Fluture
adequate-guide-react
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Fluture | adequate-guide-react | |
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4 | 1 | |
2,469 | 0 | |
0.3% | - | |
5.9 | 2.6 | |
3 days ago | over 3 years ago | |
JavaScript | CSS | |
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.
Fluture
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Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (December 2023)
My name is Aldwin. I'm back-end-leaning full-stack (web-) developer with over 13 years of full time professional experience at various software development agencies. Besides that, I have years of hobby-programming and open-source experience, with Fluture[1] being my most well-received.
I've been leading small teams for the last eight years, focusing on developer enabling work such as process management, devops, software architecture, and coaching.
I'm very passionately in particular about functional programming, and I'm hoping to coach teams when it comes to the cross-over between functional programming and software architecture - something a lot of developers who are new to FP struggle with.
Although I have been involved in a huge variety of software types, I'm particularly well-experienced when it comes to real-time, offline-first web-applications and real-time data processing.
[1]: https://github.com/fluture-js/Fluture
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FP for web/mobile apps in 2022?
I think that it is fine to code perfectly functional apps using TypeScript with React Native and React. You will have a huge community to support you with documentation, libraries, and available labor. Yes, the language has a lot of soundness holes and misses a lot of useful features like pattern matching or type classes but, for me, it is a valid trade-off. There are libraries for better FP programming in TypeScript like fp-ts, io-ts, and fluture.
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Introduction to Functional Programming in JavaScript
Fortunately, as it has been shown in this article, it’s definitely possible to use functional programming with plain JavaScript. However, if you really want to dive deeper into this paradigm while using JavaScript, you’ll probably want to use some already existing functional libraries such as Sanctuary, Fluture, Ramda and others.
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A Fallback for the JavaScript Pipeline Operator
This is great news for functionally-minded libraries such as Ramda, Sanctuary, Fluture, and many more. But it also makes some vanilla JavaScript nicer, for example:
adequate-guide-react
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Building a React app with functional programming (Part 1)
You can skip the gibberish and grab the code from the Github repo, or tinker with it live in the CodeSandbox.
What are some alternatives?
rubico - [a]synchronous functional programming
Most.js - Ultra-high performance reactive programming
scriptum - Functional Programming Unorthodoxly Adjusted to Client-/Server-side Javascript
fun-php - Functional programming utilities for PHP
posterus - Composable async primitives with cancelation, control over scheduling, and coroutines. Superior replacement for JS Promises.
node-tda - NodeJS API for TDA
ppipe - pipes values through functions, an alternative to using the proposed pipe operator ( |> ) for ES
promise-breaker - Helps you write libraries that accept both promises and callbacks.
io-ts - Runtime type system for IO decoding/encoding
proposal-pipeline-operator - A proposal for adding a useful pipe operator to JavaScript.
ramda - :ram: Practical functional Javascript
immutable-js - Immutable persistent data collections for Javascript which increase efficiency and simplicity.