ata
tauri
ata | tauri | |
---|---|---|
7 | 470 | |
269 | 77,588 | |
- | 1.2% | |
6.5 | 9.8 | |
3 days ago | about 15 hours ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
ata
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Ask HN: What are some of the best ChatGPT Clients out there?
> My main gripe with it though is that the actual interface is quite limited, and I don't like having to navigate to the site every time I want to use it.
https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata. Written in Rust. Does streaming responses and supports Emacs keyboard shortcuts. That's it. All that's needed for quickly looking up things.
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Ask HN: How are you using GPT to be productive?
- Checkout definitions. I have a small tool (https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata) available on a keyboard shortcut and use it to quickly checkout definitions for words when I come across a word that I don't know.
- Show HN: Ask the Terminal Anything (ATA) – ChatGPT in the Terminal
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ata: Ask the Terminal Anything - OpenAI GPT in the terminal
As a little side-note, it actually involved some hacking to get the output printing correct because it appeared that the API sometimes responds denotes a newline by two tokens (["\", "n"]) and sometimes by one token (["\n"]). In the playground (https://platform.openai.com/playground), they convert the two token version to a single token, so that's what ata does too (details in https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata/pull/6). My guess is that this is basically a bug in the model which they manually fixed in the Playground and ChatGPT front ends.
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Running GPT in the terminal for extra productivity
ChatGPT made my work more productive, but I was having a bit of a struggle with the browser, timeouts and slow responses, and the lack of keyboard shortcuts. That's why I made a terminal application: https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata. You can download it for free in the releases section or build it yourself from source. I'm using it daily and hope it is useful for people here too
- Show HN: OpenAI GPT in the Terminal
tauri
- Ask HN: Best stack for building a desktop app?
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Tauri CRUD Boilerplate
Hi, dear Tauri! Long time no see. I published my first post, Developing a Desktop Application via Rust and NextJS. The Tauri Way almost a year ago. Since then, Tauri has become stronger. I'm happy about that! And now, I am very pleased to make a useful contribution to the Tauri community. As a full-stack developer, I frequently face situations where I need to start a DB-based UI project as fast as possible. It's stressful if I need to start the project from 100% scratch. I prefer to keep some boilerplates on hand, which will save me time and nerves and will be the subject of this article.
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Show HN: Floro – Visual Version Control for static assets and strings
Hey Thanks!
Just electron & vite. I might actually migrate off electron, Tauri (https://tauri.app/) seems to be getting more stable and it's gotten great reviews.
I think this is the boilerplate I used though https://github.com/cawa-93/vite-electron-builder.
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3D and 2D: Testing out my cross-platform graphics engine
Well the great thing about WebAssembly is that you can port QT or anything else to be at a layer below -- thanks to WebAssembly Interface Types[0] and the Component Model specification that works underneath that.
To over-simplify, the Component Model manages language interop, and WIT constrains the boundaries with interfaces.
IMO the problem here is defining a 90% solution for most window, tab, button, etc management, then building embeddings in QT, Flutter/Skia, and other lower level engines. Getting a good cross-platform way of doing data passing, triggering re-renders, serializing window state is probably the meat of the interesting work.
On top of that, you really need great UX. This is normally where projects fall short -- why should I use this solution instead of something like Tauri[2] which is excellent or Electron?
[0]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/blob/main/des...
[1]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/blob/main/des...
[2]: https://tauri.app/
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Interview with Colin Lienard, Founder of GitLight
Welcome to the 2nd episode of our series “Building with Tauri”, where we chat with developers who build amazing projects and products using Tauri.
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Building W-9 Crafter
Tauri seemed like the "thing" I should switch to because everybody loves Rust (heh), and because it ships significantly smaller apps.
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Tauri + React + ShadcnUI
First of all, I will be using npm as my package manager but feel free to use whatever you prefer. Find more info here.
- Slint 1.5: Embracing Android, Improving Live-Preview, and Pythonic Slint
- Shoes makes building little graphical programs for Mac, Windows, Linux simple
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Tauri - Rust, Js and Native Apps
Today I'm talking about Tauri! Do you know all the various tools that allow you to develop native applications starting from web languages? They often need an intermediate compilation, in the middle of which you end up encountering various problems not always transparent and directly solvable with a language mostly detached from native development. On the other hand, there's still the ease of developing attractive and easily usable interfaces, which are more difficult to develop with low level languages.
What are some alternatives?
gptel - A simple LLM client for Emacs
Wails - Create beautiful applications using Go
gpt-anywhere - Use GPT anywhere with just one shortcut. Available for Mac, Windows, and Linux. Over 1,500 downloads.
neutralinojs - Portable and lightweight cross-platform desktop application development framework
gpt-generated-commit-messages - Commit and push with one step and ChatGPT generated commit message
dioxus - Fullstack GUI library for web, desktop, mobile, and more.
jinglebells - GPT-4 plays jingle bells in a platform-agnostic way via golang
Electron - :electron: Build cross-platform desktop apps with JavaScript, HTML, and CSS
hey-chatgpt-cli - Hey is a powerful chatbot for the command line CLI that uses ChatGPT to generate commands based on natural language input
egui - egui: an easy-to-use immediate mode GUI in Rust that runs on both web and native
gpt-generated-commit-messa
iced - A cross-platform GUI library for Rust, inspired by Elm