architect
tape
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architect | tape | |
---|---|---|
13 | 17 | |
2,492 | 5,757 | |
0.6% | 0.1% | |
8.7 | 8.5 | |
7 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
architect
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Cloudflare Sippy: Incrementally Migrate Data from AWS S3 to Reduce Egress Fees
I had been running dockeri.co with https://arc.codes/ for pennies a month.
Then, one month, I got a ~$500 bill out of no where.
Docker had changed an api causing my service to return 5xx errors all month. Each error was individually logged to CloudWatch - which racked up a ~$500 bill.
I moved to Cloudflare Workers that day and haven’t moved back.
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Show HN: Formula8.ai – A formula-based approach to AI prompts
We use https://github.com/architect/architect to test, provision and deploy the functional web app via GitHub Actions (…whenever they work ;). For the UI/UX we work with https://tailwindui.com and paid them for their great work.
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Tools like Architect (arc.codes) for AWS serverless apps?
I use https://arc.codes/ for deploying to AWS Lambda/API Gateway. It does a really good job with Remix and NestJS and is easy enough. I like that all I have to do is give a very simple config, and it builds the apps, zips the function code, uploads all my static assets, and then generates and deploys the CloudFormation. I am curious to migrate off as I do have to do some workarounds and it doesn't seem to have a ton of traction.
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Node.js 20 is now available
Not sure why this is downvoted, Fastify is quite popular and the 'generator for everything' approach of Koa didn't really take off.
Architect serverless (https://arc.codes) is pretty good for serverless.
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⚡️Serverless Frameworks for 2023
Architect is a heavily opinionated framework for building FWA's, Functional Web Apps. It uses AWS SAM under the hood but provides a layer on top with simplified abstractions that lets developers define and use AWS infrastructure without necessarily knowing what service is backing their "events" construct.
- What’s your favorite backend framework and why?
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Managed Server for NodeJS?
I work for vercel but I highly recommend a host like us because we make it a lot easier to manage a lambda environment and being a lot more to the table (cdn, edge functions, etc). If you want to go your own I really like architect https://arc.codes too. It really depends on your traffic and application patterns but cold starts can be virtually nil.
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I made a "game" to find words that are not repos on NPM, yet. It's harder than you think and surprisingly addictive.
It uses: - Remix for the frontend - Architect for the backend
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How to Use Source Maps in TypeScript Lambda Functions (with Benchmarks)
Alternately, use Architect. Architect is a 3rd party developer experience that builds on top of AWS SAM. Architect includes a TypeScript plugin.
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Tools for testing Functional Web Apps
For us at Begin and Architect, tape has been in use for several years. tape has a stable and straightforward API, routine maintenance updates, and outputs TAP, making it really versatile. While TAP is legible, it's not the most human-readable format. Fortunately, several TAP reporters can help display results for developers. Until recently, Begin's TAP reporter of choice was tap-spec. Sadly tap-spec wasn't kept up to date and npm began reporting vulnerabilities.
tape
- Having deps is a good thing, and disk space is infinite and free
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Express API Testing
Last but not least important are ava, uvu and tape; they are a really light and fast test runners.
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Unit testing: What to use, and how?
A more minimalist approach is this tape module and the TAP protocol. https://www.npmjs.com/package/tape
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Straight talk: Salary discussion thread
OK will do. Do you have any tips on finding a suitable project? Ideally I was hoping to to contribute to a piece of software that I actually use/know/like/want to improve. Given that, and my area of expertise, I had shortlisted Signal Desktop, and Tape.
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Find component by display name when the component is stateless functional, with Enzyme
Reactjs I have the following components: // Hello.jsexport default (React) => ({name}) => { return ( Hello {name ? name : 'Stranger'}! )}// App.jsimport createHello from './Hello'export default (React) => () => { const Hello = createHello(React) const helloProps = { name: 'Jane' } return ( )}// index.jsimport React from 'react'import { render } from 'react-dom'import createApp from './App'const App = createApp(React)render( , document.getElementById('app')) And I want to set up a test to see if the App component contains one Hello component. I tried the following, using Tape and Enzyme: import createApp from './App'import React from 'react'import test from 'tape'import { shallow } from 'enzyme'test('App component test', (assert) => { const App = createApp(React) const wrapper = shallow() assert.equal(wrapper.find('Hello').length === 1, true)}) But the result was that the length property of the find result was equal to 0, when I was expecting it to be equal to 1. So, how do I find my Hello component? Answer link : https://codehunter.cc/a/reactjs/find-component-by-display-name-when-the-component-is-stateless-functional-with-enzyme
- Nobody at Facebook has worked on Jest for years
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Tools for testing Functional Web Apps
For us at Begin and Architect, tape has been in use for several years. tape has a stable and straightforward API, routine maintenance updates, and outputs TAP, making it really versatile. While TAP is legible, it's not the most human-readable format. Fortunately, several TAP reporters can help display results for developers. Until recently, Begin's TAP reporter of choice was tap-spec. Sadly tap-spec wasn't kept up to date and npm began reporting vulnerabilities.
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Chaijs.com just let their domain expire
I really enjoy Ava [1] or anything assert-tape-like [2]. "uvu" [3] is getting a lot of love lately, but it's very feature limited and much of it's touted advantages are at the detriment to feature set.
[1] https://github.com/avajs/ava
[2] https://github.com/substack/tape
[3] https://github.com/lukeed/uvu
Jest is great for front-end (or full stack integration) testing, but I feel it's specialized for that use-case and doesn't always play nice with backend/middle-tier testing needs.
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Advanced Roadmap for React.js developers
-Jest -React testing library -Enzyme -Sinon -Mocha -Chai -AVA -Tape
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The React roadmap for beginners you never knew you needed.
Tape
What are some alternatives?
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML
jest - Delightful JavaScript Testing.
ARC-Game - The Abstraction and Reasoning Corpus made into a web game
tap - Test Anything Protocol tools for node
aws-lambda-power-tuning - AWS Lambda Power Tuning is an open-source tool that can help you visualize and fine-tune the memory/power configuration of Lambda functions. It runs in your own AWS account - powered by AWS Step Functions - and it supports three optimization strategies: cost, speed, and balanced.
ava - Node.js test runner that lets you develop with confidence 🚀
node-source-map-support - Adds source map support to node.js (for stack traces)
mocha - ☕️ simple, flexible, fun javascript test framework for node.js & the browser
aws-sam-cli - CLI tool to build, test, debug, and deploy Serverless applications using AWS SAM
hyperapp - 1kB-ish JavaScript framework for building hypertext applications
deno-mixed-runtimes - Begin app
AVA