Transcrypt
wtfjs
Our great sponsors
Transcrypt | wtfjs | |
---|---|---|
16 | 94 | |
2,808 | 33,956 | |
0.4% | - | |
3.2 | 0.0 | |
9 months ago | 5 months ago | |
Python | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | Do What The F*ck You Want To Public 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.
Transcrypt
- Ask HN: Why don't browsers just build a non-JS interpreter?
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How does PyScript actually work?
This is the primary difference between Pyodide and projects like Transcrypt or Brython: rather than transpiling to JavaScript, you get the real-deal CPython interpreter running client-side in the user's browser. There are a few things that don't work out of the box, since CPython usually runs on a computer and the Browser environment has some unique restrictions (lack of low-level access to networking, for one), but most things do just work.
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alternatives to the javascript ecosystem
In the past, I've personally used GWT to transpile Java to JavaScript in order to share some complex code modules that we needed to use on both the server and client for an enterprise application. In more recent years, I've been using Transcrypt to develop React/MUI applications that are coded in Python. So I'm able to use JS libraries that are proven to work great in a web browser, but use my preferred language to code to the API of those libraries. This approach is certainly not for everyone, but it can be a viable option in some cases.
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What's your Python story?
I now use Python everywhere. Desktop (PySide), embedded (MicroPython), web dev (React via Transcrypt), mobile (Kivy), and just general scripting. I love the versatility of Python, the ease of reading it without the visual cruft of other languages, and the availability of existing libraries that do just about everything you can think of. I also agree with the OP on the welcoming attitude of the Python community. The fact that Python is used in so many different areas leads to many new learning experiences when talking to other Python developers.
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After tearing my hair out writing JavaScript the last few days how close are we to Python in the browser?
Transcrypt is pretty usable for this.
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What do you guys use python for?
Transcrypt transpiles Python into JavaScript in the same way that TypeScript gets transpiled into JavaScript. It lets Python code word with JavaScript libraries that can then be run in a web browser.
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Graphs in Python web app
There are options for writing Python and transpiling it into JavaScript but, frankly, they suck (https://www.transcrypt.org/).
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React JSX vs react with HMTL
Lol, I'll tell you but you're not gonna like it - I write React applications in Python using a Python-to-JS transpiler called Transcrypt, and the source needs to be valid lintable Python code, so no JSX.
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What is the best way to parse python code?
The Python AST module exists for this purpose and works by tokenizing individual pieces of the source code. It's also how transpilers such as Transcrypt work their magic to convert Python code to other languages.
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We've been lied to: JavaScript is fast
https://github.com/qquick/Transcrypt
wtfjs
- Milyen hasznos Github repokat ismertek?
- doNotDespairEverythingIsAhead
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Companies: We can't find any good candidates!!! Also companies:
Me in the interview: "Generally, no, a variable can only be assigned one numeric value at a time. However, Javascript is famous for unpredictable behaviors in variable comparison statements, for instance [] == ![]. There's actually a whole library built around documenting this type of behavior this for comedic value, and other more serious libraries geared towards solving the problem. So it's possible that some obscure variable assignment scenario would result in that line evaluating as true, but it's not something you'd expect to encounter in the real world. This has gotten a lot better with typescript and es2022, but still something you need to watch for a bit."
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“Go is hard to justify unless at massive scale”
I do see that point of view, didn't think of that, there are some aspects of go which are a bit weird if you never touched lower abstraction languages, yet once you learn what they are, you are all set and you can code in anything. go has the least amount of gotchas I have seen in any programming language. compare it with loads of the weird stuff javascript does https://github.com/denysdovhan/wtfjs and go is like heavenly lol
- Typescript is polishing a turd
- 3 < 2 < 1 === true
- Show HN: Whatdoesthiscodedo.com – AI explanations for other people’s code
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Learning Frontend/React is the new rat race.
Its a very poorly designed language. Its syntax and semantics are often confusing and unpredictable. There is no well defined mental model of how constructs work in this language.
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🚀 8 GitHub Repositories to learn JavaScript
WTF JS
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Awesome Github Repos to Master JAVASCRIPT
😎 A great guide to Javascript that is both simple and wonderful, but also difficult and fun that seems like bullshit. -> wtfjs
What are some alternatives?
brython - Brython (Browser Python) is an implementation of Python 3 running in the browser
Power-Fx - Power Fx low-code programming language
pyodide - Pyodide is a Python distribution for the browser and Node.js based on WebAssembly
jsfuck - Write any JavaScript with 6 Characters: []()!+
sqlglot - Python SQL Parser and Transpiler
html-over-the-wire - HTML over the wire: List of frameworks which receive HTML snippets from the server.
python-functions
wtfpython - What the f*ck Python? 😱
krustlet - Kubernetes Rust Kubelet
proposal-shadowrealm - ECMAScript Proposal, specs, and reference implementation for Realms
jupyterlite - Wasm powered Jupyter running in the browser 💡
typegoose - Typegoose - Define Mongoose models using TypeScript classes.