Dapper
enquirer
Our great sponsors
Dapper | enquirer | |
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9 | 18 | |
13,651 | 7,498 | |
- | 0.7% | |
5.1 | 4.9 | |
about 3 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
C# | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Dapper
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Working with ListView in Windows Forms
Even those the old backend code to read from a database would work, the code was rewritten using Dapper. Had to add two column aliases in SQL SELECT statements and everything worked.
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Import data from a database with Dapper and SpreadsheetLight to Excel in C#
In this article learn how to create Excel spreadsheet documents from reading data from two SQL-Server table from a modified version of Microsoft NorthWind database using NuGet package Dapper and SpreadSheetLight to create and populate the spreadsheet files.
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Multiple Result Sets for SQL-Server (C#) including Dapper
Learn how to read reference table from SQL-Server using a single method. What is shown provides an efficient way to either use a connection, command objects to read data via a SqlDataReader for conventional work using methods from SqlClient and also Dapper which requires two lines of code to read data and one line of code to store data into list.
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BREAKING!! NPM package ‘ua-parser-js’ with more than 7M weekly download is compromised
https://www.nuget.org/packages/Newtonsoft.Json/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/AutoMapper/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/Dapper/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/FluentValidation/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/FluentAssertions/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/NUnit/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/xunit/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/YamlDotNet/ https://www.nuget.org/packages/Moq/ That is simply not true. Mature c# projects purposely maintain no downstream dependencies and is they do, it's to a major reputable lib. See for yourself - these are staple third party packages commonly used. Anything dependency starting with System or NETStandard is Microsoft maintained.
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How to Build a Blazor CRUD Application with Dapper
In this blog post, we are going to discuss how to bind the Syncfusion Blazor DataGrid with a database using Dapper and perform CRUD operations. To demonstrate this, we are going to create a bug tracker database table in MS SQL Server and perform CRUD operations in that table in a Blazor server-side application.
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A couple of questions about dotnet from a Java developer :)
Entity Framework Core StackExchange/Dapper
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Requests per second 12 requests per second – Realistic Python web frameworks
Like there wouldn't be anything in between /s
There are "simple ORMs" that only map results of SQL queries to objects. They do not provide a magic query API - which is the source of most problems. I don't do Python, but for .NET there is Dapper https://github.com/StackExchange/Dapper, you can have a look what I mean. You write the SQL query, explicitly execute it, the library maps the results of that query into objects (it's C#, so you have to declare the class. In Python I'd imagine it would create the object for you)
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Why would I even bother using Dapper?
To add some differences: EF tracks object state in an instance of a context, Dapper does not. Dapper is strictly for object mapping (taking the output of a query and mapping it onto an object). This makes Dapper far easier to implement, versus EF’s DbContext configuration. Due to the lack of tracking and slimmer wrapping, it’s also faster. Things get really great when you have multiple complex objects and multiple result sets. It takes a lot of boring boilerplate code out of your code.
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Plans for Entity Framework Core 6.0 revealed as Microsoft admits it is unlikely to match Dapper for performance
Just take a look at this Dapper 2.0 feature that's been festering for months years.
enquirer
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For achieving the widest adoption among Windows users, which commonly used scripting language would be best suited for a CLI program?%
Although I'm happy there is a way to bundle Node.js apps with support for pnpm, and for a modern-ish version of Node.js, it's somewhat slow in my experience to build locally. Interactivity doesn't have the greatest ecosystem there, especially with TypeScript. Best library I've found is Enquirer.
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💡 Generate package.json From GitHub
{ "name": "@jonschlinkert/omit-deep", "description": "Recursively omit specified keys from an object", "tags": ["object", "deep", "remove", "omit"], "version": "0.3.0", "author": "Jon Schlinkert (https://github.com/jonschlinkert)", "repository": "jonschlinkert/omit-deep", "bugs": "https://github.com/jonschlinkert/omit-deep/issues", "license": "MIT" }
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Using generators to improve developer productivity
In case you need to ask for user input, optionally you can use a prompt file. This is very useful to customize the output of the generator. Prompts are defined using a library named Enquirer.
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NPM Vulnerability Discussion on Twitter
> I don't fully understand why packages like this are so popular.
It actually works like this: Author X develops `iseven`, `isodd`, etc. No one really downloads such packages. Author X then develops `importantPackage` which does do something useful developers out here download. Now `iseven`, `isodd` are downloaded alongside `importantPackage`.
My point is, we should recognize certain NPM authors as toxic, but I guess "freedom of speech/code" stops us from doing so. Example of such an author: https://github.com/jonschlinkert/
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Call for Deno module ideas
something like enquirer
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I will pay you cash to delete your npm module
You're thinking of Jon Schlinkert, publisher of 1435 packages on npm.
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NPM – is-even, 160k weekly downloads
It's insanely funny to me that these packages exist while one of his bigger projects (https://github.com/enquirer/enquirer) lists the following reason under "why use it":
> Lightweight - Only one dependency, the excellent ansi-colors by Brian Woodward.
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BREAKING!! NPM package ‘ua-parser-js’ with more than 7M weekly download is compromised
It's written by this guy, who shits out micro libraries by the hundreds. He moved the project to another user under the pretense that he was learning to program back then, but a lot of his stuff is similarly inconsequential micro libraries.
- NPM Audit: Broken by Design
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Git Graft: A NPX Tool & Git Hook in TypeScript & Node
Enquirer
What are some alternatives?
LINQ to DB - Linq to database provider.
prompts - ❯ Lightweight, beautiful and user-friendly interactive prompts
PetaPoco - Official PetaPoco, A tiny ORM-ish thing for your POCO's
oclif - CLI for generating, building, and releasing oclif CLIs. Built by Salesforce.
Entity Framework - EF Core is a modern object-database mapper for .NET. It supports LINQ queries, change tracking, updates, and schema migrations.
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
MongoDB Repository pattern implementation
deno-puppeteer - A port of puppeteer running on Deno
NPoco - Simple microORM that maps the results of a query onto a POCO object. Project based on Schotime's branch of PetaPoco
ua-parser-js - UAParser.js - Free & open-source JavaScript library to detect user's Browser, Engine, OS, CPU, and Device type/model. Runs either in browser (client-side) or node.js (server-side).
NHibernate - NHibernate Object Relational Mapper
terminalizer - 🦄 Record your terminal and generate animated gif images or share a web player