Ancestry
Bridgetown
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Ancestry | Bridgetown | |
---|---|---|
6 | 33 | |
3,673 | 1,077 | |
- | 2.1% | |
5.8 | 8.7 | |
about 2 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | 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.
Ancestry
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SQL help me please with multi nested childs
Making some guesses about what you’re trying to do, you’ll have to alter the table schema to do this efficiently. The ‘ancestry’ gem (https://github.com/stefankroes/ancestry ) can do the migration and update your parent_id-based data to enable all its cool features.
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Active record: how to recursively load children of children of children in one query?
Another gem that stores trees and can get a whole sub tree with one query is ancestry: https://github.com/stefankroes/ancestry
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Hierarchical data
Ancestry gem is what I always use for hiarichle data structures: https://github.com/stefankroes/ancestry If I understand what your looking for, it does pretty much exactly what you want.
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How to query Ancestry fast
Ancestry is a great library to organize models in a tree structure.
- Find all objects of a chain of associations on the same table
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26 most popular Ruby/Rails repositories on GitHub in July-August 2020
Ancestry is a gem that allows the records of a Ruby on Rails ActiveRecord model to be organized as a tree structure (or hierarchy). It employs the materialized path pattern and exposes all the standard tree structure relations (ancestors, parent, root, children, siblings, descendants), allowing all of them to be fetched in a single SQL query. 3,136 stars by now
Bridgetown
- Bridgetown: Progressive site generator and fullstack framework, powered by Ruby
- Progressive site generator and fullstack framework, powered by Ruby
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Do we really need variadics?
I'm using bridgetown because I like sitting on the bleeding edge, its basically a newer Jekyll which I would recommend checking out too. Bridgetown has a great modern dev experience but its missing some of the ecosystem from Jekyll. Not a problem for me because I'm really comfortable with Ruby.
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Why write technical content on a blog and not only on social media
If you want to have a different UI or your blog to look in a very specific way I recommend using Jekyll or Bridgetown.
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How would I make and deploy a simple website
If I wanted to post a simple website today I would look into Jekyll. There are a ton of articles and answers to common questions etc. It itself is written in Ruby but using it will not likely help you to learn Ruby. One-step in the direction of learning Ruby and getting a simple website could be Bridgetown. This will start you down a path of learning Ruby and not Rails. We use Bridgetown for our company site at Flagrant.
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How to use View Transitions in Hotwire Turbo
In the Hotwire Turbo world specifically, several discussions about integrating transition animations also took place and a few promising approaches emerged, namely the Turn project or the transitions in Bridgetown. There is also a chapter in the Noel Rappin’s Modern Front-End book and an interesting article but overall, frankly, this topic still fells somewhat early-stage and exploratory.
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Help with picking a framework for a personal website
https://www.bridgetownrb.com/ static site generator. Can be linked with prism of you want a kind of panel to add new articles.
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How to integrate a static website to Rails app
FYI. I used Bridgetown as a static site generator recently and rather enjoyed it. https://github.com/bridgetownrb/bridgetown.
- [student help] Using Rails as front end. Is it possible?
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how to add a simple blog to my SaaS?
If you’re not adept in that right now you’re unlikely to create a system to support it. I would encourage you to look into Jekyll or Bridgetown.rb as blog systems that support all the SEO bells and whistles without you having to recreate them.
What are some alternatives?
Closure Tree - Easily and efficiently make your ActiveRecord models support hierarchies
Jekyll - :globe_with_meridians: Jekyll is a blog-aware static site generator in Ruby
Awesome Nested Set - An awesome replacement for acts_as_nested_set and better_nested_set.
Middleman - Hand-crafted frontend development
ActsAsTree - ActsAsTree -- Extends ActiveRecord to add simple support for organizing items into parent–children relationships.
Awesome Jekyll - A collection of awesome Jekyll goodies (tools, templates, plugins, guides, etc.)
rails_or - Cleaner syntax for writing OR Query in Rails 5, 6. And also add #or support to Rails 3 and 4.
Directus - The Modern Data Stack 🐰 — Directus is an instant REST+GraphQL API and intuitive no-code data collaboration app for any SQL database.
Mongoid Tree - A tree structure for Mongoid documents using the materialized path pattern
Nanoc - A powerful web publishing system
counter_culture - Turbo-charged counter caches for your Rails app.
webgen - webgen is a fast, powerful and extensible static website generator