FluidFramework
Command Line Parser
Our great sponsors
FluidFramework | Command Line Parser | |
---|---|---|
12 | 17 | |
4,613 | 4,397 | |
0.4% | 1.7% | |
10.0 | 0.0 | |
3 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
TypeScript | C# | |
MIT License | 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.
FluidFramework
- FluidFramework: Build distributed, real-time collaborative web applications
-
Ask HN: What Are You Working on This Year?
Have you seen FluidFramework? It's open source (MIT): https://github.com/microsoft/FluidFramework
I think the first product they're building on it is Loop: https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-introduces-loop-a-ne...
- Ask HN: Apps that are built with Git as the back end?
- Realtime: Multiplayer Edition
- Fluid Framework: Data Sync Reimagined
-
Woe be onto you for using a WebSocket
Full disclosure I work at MSFT and on the fluid framework.
If you are interested in this you may also be interested in the fluid framework, https://github.com/microsoft/FluidFramework
We use websockets and solve a lot of the state management problem called out here by keeping very little state on the server itself. The primary thing on server is a monotonically increasing integer we use to stamp messages, this gives us total order broadcast which we then build upon: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_broadcast
Here are some code pointers if you want to take a look:
The map package is a decent place to look for how we leverage total order broadcast to keep clients in sync in our distributed data structures:
-
Microsoft Launches Google Wave
(Disclosure: Work at Microsoft, but I work in Azure and some open source stuff, not on or directly with Fluid/Office/etc.)
That's just a trademark clause for Microsoft logos and brands. The Fluid Framework itself is [MIT licensed](https://github.com/microsoft/FluidFramework/blob/main/LICENS...) and doesn't require exposing any of those logos/brands when you use it, so the framework itself is fairly open for usage.
I think the main thing that would slow down adoption for Fluid is that the only "production" backend is an Azure service, which isn't part of the open source Fluid Framework. [Other open source backends](https://fluidframework.com/docs/deployment/service-options/) aren't recommended for productions. Until there are some open source ones, I'd assume adoption will be limited to folks in the Azure ecosystem.
-
The Lost Apps of the 80s
Within the context of the Microsoft-verse, Fluid Framework (https://fluidframework.com) is supposed to be solving similar problems in web apps, although I haven't personally played with it.
-
A couple of questions about dotnet from a Java developer :)
Microsoft recently open sourced fluid framework. It is a distributed, consensus based, real time collaboration framework written in typescript. Fluid would keep your clients synced up and your server code would only have to handle when someone hits submit. Fluid Framework
-
Fluid Framework discovery
The official documentation and the github repository seem clear.
Command Line Parser
-
Parse CLI arguments in .NET
So after some research I found the awesome NuGet-Package Command Line Parser Library. This package allows to define your options with Property-Attributes.
- Is it possible to pass variables from PHP to a C# console app?
- How to generate a CLI interface for CRUD operations?
-
Made this a while ago and forgot to share it here -- ArgSharp, a simple and capable CLI argument parser
seems very similar to command line parser, btw good job
-
having trouble understanding the new "method chaining" syntax
The URL of the library is at https://github.com/commandlineparser/commandline. This project page has samples for VB.Net, along with other languages too.
-
IS there any way to change string[] args to an object on the fly?
How about https://github.com/commandlineparser/commandline ?
-
Developing and installing your own CLI with dotnet tool and CliFx NuGet package
This lib looks way better than the seemingly most popular one: https://github.com/commandlineparser/commandline Which is just a nightmare with terrible docs
- What's your favorite command line arg parser?
- What is your preferred way to roll for stats?
-
Reverse Engineering Keyboard Driver: Part 2 (Decompiling .NET applications)
CommandLineParser
What are some alternatives?
SyncedStore - SyncedStore CRDT is an easy-to-use library for building live, collaborative applications that sync automatically.
Fluent Command Line Parser - A simple, strongly typed .NET C# command line parser library using a fluent easy to use interface
automerge - A JSON-like data structure (a CRDT) that can be modified concurrently by different users, and merged again automatically.
spectre.console - A .NET library that makes it easier to create beautiful console applications.
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
CommandLineUtils - Command line parsing and utilities for .NET
crdt-event-fold - A Haskell library providing a garbage collected CRDT event accumulation datatype.
Power Args - The ultimate .NET Standard command line argument parser
rsocket-java - Java implementation of RSocket
Cocona - Micro-framework for .NET console application. Cocona makes it easy and fast to build console applications on .NET.
jsynchronous - Jsynchronous.js - Data synchronization for games and real-time web apps.
CliWrap - Library for running command-line processes