Sprache
Superpower
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Sprache | Superpower | |
---|---|---|
10 | 4 | |
2,271 | 968 | |
1.1% | 2.1% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
9 days ago | almost 2 years ago | |
C# | C# | |
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.
Sprache
- how would you solve this? Filtering a db model from the api and persisting the filtration rules in a safe and db agnostic way
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What is a tool you use or a bit of code that you like to use that you feel is worth bragging about?
Sprache
- Any prerolled SQL and/or keyword searches out there?
- GitHub - nreco/nlquery: Parser for end-user search-like queries and rule-based named entity recognition (NER) in context of tabular dataset schema.
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Would Someone ELI5 Parser Combinators?
Unfortunately I'm struggling. The first problem is choosing which combinator library to go with: Sprache, Superpower, Parlot, Pidgen, Lexepars, etc. etc. Some look simpler to use than others, others more performant, others come with useful parsers built in.
- Architecture pattern for Console Apps?
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C# vs F# for parser combinators
I found Sprache much easier to learn/use than FParsec.
- Parsing an insert sql statement but the data contains commas
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I don't like regex, so I wrote this
Things like https://github.com/sprache/Sprache are arguably similar.
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How can I split a string containing HTML span element tags by its element tags?
Att my office usually use Sprache to parse complex models from strings. Mostly query expressions, but it should excell at parsing html as well. Maybe it can be a solution for you here. https://github.com/sprache/Sprache
Superpower
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I made a new filtering library for .NET projects
Awesome little project you got going on there :) , I've done something similar with Ooze and extracted it to Ooze.Query later. I need to push them to nuget also when I catch some time (I jump back to it from time to time when I have some free space). Cool to see another person using parser construction libs. I see you used Sprache, I went for SuperPower for this situation.
- how would you solve this? Filtering a db model from the api and persisting the filtration rules in a safe and db agnostic way
- GitHub - nreco/nlquery: Parser for end-user search-like queries and rule-based named entity recognition (NER) in context of tabular dataset schema.
-
Would Someone ELI5 Parser Combinators?
Unfortunately I'm struggling. The first problem is choosing which combinator library to go with: Sprache, Superpower, Parlot, Pidgen, Lexepars, etc. etc. Some look simpler to use than others, others more performant, others come with useful parsers built in.
What are some alternatives?
Pidgin - A lightweight and fast parsing library for C#.
FParsec - A parser combinator library for F#
CSLY - a C# embeddable lexer and parser generator (.Net core)
Jot - Jot is a library for persisting and applying .NET application state.
Humanizer - Humanizer meets all your .NET needs for manipulating and displaying strings, enums, dates, times, timespans, numbers and quantities
Recognizers-Text - Microsoft.Recognizers.Text provides recognition and resolution of numbers, units, date/time, etc. in multiple languages (ZH, EN, FR, ES, PT, DE, IT, TR, HI, NL. Partial support for JA, KO, AR, SV). Packages available at: https://www.nuget.org/profiles/Recognizers.Text, https://www.npmjs.com/~recognizers.text
CsvHelper - Library to help reading and writing CSV files
nlquery - Parser for end-user search-like queries and rule-based named entity recognition (NER) in context of tabular dataset schema.
Ooze - This package provides simple mechanism for applying filters, sorters, paging to your IQueryable<T> queries.