Palladium
Giraffe
Palladium | Giraffe | |
---|---|---|
2 | 19 | |
12 | 2,072 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 7.4 | |
almost 2 years ago | 24 days ago | |
F# | F# | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
Palladium
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Creating a TRX File from an API for Azure DevOps CI/CD Pipeline Integration
Below is an example of the TRX output from Palladium /AsynchronousTests. We made some slight alterations from the default file structure to better serve our needs. For example we removed the deployment node from TestSettings and made it self closing. We also did away with the contents of the Output node.
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XML Serialization for F# Record Types
The following solution provides an example of the XmlSerializer turning a record type into an xml formatted string for an API response. This solution is an open-source implementation of asynchronous, long-running tests in Orleans which produce TRX results via a HTTP web API endpoint.
Giraffe
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The combined power of F# and C#
Giraffe is another interesting one to explore: https://giraffe.wiki/
Giraffe is nice because it is itself built "just" as ASP.NET Core Middleware so it plays a bit more nicely than Suave with a mixed stack of C#-defined Middleware.
It's more likely you accidentally fall back into just translating C# patterns to non-idiomatic F# with Giraffe, but it's also nicer when in that case of needing to live in both worlds and use a mixture of libraries built for C# ASP.NET projects.
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ASP.NET Core updates in .NET 8 Preview 4 - .NET Blog
There are also some F# frameworks built on top of ASP.NET core like https://giraffe.wiki
- Confusion in learning Giraffe's HttpHandler
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Is there any advantage to using F# instead of C#?
If you have an interest in F#, I highly recommend diving in because (1) it has a ton of things you might learn to appreciate in C#; (2) it has things C# cannot have. I do like some of the suggestions people have made regarding mixing your code bases, but I'll also say that building, say, endpoint routing in Giraffe is (to repeat myself) easy, simple, and elegant.
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Targeting Node, Bun and Deno With F#
Bix is a micro-framework designed with F# in mind and that runs on both Deno and Bun! and in theory it also should even run in a service worker! (intercepting fetch requests) although I haven't tested that yet, it offers a general purpose handler that coupled with a set of route definitions it can bring a Giraffe/Saturn like framework to life in JavaScript runtimes which is incredibly awesome! useful? maybe not 😅, but awesome indeed. Let's see some code for it
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If you were to create a Web API today from scratch how would you do it ?
Backend: Most likely it would be a toss between https://saturnframework.org or https://giraffe.wiki. They both combins the extremely good type system in F# combined with the ease of a minimal API.
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Is it possible to run C# asp.net core MVC and f# giraffe in a single solution
I was wondering if its possible to simultaneously run a C# core MVC project in combination with https://github.com/giraffe-fsharp/Giraffe
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Overriding JSON serializer in Giraffe
By default Giraffe, the framework which I use as a web server, uses Newtonsoft.Json to serialize results to JSON. However, for discriminated union, it generates quite a lot of JSON so I've switched to System.Text.Json which is built into newer versions of .Net Core. In combination with FSharp.SystemTextJson package allows serializing discriminated unions more gracefully. All we need is to decorate Branch type with JsonFSharpConverter(JsonUnionEncoding.BareFieldlessTags) attribute.
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Introducing Giraffe.Htmx
Giraffe is a library that sits atop ASP.NET Core and allows developers to build web applications in a functional style; dotnet new giraffe is literally my starting point when I begin a new web application project. (Rather than write three more sentences filled with effusive praise, I’ll just leave it at that; it’s great.) It also provides a view engine (that builds upon Suave‘s “experimental” view engine) which uses an F# DSL to define HTML in a strongly-typed way. It has been incredibly efficient for a while, but with .NET’s work over the past two releases at improving performance, and Giraffe’s adoption of those techniques, it is lightning fast.
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Show HN: F# web server in 3-4 lines of code
Wrapping ASP.NET Core to be easier and more idiomatic with F# seems to be a common domain. Out of curiosity, did you look at any existing projects? If so, what was lacking from them that made you decide to write WebFrame?
Giraffe: https://github.com/giraffe-fsharp/Giraffe
What are some alternatives?
Suave.IO - Suave is a simple web development F# library providing a lightweight web server and a set of combinators to manipulate route flow and task composition.
Saturn - Opinionated, web development framework for F# which implements the server-side, functional MVC pattern
ASP.NET Core - ASP.NET Core is a cross-platform .NET framework for building modern cloud-based web applications on Windows, Mac, or Linux.
Falco - A toolkit for building fast and functional-first web applications using F#.
ASP.NET MVC
Freya - Freya Web Stack - Meta-Package
DotVVM - Open source MVVM framework for Web Apps
dotNetify - Simple, lightweight, yet powerful way to build real-time web apps.
IISNode - Hosting node.js applications in IIS on Windows
Coalesce - Helping you quickly build amazing sites
Signals - Signals is a framework for developing enterprise and SaaS applications that follows the USE-CASE driven methodology
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML