Articles

  • Nov 16, 2024 | dev.to | Peiwen Lu

    Typography and layout play a crucial role in creating visually appealing and readable web designs. One concept that has always fascinated me is vertical rhythm, the consistent vertical spacing of text and elements across a web page. Back in 2015, my friend Rob Turlinckx introduced me to this concept, sparking a journey of exploration that led me to develop tools for effectively implementing vertical rhythm in modern web browsers.

  • May 15, 2024 | dev.to | Peiwen Lu

    Emacs 29 introduced built-in support for Tree-sitter, a powerful tool that revolutionizes syntax highlighting and editing. Tree-sitter constructs a concrete syntax tree for source code and efficiently updates it as modifications are made, offering significant improvements in performance and accuracy compared to traditional regular expression parsing. While exploring Tree-sitter, I discovered its vast potential for enhancing the editing experience.

  • Apr 19, 2024 | dev.to | Peiwen Lu

    One aspect of CSS modules that I truly appreciate is its ability to compress class names into very short hashes. This feature allows me to keep my CSS selectors as long and descriptive as needed, while still compressing them into concise three or four character hashes. It aligns with my rule for CSS: selectors should be written for human readability, but compressed for machine efficiency.

  • Mar 2, 2024 | medrxiv.org | Julio César Silva |Júlio Silva |Takehiro Takahashi |Jamie Wood |Peiwen Lu

    In the past three years, H.K. received expenses and/or personal fees from UnitedHealth, Element Science, Eyedentifeye, and F-Prime. He is a co-founder of Refactor Health and HugoHealth, and is associated with contracts, through Yale New Haven Hospital, from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and through Yale University from the Food and Drug Administration, Johnson & Johnson, Google, and Pfizer.

  • Sep 25, 2023 | nature.com | Jon Klein |Rahul Dhodapkar |Peiwen Lu |Valter Silva Monteiro |Julio César Silva |Júlio Silva | +16 more

    AbstractPost-acute infection syndromes may develop after acute viral disease1. Infection with SARS-CoV-2 can result in the development of a post-acute infection syndrome known as long COVID. Individuals with long COVID frequently report unremitting fatigue, post-exertional malaise, and a variety of cognitive and autonomic dysfunctions2,3,4. However, the biological processes that are associated with the development and persistence of these symptoms are unclear.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →