Converter
shoelace-css
Converter | shoelace-css | |
---|---|---|
7 | 73 | |
208 | 12,030 | |
1.0% | 2.0% | |
7.0 | 9.5 | |
12 days ago | 10 days ago | |
Scala | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Converter
- Is there any project on langchain with scala
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st-material-ui - Material UI 5 for Scala 3
The longer story is that st-material-ui incorporates https://github.com/ScalablyTyped/Converter/pull/487 in order to get much, much cleaner API. You'll probably have seen the fake literal types, some rewriting from type unions to inheritance, things like that.
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State of Scala.js frameworks
Given that you want interoperability with js, I'd start by playing with https://scalablytyped.org/, then, play with the scalajs-react demos (https://github.com/ScalablyTyped/ScalaJsReactDemos) and the slinky demos (https://github.com/ScalablyTyped/SlinkyDemos). There are some libraries that scalablytyped doesn't support pretty well but you can leverage https://github.com/nafg/scalajs-facades for those.
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From ES6 to Scala: Basics
ScalaJS is awesome. Really solid and mature project, can totally recommend.
The only thing that can be annoying is when you want to have a typesafe interface and have to write a lot of adapters for javascript libraries.
Fortunately there is even a project that can make use of typescript interfaces for those libraries, so that you can use them from ScalaJS more or less automatically: https://scalablytyped.org/
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Ask HN: What cutting-edge technology do you use?
I'm using it mostly for full-stack web development with ScalaJS (https://www.scala-js.org) in the frontend (https://outwatch.github.io/docs/readme.html) and in the backend with AWS lambdas.
The ecosystem is currently in the process of porting all the libraries to Scala 3. So if you're new to Scala, I'd recommend to start with Scala 2, which is rock-solid and already very powerful.
I never worked with SQLAlchemy. But on the scala database side, popular libraries are Doobie (https://tpolecat.github.io/doobie) and Quill (https://getquill.io). Keep in mind that these are for Scala on the JVM. On the ScalaJS side I'm using the javascript library pg. But I'd like to try if it works well with Prisma soon.
The nice thing about ScalaJS is, that you can use Javascript libraries. And if there are typescript facades, then you can transpile these to Scala and use them in a type safe way (https://scalablytyped.org).
- Scala.js 1.7.0 released with βzero known bugsβ
- ScalablyTyped publishes Scala 3 support
shoelace-css
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Htmx and the Rule of Least Power
HTMX gets all the hype right now, but there are other tools in the same vain, my favorite being Unpoly (https://unpoly.com). Together with Shoelace (https://shoelace.style) you get nice GUIs real fast, without the burden of complicated dependency management and build steps. Also, you don't have to write a lot of JS, just what is needed for small enhancements, as it was meant to be. Some might say the main drawback is the tight coupling to your backend. In my case, this is also the main benefit as it integrates perfectly with the backend framework (Django).
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Show HN: Hyperdiv β Reactive, immediate-mode web UI framework for Python
Hello HN,
I'm releasing Hyperdiv (https://hyperdiv.io), a framework for rapidly developing reactive browser UIs in Python, with immediate-mode syntax and using Shoelace (https://shoelace.style) as its built-in component system.
This short coding video will give you a good idea of what it is: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XJKfxaqvGE
I wrote a brief article about the motivation and approach: https://hyperdiv.io/intro.html
Hyperdiv doesn't aim to compete with serious full-stack frameworks. The core aim was to make it easy and fast to prototype apps and build UI-based tools. I was originally motivated by internal tools at work -- feeling the need to quickly put together UI-based tools to share with both technical and non-technical coworkers, without having to stand up and maintain a full internal stack.
This is my first major open source release. I really appreciate your feedback and support. - Marius
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Making Web Component properties behave closer to the platform
For example, all the following design systems can be used without tooling (some of them provide ready-to-use bundles, others can be used through import maps): Google's Material Web, Microsoft's Fluent UI, IBM's Carbon, Adobe's Spectrum, Nordhealth's Nord, Shoelace, etc.
- Shadcn: Beautifully designed components that you can copy-paste into your apps
- Shoelace: A forward-thinking library of web components
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Stream Updates to Your Users with LiteCable for Ruby on Rails
Here's what this looks like - note that I'm using Shoelace components for styling purposes.
- Ask HN: Is there something like shadcn/UI for vanilla HTML and JavaScript?
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Lit 3 Release Announcement
There are lots of open-source design systems built with Lit. Shoelace is a popular component set that you might check out: https://github.com/shoelace-style/shoelace There are many others...
Would it help if we listed more open source projects on our site?
Because of our focus on components and the fact that you really can use just about any libraries and scaffolding for apps, we don't really have an app starter kit, but it's something we've talked about.
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Framework Interoperable Component Libraries Using Lit Web Components.
I'm really excited about all this, and it makes me have some faith in the web again. I think that Lit is a step in the right direction especially the ability to do SSR / SSG and hydrate a web page. Hopefully π€ Shoelace can get SSR running, which is currently one hurdle, but I think it is achievable.
What are some alternatives?
tyrian - Elm-inspired Scala UI library.
carbon-components-svelte - Svelte implementation of the Carbon Design System
Demos - Demos for ScalablyTyped
ng-bootstrap - Angular powered Bootstrap
langchainjs - π¦π Build context-aware reasoning applications π¦π
storybook - Storybook is a frontend workshop for building UI components and pages in isolation. Made for UI development, testing, and documentation.
Laminar - Simple, expressive, and safe UI library for Scala.js
material - Material design for AngularJS
diode - Scala library for managing immutable application model
stencil - A toolchain for building scalable, enterprise-ready component systems on top of TypeScript and Web Component standards. Stencil components can be distributed natively to React, Angular, Vue, and traditional web developers from a single, framework-agnostic codebase.
EnvisEdge - Deploy recommendation engines with Edge Computing
spectrum-web-components - Spectrum Web Components