ActiveAdmin
Trestle
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ActiveAdmin | Trestle | |
---|---|---|
22 | 4 | |
9,430 | 1,896 | |
0.1% | 0.7% | |
9.3 | 5.4 | |
7 days ago | 28 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
ActiveAdmin
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Ask HN: Why aren't Django Admin style dashboards popular in other frameworks?
Can you clarify what's the "tremendous value" you're getting out of the Django admin?
At Heii On-Call https://heiioncall.com/ we are using Active Admin https://activeadmin.info/ for Ruby on Rails, which seems quite similar to the Django admin. In my experience, it's mostly useful as a fairly basic read-only view of what's in the database. In Rails, it's so easy to whip together a custom view that we tend to do that, and the Active Admin is nice to have but I wouldn't say "tremendous value".
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Top 5 Ruby on Rails Gems
Github Link : https://github.com/activeadmin/activeadmin
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View code coverage (active_admin and orther .arb file)
for those who know [https://activeadmin.info/](https://activeadmin.info/) it uses a file format [https://github.com/activeadmin/arbre](https://github.com/activeadmin/arbre)
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Show HN: Build Ruby on Rails apps 10x faster โ Avo
Very neat! My first thought was that this was a competitor to https://bullettrain.co/.
Looking into it a bit more, it seems more aimed at building admin panels than whole apps. I guess it competes against tools like https://activeadmin.info/?
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From partials to ViewComponents: writing reusable front-end code in Rails
We briefly considered migrating to a full-grown Rails admin interface, such as ActiveAdmin, RailsAdmin, Administrate or Avo. We especially liked Avo which is built on a very modern stack similar to ours (Tailwind + Hotwire + ViewComponents). In the end, we didnโt go this route as we found some of the options a bit too restrictive (even though Avo is very flexible) and we did not feel like trying to amend it to our needs. For example, Avo renders forms in a 1-field-per-row layout while we wanted something more similar to the Tailwind UI Stacked form layout. Nevertheless, we found a great deal of inspiration in the Avo code and its design principles.
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Ask HN: Easiest way to build a CRUD app
I second Rails. It's incredibly polished and has really good gems to speed up dev. ActiveAdmin is a great gem if you need to quickly make an admin dashboard. It was useful when I had a small consultancy.
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Admin Framework for Rails
See an example: https://activeadmin.info It provides a fast way to create back office functionality.
Until recently, my default Admin was ActiveAdmin library. But I found it a bit challenging onboarding new engineers with Inherited Resources gem. Also, a lot is changed on the frontend side with webpack, and now esbuild. I would like to use TailwindCSS to simplify the development. IMHO, ActiveAdmin legacy makes it way more complicated for customization to a new project.
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We built an open-source platform (3k stars on GitHub) for building & deploying react based internal tools.
[1] https://activeadmin.info/
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Stop Building a General Purpose API to Power Your Own Front End
I can't speak much about Rails, as I've only played with it. But I've used a lot Django in the past.
Regarding the Django admin (in rails you have ActiveAdmin[1]) think if it just as a glorified database explorer. It is an internal tool for developers, product managers and maybe for your support team. It is in no way thought to be used by end users. Every attempt I've seen to use it as such was a catastrophic failure.
With Django, if you know plain HTML and CSS, with the tools I've mentioned in the comment you're responding to, you can build almost anything... For example, let's say you need a highly interactive client side table.... you can always just attach a Vue or a React component for it by using Unpoly compilers [2].
I'd say this stack is less useful the more your app needs to work fully offline... but if you don't have that constraint... I cannot think of anything that can't be built faster and safer.
Trestle
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Show HN: Build Ruby on Rails apps 10x faster โ Avo
Looks like it fits a similar bill to many existing rails admin frameworks, e.g. https://trestle.io/
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Admin Framework for Rails
Trestle
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Motor Admin - a modern Admin UI and Business Intelligence Rails engine
Only semi-related anecdote here: I know they're not sexy but they're sexy in terms of value: they just work and get out of the way. The time they save I can spend time making other things sexy that drive business value. There's also https://github.com/TrestleAdmin/trestle which is sexier than the mainstays, but I haven't used it in production myself.
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Rails Admin or Active Admin?
Just want to put Trestle in here.
What are some alternatives?
RailsAdmin - RailsAdmin is a Rails engine that provides an easy-to-use interface for managing your data
Administrate - A Rails engine that helps you put together a super-flexible admin dashboard.
Avo - Build Ruby on Rails apps 10x faster
go-admin - A golang framework helps gopher to build a data visualization and admin panel in ten minutes
ActiveScaffold - Save time and headaches, and create a more easily maintainable set of pages, with ActiveScaffold. ActiveScaffold handles all your CRUD (create, read, update, delete) user interface needs, leaving you more time to focus on more challenging (and interesting!) problems.
Forest Admin - ๐ Ruby on Rails agent for Forest Admin to integrate directly to your existing Ruby on Rails backend application.
daisyui - ๐ผ ๐ผ ๐ผ ๐ผ ๐ผ โThe most popular, free and open-source Tailwind CSS component library
Typus
Godmin - Admin framework for Rails 5+