New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: SwiftUI package for onboarding flows in iOS apps

Show HN: SwiftUI package for onboarding flows in iOS apps
2 by vadimkomis | 0 comments on Hacker News.
It supports: - Image, SF Symbol, and autoplaying video pages - Optional skip behavior - Custom theming - Completion gating - Snapshot-tested SwiftUI UI

New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: I built a Web-Scraper API that is 6-7x more efficient than current ones

Show HN: I built a Web-Scraper API that is 6-7x more efficient than current ones
6 by polaritymaking | 3 comments on Hacker News.
Runo is a web-scraping API that returns typed, structured JSON. You define a schema (field name, type, example value), and Runo fetches the page and returns the data. No HTML, no parsers, no post-processing. Over the past few weeks, I have been building this non stop. Currently, every scraper API out there solves the site fetching problem but left the extraction of the actual data entirely to users. Runo makes that completely disappear. For Runo, I went ahead and added JS rendering, stealth mode, and full LLM extraction to make this a fully functional and capable of scraping most if not all sites. Also, another major problem with current web scrapers is that they charge per feature or bundle them into expensive credit tiers. A single large or JS rendered request can cost 5-75 credits, which means you essentially get nothing out of their plans. Runo is flat per request, no matter the site. At the Scale tier, Runo works out to $0.90 per 1,000 effective requests vs. around $6 for the nearest Firecrawl equivalent. My jaw dropped when I was testing Runo and came across these numbers. I created a free tier that is 500 requests/month, no credit card required. Take it for a spin and let me what can be improved. I would love feedback.

New ask Hacker News story: Viable open source Claude Design alternative?

Viable open source Claude Design alternative?
4 by splatzone | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Can anyone recommend an alternative to Claude Design? I've been trying OpenDesign (https://ift.tt/qdo1Zjl) using GPT5.5 which seemed promising, but so far the results have nowhere near the same level of polish or consistency as Claude Design from what I can tell. Any recommendations?

New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: Nibble

Show HN: Nibble
3 by glouwbug | 0 comments on Hacker News.
An attempt at a single pass LLVM frontend in ~3000 lines of C without external dependencies, malloc, or an AST. Included are some graphical examples. The IR isn't perfect, and the README touches on one particular downfall

New ask Hacker News story: Tell HN: Starting June 15, claude -p usage will change

Tell HN: Starting June 15, claude -p usage will change
1 by andersonmvd | 1 comments on Hacker News.
"Starting June 15, 2026, Agent SDK and claude -p usage on subscription plans will draw from a new monthly Agent SDK credit, separate from your interactive usage limits." Details: https://ift.tt/LmsnlPf

New Show Hacker News story: Show HN: Petri – Drop-in Postgres image that forks a DB per test

Show HN: Petri – Drop-in Postgres image that forks a DB per test
3 by nizarmah | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Rolling it out at work to parallelize 4,257 tests across 5 services. It fixes our tests running in band and DB mocking in API tests. It's a drop-in Postgres image, with a Golang proxy. :5432 is passthrough, :5433 forks the DB per conn (CREATE DATABASE … TEMPLATE …, dropped on disconnect). If you use it, let me know what you like or don't like, so I can make it better. Cheers!

New ask Hacker News story: Tell HN: Dont use Claude Design, lost access to my projects after unsubscribing

Tell HN: Dont use Claude Design, lost access to my projects after unsubscribing
2 by pycassa | 0 comments on Hacker News.
I wanted to try codex after 5 months of claude code max subscription. And then I went back to my previous projects on claude design only to realize I don't have access to them anymore. This is a first. I never lost access to any of my past sessions because I unsubscribed in any of the LLM apps. I actually wanted to try out codex previously, but had similar experience with my credits. They gave extra credits equivalent to my montly subscription price, with some time limit because claude has so many issues that month. And as soon as plan ended. I lost access to the credits. Even after resubscribing, I still don't have access to those credits. I have sympathies towards the engineers, especially the ones that are putting themselves on X. But only when someone with large following has some issue, they sort it out. Having worked at a billing company, I can see how complex contracts sound good for the growth/sales folks but are also horrible for engineers actually implementing those contracts. Their complex rate limiting which is now a norm, identifying other harnesses to count them against extra usage are all probably not easy to implement without very rough edge cases. But all the "bugs" are just where the user gets screwed is what is problematic. I just wanted to post this here, after tagging them multiple times on X to alert other users.