Stream-Framework
sourcegraph
Stream-Framework | sourcegraph | |
---|---|---|
34 | 69 | |
4,720 | 9,742 | |
- | 1.2% | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
11 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Python | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
Stream-Framework
-
Recommendations for an external messenger integration/API?
I have looked into a getstream.io integration, however it seems that the Ruby SDK is really treated as a second class citizen. There's bugs with the documented API (I'm having issues even creating users and querying users), the usage of the gem is low and there is an open issue since May that no one has even looked at, which doesn't give me hope for long term support.
-
On what side project you guys are working on?
An ultralight social media app with no dependencies that can run on shared web hosting. It's an API like Getstream, so F/E is up to you. I've had a fork of it in production for 2.5 years on a subscription site that generates a small income.
-
Need Advice : Choosing Between Stream and MirrorFly for Chat Implementation
Now, I'm seeking your advice and opinions. If you have experience using Stream or MirrorFly for chat implementation, I'd greatly appreciate any insights you can provide. Here are some questions I have:
-
I need advice and help.
Think about the edge that you can have over thousands other people looking for a job like you. One of the ways to do it – tailor your (even small) experience to the company you are applying to. E.g. Let's take a company like Stream that have an open-source Swift SDK, try to contribute to their SDK, maybe close some `good-first-issue`s here and there, do some documentation improvements, enrich their example app. So that when you feel like you are ready to knock their door – you already have an edge over others – you don't need onboarding (because you already know most of their codebase, you even completed your first few tasks while yet not being employed!)
-
Quoting a user's TOS-breaking content in ban messages have led to erroneous actions against mods in the past, so some subs remove the quote. However, would we be safe to keep the quote in the ban note instead?
This is absolutely absurd. I mean I 100% believe it happens, it's just absurd that the Tier 1 admin bot is this bad.
-
We need to talk about how Reddit handles automated permabans of mods
I too firmly believe the tier 1 admins are just this program - https://getstream.io/ And reddit doesn't want to admit that humans are not actually reviewing things
- Building a functional Twitter clone in a weekend
-
Building a Site for a community based on shared interests?
Really depends on so many variables, and comes down to knowing the audience. I built a lightweight social network api platform to do a lot of what getstream.io and OSSN does, but the way users engaged with it was nothing like what I expected. One use case, for example, would have been mostly satisfied with WordPress and Mailchimp. Forums are very familiar to people and still used by a lot of "I don't do social media" types. At the risk of making a sweeping generalization, if you have an older target audience they will be happy with a forum. If you have a younger target audience they will prefer the sequential post / react style of interacting, like Discord or Instagram.
- Adding live chat support for Flutter Web
- React Native Stack Suggestions
sourcegraph
-
Ask HN: Who is hiring? (March 2024)
Sourcegraph | REMOTE | Full-Time | Machine Learning Engineer, Developer Advocate, Enterprise Product Manager, Technical Advisor | https://sourcegraph.com
Sourcegraph is a code AI platform that makes it easy to read, write, and fix code–even in big, complex codebases.
We are building Cody, an AI coding assistant that uses code search and code intelligence to help devs quickly understand what's happening in code and generate new code that matches the best practices in your codebase. Cody supports AI-enabled autocompletion, fixing bugs, refactoring, test generation, code explanation, and answering high-level questions. You can read Steve Yegge's post on why Cody's code context engine differentiates it from the fast-moving field of AI dev tools: https://about.sourcegraph.com/blog/cheating-is-all-you-need.
Apply here: https://grnh.se/0572f98b4us
-
Architecture.md (2021)
That's pretty much what https://sourcegraph.com/ are selling, is it not?
-
Tell HN: GitHub is blocking search unless you are logged in
Despite their shitty rug-pull <https://github.com/sourcegraph/sourcegraph/pull/53345>, I do really like Sourcegraph and one doesn't (currently?!) need to be logged in to use it: https://sourcegraph.com/search and they have a handy rewrite pattern such that one can just plug the repo path into the URL for quick searching e.g. https://sourcegraph.com/github.com/JetBrains/intellij-commun...
-
My 2024 AI Predictions
- https://sourcegraph.com is pivoting and building a copilot application (named Cody). This is pretty good, since sourcegraph is great at understanding your code
-
The Curse of Docker
While a readable Dockerfile can work as documentation, there are a few caveats:
* the application needs to be designed to work outside containers (so, no hardcoded URLs, ports, or paths). Also, not directly related to containers, but it's nice if it can be easily compiled in most environments and not just on the base image.
* I still need a way to notify me of updates; if the Dockerfile just wgets a binary, this doesn't help me.
* The Dockerfiles need to be easy to find. Sourcegraph's don't seem to be referenced from the documentation, I had to look through their Github repos to find https://github.com/sourcegraph/sourcegraph/tree/main/docker-... (though most are bazel scripts instead of Dockerfiles, but serve the same purpose)
-
Building Reddit’s Design System on iOS
We use Sourcegraph, which is a tool that searches through code in repositories. We leverage this tool in order to understand the adoption curve of our components across all of Reddit. We have a dashboard for each of the platforms to compare the inclusion of RPL components over legacy components. These insights are helpful for us to make informed decisions on how we continue to drive RPL adoption. We love seeing the green line go up and the red line go down!
-
Launch HN: GitStart (YC S19) – Remote junior devs working on production PRs
SourceGraph: https://github.com/sourcegraph/sourcegraph/pulls?q=is%3Apr+a...
- Sourcegraph is no longer Open Source
What are some alternatives?
django-activity-stream - Generate generic activity streams from the actions on your site. Users can follow any actors' activities for personalized streams.
opengrok - OpenGrok is a fast and usable source code search and cross reference engine, written in Java
informant - An Arch Linux News reader and pacman hook
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools
web - Grow Open Source
Code-Server - VS Code in the browser
Open Food Network - Connect suppliers, distributors and consumers to trade local produce.
theia-apps - Theia applications examples - docker images, desktop apps, packagings
Mattermost - Mattermost is an open source platform for secure collaboration across the entire software development lifecycle..
Vue Storefront - Alokai is a Frontend as a Service solution that simplifies composable commerce. It connects all the technologies needed to build and deploy fast & scalable ecommerce frontends. It guides merchants to deliver exceptional customer experiences quickly and easily.
stream-chat-react - React Chat SDK ➜ Stream Chat 💬
Atheos - A self-hosted browser-based cloud IDE, updated from Codiad IDE