionality from scratch.
              It has 21552 lines of code, 23 functions and 565 files.
              It has low code complexity. Code complexity directly impacts maintainability of the code.

            Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA

            kandi has reviewed lang and discovered the below as its top functions. This is intended to give you an instant insight into lang implemented functionality, and help decide if they suit your requirements.
            • Map assignees .
            • Saving content .
            • Run the migrations .
            • Get title .
            • Is main JSON file .
            • Stores a file .
            • Get cookie path .
            • Load a config file .
            • Resolve finder .
            • Get the facade accessor .
            Get all kandi verified functions for this library.

            lang Key Features

            No Key Features are available at this moment for lang.

            lang Examples and Code Snippets

            Gets the lang key .
            javadot img1Lines of Code : 3dot img1License : Permissive (MIT License)
            copy iconCopy
            public String getLangKey() {
                    return langKey;
                }  

            Community Discussions

            QUESTION

            How do purely functional languages handle index-based algorithms?
            Asked 2022-Apr-05 at 12:51

            I have been trying to learn about functional programming, but I still struggle with thinking like a functional programmer. One such hangup is how one would implement index-heavy operations which rely strongly on loops/order-of-execution.

            For example, consider the following Java code:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2022-Mar-07 at 21:17

            This is not an index-heavy operation, in fact you can do this with a one-liner with scanl1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> [a] -> [a]:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/71387267

            QUESTION

            Error while creating new React app ("You are running `create-react-app` 4.0.3, which is behind the latest release (5.0.0)")
            Asked 2022-Apr-04 at 11:58

            I am getting this create React app error again and again even after doing the uninstall part.

            npm uninstall -g create-react-app

            up to date, audited 1 package in 570ms

            found 0 vulnerabilities

            npx create-react-app test-app

            Need to install the following packages: create-react-app Ok to proceed? (y) y

            You are running create-react-app 4.0.3, which is behind the latest release (5.0.0).

            We no longer support global installation of Create React App.

            Please remove any global installs with one of the following commands:

            • npm uninstall -g create-react-app
            • yarn global remove create-react-app

            The latest instructions for creating a new app can be found here: https://create-react-app.dev/docs/getting-started/

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2022-Jan-01 at 22:34

            You will have to clear the npx cache to make it work.

            You can locate the location of the folder where create-react-app is installed using npm ls -g create-react-app.

            Also, to clear the cache, refer to this answer in How can I clear the central cache for `npx`?

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/70358474

            QUESTION

            Error message "error:0308010C:digital envelope routines::unsupported"
            Asked 2022-Apr-03 at 10:57

            I created the default IntelliJ IDEA React project and got this:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Nov-15 at 00:32

            Failed to construct transformer: Error: error:0308010C:digital envelope routines::unsupported

            The simplest and easiest solution to solve the above error is to downgrade Node.js to v14.18.1. And then just delete folder node_modules and try to rebuild your project and your error must be solved.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69692842

            QUESTION

            ASP.NET Core 6 how to access Configuration during startup
            Asked 2022-Mar-08 at 11:45

            In earlier versions, we had Startup.cs class and we get configuration object as follows in the Startup file.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Oct-26 at 12:26

            WebApplicationBuilder returned by WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args) exposes Configuration and Environment properties:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69722872

            QUESTION

            Unable to load class AndroidComponentsExtension after upgrading the Android Gradle Plugin 7.1
            Asked 2022-Mar-07 at 20:34

            I recently downloaded Android Studio Bumblebee and it helpfully asked whether I wanted to upgrade to Android Gradle Plugin 7.1.0, the version that shipped alongside Android Studio Bumblebee.

            After upgrading, I get a build error:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2022-Feb-11 at 04:05

            Updating Navigation Safe Args

            These lines are the important ones to look at:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/70857476

            QUESTION

            Error [ERR_REQUIRE_ESM]: require() of ES Module not supported
            Asked 2022-Feb-03 at 22:08

            I'm trying to make a Discord bot that just says if someone is online on the game.

            However I keep getting this message:

            [ERR_REQUIRE_ESM]: require() of ES Module from not supported. Instead change the require of index.js in... to a dynamic import() which is available in all CommonJS modules.

            This is my code:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Sep-07 at 06:38

            node-fetch v3 recently stopped support for the require way of importing it in favor of ES Modules. You'll need to use ESM imports now, like:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69081410

            QUESTION

            Error [ERR_PACKAGE_PATH_NOT_EXPORTED]: Package subpath './lib/tokenize' is not defined by "exports" in the package.json of a module in node_modules
            Asked 2022-Jan-31 at 17:22

            This is a React web app. When I run

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Nov-13 at 18:36

            I am also stuck with the same problem because I installed the latest version of Node.js (v17.0.1).

            Just go for node.js v14.18.1 and remove the latest version just use the stable version v14.18.1

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69693907

            QUESTION

            What's the mathematical reason behind Python choosing to round integer division toward negative infinity?
            Asked 2022-Jan-30 at 01:29

            I know Python // rounds towards negative infinity and in C++ / is truncating, rounding towards 0.

            And here's what I know so far:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2022-Jan-18 at 21:46

            Although I can't provide a formal definition of why/how the rounding modes were chosen as they were, the citation about compatibility with the % operator, which you have included, does make sense when you consider that % is not quite the same thing in C++ and Python.

            In C++, it is the remainder operator, whereas, in Python, it is the modulus operator – and, when the two operands have different signs, these aren't necessarily the same thing. There are some fine explanations of the difference between these operators in the answers to: What's the difference between “mod” and “remainder”?

            Now, considering this difference, the rounding (truncation) modes for integer division have to be as they are in the two languages, to ensure that the relationship you quoted, (m/n)*n + m%n == m, remains valid.

            Here are two short programs that demonstrate this in action (please forgive my somewhat naïve Python code – I'm a beginner in that language):

            C++:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/70730831

            QUESTION

            Resource linking fails on lStar
            Asked 2022-Jan-21 at 09:25

            I'm working on a React Native application. My Android builds began to fail in the CI environment (and locally) without any changes.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Sep-03 at 11:46

            Go to your package.json file and delete as many dependencies as you can until the project builds successfully. Then start adding back the dependencies one by one to detect which ones have troubles.

            Then you can manually patch those dependencies by acceding them on node_modules/[dependencie]/android/build.gradle and setting androidx.core:core-ktx: or androidx.core:core: to a specific version (1.6.0 in my case).

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69021225

            QUESTION

            Bubble sort slower with -O3 than -O2 with GCC
            Asked 2022-Jan-21 at 02:41

            I made a bubble sort implementation in C, and was testing its performance when I noticed that the -O3 flag made it run even slower than no flags at all! Meanwhile -O2 was making it run a lot faster as expected.

            Without optimisations:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Oct-27 at 19:53

            It looks like GCC's naïveté about store-forwarding stalls is hurting its auto-vectorization strategy here. See also Store forwarding by example for some practical benchmarks on Intel with hardware performance counters, and What are the costs of failed store-to-load forwarding on x86? Also Agner Fog's x86 optimization guides.

            (gcc -O3 enables -ftree-vectorize and a few other options not included by -O2, e.g. if-conversion to branchless cmov, which is another way -O3 can hurt with data patterns GCC didn't expect. By comparison, Clang enables auto-vectorization even at -O2, although some of its optimizations are still only on at -O3.)

            It's doing 64-bit loads (and branching to store or not) on pairs of ints. This means, if we swapped the last iteration, this load comes half from that store, half from fresh memory, so we get a store-forwarding stall after every swap. But bubble sort often has long chains of swapping every iteration as an element bubbles far, so this is really bad.

            (Bubble sort is bad in general, especially if implemented naively without keeping the previous iteration's second element around in a register. It can be interesting to analyze the asm details of exactly why it sucks, so it is fair enough for wanting to try.)

            Anyway, this is pretty clearly an anti-optimization you should report on GCC Bugzilla with the "missed-optimization" keyword. Scalar loads are cheap, and store-forwarding stalls are costly. (Can modern x86 implementations store-forward from more than one prior store? no, nor can microarchitectures other than in-order Atom efficiently load when it partially overlaps with one previous store, and partially from data that has to come from the L1d cache.)

            Even better would be to keep buf[x+1] in a register and use it as buf[x] in the next iteration, avoiding a store and load. (Like good hand-written asm bubble sort examples, a few of which exist on Stack Overflow.)

            If it wasn't for the store-forwarding stalls (which AFAIK GCC doesn't know about in its cost model), this strategy might be about break-even. SSE 4.1 for a branchless pmind / pmaxd comparator might be interesting, but that would mean always storing and the C source doesn't do that.

            If this strategy of double-width load had any merit, it would be better implemented with pure integer on a 64-bit machine like x86-64, where you can operate on just the low 32 bits with garbage (or valuable data) in the upper half. E.g.,

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69503317

            Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network

            Vulnerabilities

            No vulnerabilities reported

            Install lang

            You can download it from GitHub.
            PHP requires the Visual C runtime (CRT). The Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2019 is suitable for all these PHP versions, see visualstudio.microsoft.com. You MUST download the x86 CRT for PHP x86 builds and the x64 CRT for PHP x64 builds. The CRT installer supports the /quiet and /norestart command-line switches, so you can also script it.

            Support

            See the documentation for detailed installation and usage instructions.
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          • HTTPS

            https://github.com/Laravel-Lang/lang.git

          • CLI

            gh repo clone Laravel-Lang/lang

          • sshUrl

            git@github.com:Laravel-Lang/lang.git

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