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Based on our record, JavaScript Obfuscator should be more popular than Apache Tika. It has been mentiond 29 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Now let's take the above code and modify it with a popular obfuscator for JS - obfuscator.io. As a result, we will get a code like this:. - Source: dev.to / 4 months ago
You can use tools like JavaScript Obfuscator or UglifyJS to obfuscate your code. - Source: dev.to / 7 months ago
I know it's frowned upon here, but there are commercial and open source[1] javascript obfuscators with domain locking functionalities. If your site is already a SPA, they can make it very painful to just lift it (not impossible, obviously, because everything is reverse-engineerable, but the point is to discourage the majority of thiefs). You can be creative: for example, if whoever cloned your site is located in... - Source: Hacker News / 9 months ago
I don't need/use IDA, Nemlei just used https://obfuscator.io/, which just obfuscates the crap out of the code using various known methods (which I won't go into detail, it's public knowledge) and an un-obfuscation was cooked up by others. The one fucked-up thing the website does is randomizing function names, it just changes every variable/function name. We can't "un-obfuscate" those, so it's up to our brains to... Source: over 1 year ago
It's to purposefully makes your code harder to read so it prevents people from stealing your work. Here's a tool that does it: https://obfuscator.io/. Source: over 2 years ago
Strongly recommend using Apache Tika[1] for this. It's industry standard for ubiquitous document text extraction. You can take the text output from Tika, chunk it with something like Chonkie[2], and embed it for your search index. -[1]https://tika.apache.org/ -[2]https://chonkie.ai/. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 month ago
Apache Tika could help extract the relevant bits of PDFs, couldnt it? https://tika.apache.org/. - Source: Hacker News / 12 months ago
Apache Tika has worked well for me in the past, ended up running it on an AWS Lambda https://tika.apache.org/. - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
If you accept running Java, the Apache Tika is extremely good at parsing content (https://tika.apache.org/). - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
Apache Tika can spit out text from lots of formats. I've used it with grep (or rg) to make a small scale searching of local folders. Tika does a really good job at OCR for finding if text is in a file. Source: about 2 years ago
Terser - JavaScript parser, mangler, optimizer and beautifier toolkit for ES6+
Apache Archiva - Apache Archiva is an extensible repository management software.
UglifyJS - JavaScript minifier, beautifier, mangler and parser toolkit.
highlight.js - Highlight.js is a syntax highlighter written in JavaScript. It works in the browser as well as on the server.
YUI Compressor - Yahoo JS/CSS Compressor
code-prettify - Code Prettify is an embeddable script that makes source-code snippets in HTML prettier.