papers-we-love | Papers from the computer science community to read | Awesome List library
kandi X-RAY | papers-we-love Summary
kandi X-RAY | papers-we-love Summary
Papers We Love (PWL) is a community built around reading, discussing and learning more about academic computer science papers. This repository serves as a directory of some of the best papers the community can find, bringing together documents scattered across the web. You can also visit the Papers We Love site for more info. Due to licenses we cannot always host the papers themselves (when we do, you will see a :scroll: emoji next to its title in the directory README) but we can provide links to their locations. If you enjoy the papers, perhaps stop by a local chapter meetup and join in on the vibrant discussions around them. You can also discuss PWL events, the content in this repository, and/or anything related to PWL on our Slack, after signing-up to join it, or on our #paperswelove IRC channel on freenode.
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Currently covering the most popular Java, JavaScript and Python libraries. See a Sample of papers-we-love
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Trending Discussions on Awesome List
QUESTION
Vim Awesome lists ESLint as a plugin: https://vimawesome.com/plugin/eslint. However, also on that page it says "...your plugins (and ESLint) are ..." implying ESLint is not a Vim plugin.
I am trying to work out how to apply ESLint to JavaScript files I am writing in Vim. I would like to do so (at least initially) without any plugins. I think it might help me to achieve this if I knew whether or not ESLint is a Vim plugin or not.
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-12 at 01:35No. It is a general linter for javascript. See https://eslint.org/
If you want to use ESLint in Vim, you can use a vim plugin (such as ALE or the eslint vim plugin) to help you. Or you can use the command line interface eslint offers if you don't want to use plugins.
QUESTION
I'm looking for a way to automatically add new list elements/levels to an existing list:
- my real-life use case has several thousand elements to add, so the manual example below for adding two elements is not feasible anymore,
- I need a list because that's the format expected by an API I'm trying to access.
Example:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Apr-12 at 14:41Iterate over names using map or using the same arguments replace map with lapply in which case no packages are needed.
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