Someone has made a programming language called Sui, which is said to be designed for LLMs.
However, using index-based variable names in order to "avoid typo bugs" makes it more difficult than general-purpose languages, and it also has poor token efficiency :(
I’ve been thinking about creating a CSS tool somewhere about halfway between new.css and Pico CSS for very basic page layout tools (containers, callouts, menu bars, etc) that still focuses on being extremely small and performant.
I feel that a tool like that would be helpful for laying out a simple but functional site (sourcehut’s site [1] comes to mind) where you need a few basic layout tools but don’t need all of Bootstrap.
I’d love to see NeatCSS on your list. It’s not officially classless but I try to make it semantic as much as possible. I bookmarked you GitHub repo (which you should link on the page if I didn’t miss it). I’ll give it a try myself to see if it works (and maybe make adjustments).
I think this would be excellent. There's a whole class of websites /landing pages which right now Astro seems to be filling that niche. It's mind boggling how hard it is to do basic components on the web
I happened to be visiting Miyagi just before the tsunami struck, and I was really panicked.
When I got out of the car, everyone's smartphones nearby suddenly started beeping.
A message in Japanese, saying something like "TSUNAMI EVACUATE NOW," sounded throughout the area. At the time, my phone displayed a warning that a three-meter tsunami would hit the area within an hour.
I waited on slightly higher area for about two hours, but the locals kept going about their usual business, and there were no announcements from the nearby police.
Fortunately, nothing happened, but it's difficult to know which information to trust. Still, it's good that there's a system in place for evacuation alerts.