RazorLight
Capybara
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RazorLight | Capybara | |
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11 | 20 | |
1,480 | 9,964 | |
- | 0.3% | |
0.0 | 7.9 | |
7 months ago | 11 days ago | |
C# | Ruby | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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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.
RazorLight
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Introducing TopazView: A Lightweight and Powerful View Engine
Yes, I have used Razor pages in non-website applications before where I needed to load the cshtml templates from a different source. I have written Line of Business apps (think WinForms or WPF) where the reporting spits out HTML with tables and charts. There are a number of similar projects to yours out there which I have used in the past such as RazorLight or RazorMachine.
- A Handlebar and Puppeteer Equivalent in C#?
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Sending HTML based emails. Is there an easier way to dynamically generate the document?
Your mileage may vary but I've had good luck with the RazorLight library for generating HTML emails from a template with data merged in. Under the hood, it uses the ASP.NET Razor engine for applying a model to a template.
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Email template engine
We use https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight in combination with serverless functions.
- Rendering HTML (C# windows forms) not working after deploy
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Generating html in a hosted service
you could use a razor based engine to generate html based on a view model (your data). take a look at: https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight i use it to generate html emails
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Don't make me think, or why I switched to Rails from JavaScript SPAs
Rails has a templating system for generating emails (standard HTML/ERB files). If you're running an ASP.NET Web API (not MVC) the best way of doing that I've found is via Razorlight which you have to set up manually - https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight
With Rails the standard is pretty much Devise or Omniauth (or both) - does everything for you. I've never found anything for ASP like Devise which gives you an entire login system with all the required views/migrations in a couple commands.
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How would you setup a e-mail template / content in .NET in order to reference to templates when sending mail?
I use RazorLight: https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight
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How to render a Razor view from a Console application?
Razor Light
- How do you manage transactional email templates?
Capybara
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16 Best Ruby Frameworks For Web Development [2024]
Cuba takes help from a lot of other technologies to bring the best of everything. For example, the responses in Cuba are the optimized version of the Rack responses. The templates are integrated via Tilt and testing via Cutest and Capybara.
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🩰 Scheduling automated tests
I am going to use a browser based testing tool called Playwright (But you could use Capybara, or Selenium WebDriver etc.).
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Building GitHub with Ruby on Rails
Even as a much smaller team, building Heii On-Call [0] as a lightweight alerting/monitoring/on-call rotations SaaS based on Ruby on Rails has basically been a pleasure!
And as the article highlights, perhaps the key reason for smooth deployments and upgrades is that the CI testing story is so, so good: RSpec [1] plus Capybara [2] for us. That means we have decently extensive tests of just about all behavior. The few small Rails and Ruby upgrades we've done have gone quite smoothly and confidently, with usually just a few non-Rails gem dependencies needing to be manually updated as well.
The "microservices" story is where we've pulled in the Crystal programming language [3] to great effect. After dabbling with Go and Rust, we've found that Crystal is truly a breath of fresh air. Crystal powers the parts of Heii On-Call that need to be fast and low-RAM, specifically the inbound API https://api.heiioncall.com/ and the outbound HTTP(S) prober background processes. I've ported some shared utility classes from Ruby to Crystal almost completely by just copy-and-pasting ___.rb to ___.cr; porting the tests for those classes was far more onerous than porting the class code itself. (Perhaps another point of evidence toward the superiority of RoR's testing story...)
The front-end story is nice but just a bit weaker. Using Hotwire / Turbo successfully, but I have an open PR to fix a fairly obvious stale cache bug in Turbo [4] that has been sitting unloved for nearly a month, despite other users reporting the same issue. I'm hopeful that it will get merged in the next release, but definitely less active than the backend side.
For me, the key conclusion is that the excellent Ruby on Rails testing story is what enables everything to go a lot more smoothly and have such a strong foundation. I'd be curious if any GitHubbers can talk more about whether they too are using Rspec+Capybara or something else? Are there internal guidelines for test coverage?
[0] https://heiioncall.com/
[1] https://rspec.info/
[2] https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara
[3] https://crystal-lang.org/
[4] https://github.com/hotwired/turbo/pull/895
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Using Capybara to test responsive code
Engineering at Aha! focuses on using and improving the Capybara test framework. We have added many helpers and additional functionality to make working with Capybara easy. Testing at mobile widths is another chance to improve our testing tooling. Here is the incremental approach that we used to add mobile testing helpers.
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Minitest vs. RSpec in Rails
Since the Capybara library drives the underlying tests, Minitest also has the same syntax.
- Is it a common practice to test JS code in a browser instead of Node.js?
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Testing Strategies For Microservices
We can write component tests with any language or framework, but the most popular ones are probably Cucumber and Capybara.
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From partials to ViewComponents: writing reusable front-end code in Rails
The nice thing about partial templates is that templates are unit-testable with View specs (or similarly in Minitest) and the rendered output can even be verified using Capybara matchers.
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Tip: if you're changing all your form_for to form_with, take the opportunity to make sure all forms are being tested.
To piggyback: This would be a type of browser test, so you would want to use something like Cypress (https://github.com/testdouble/cypress-rails) or Capybara (https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara). RSpec has a good integration with Capybara. Cypress is JS-based so it will require some additional config.
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Validating Views with Capybara Queries
When you write a system test (or, as we prefer, a system spec) with Ruby on Rails, you're exercising the whole stack from the point of view of the user. So, naturally, you have to do things like make sure that certain elements are on the page and work as you expect when you click on then, type in them, and drag them around. Capybara works exceedingly well for this, giving you a lovely API for querying HTML.
What are some alternatives?
RazorEngine - Open source templating engine based on Microsoft's Razor parsing engine
Playwright - Playwright is a framework for Web Testing and Automation. It allows testing Chromium, Firefox and WebKit with a single API.
scriban - A fast, powerful, safe and lightweight scripting language and engine for .NET
Aruba - Test command-line applications with Cucumber-Ruby, RSpec or Minitest.
Handlebars.Net - A real .NET Handlebars engine
shoulda-matchers - Simple one-liner tests for common Rails functionality
DotLiquid - .NET Port of Tobias Lütke's Liquid template language.
Emoji-RSpec - Custom Emoji Formatters for RSpec
Mustache Sharp - An extension of the mustache text template engine for .NET.
Cucumber - A home for issues that are common to multiple cucumber repositories
SmartFormat.NET - A lightweight text templating library written in C# which can be a drop-in replacement for string.Format
Bacon - a small RSpec clone