Avo
RailsAdmin
Our great sponsors
Avo | RailsAdmin | |
---|---|---|
48 | 9 | |
1,346 | 7,849 | |
4.3% | 0.2% | |
9.7 | 7.5 | |
1 day ago | 27 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 2.5 Generic | 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.
Avo
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Show HN: Build your startup or side project faster with these SaaS templates
Avo is a great content management system for Rails. I'm a paying customer. https://avohq.io/
Quality is often much better with these kinds of templates and frameworks, because the creators often can make better default choices.
For example, Avo (https://avohq.io) and Bullet Train (https://bullettrain.co/) are IMHO both much higher quality out of the box than what a typical intermediate Rails developer could accomplish in months of full time learning and coding.
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Mastering Rails Web Navigation with link_to and button_to Helpers - Part 2
<%= link_to(@car) do %> <%= @car.name %> -- Check this car! <% end %> cars/1"> Tesla -- Check this car! <%= link_to "https://avohq.io/" do %> AvoHQ - The Best Rails Guide <% end %> https://avohq.io/"> AvoHQ - The Best Rails Guide
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Ready System with a Modern Stack and Many Features Using Ruby 3.2, Rails 7.0 and Avo 2
Access the Avo, and click on Sign Up. After completing registration, click on your profile icon and select Subscriptions, then Choose a plan, choose the Pro version and click on Start 30 day trial. The system URL is not required, click Subscribe. Now you will have your key to use the Avo 2 Pro version for 30 days.
- The Open Source Ruby on Rails SaaS Framework
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Experience using Retool and Ruby on Rails
But there's another alternative for Ruby on Rails. This is a shameless plug, but why don't you try Avo?
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Ask HN: What would be your stack if you are building an MVP today?
Nothing really beats Rails. Use something like Jumpstart (jumpstartrails.com) and Avo (https://avohq.io) and you scaffold a full consumer-ready app in literally a few hours.
The thing that bugs me the most with Next.JS and the whole JAMStack movement is that, yeah, you get from "git clone" to deployed on Vercel in two minutes, but if you need to create real app features like a sturdy admin, accounts, authorization, proper asset management, CI/CD, it takes a whole lotta time. I'm not even touching the most common app features.
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Show HN: Refine v3.97 – Open-source React framework for building CRUD apps
Hey. I'm Adrian, author of Avo. Avo is similar to Refine but for Ruby on Rails.
It helps developers create CRUD-like applications such as internal tools, admin panels, Content Management Systems and user-facing apps.
I love seeing more and more movement in this space.
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Write admin tools from day one
Laravel has Nova, Django has Django Admin, and now, Rails has Avo.
*I am the author of Avo
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How to bundle assets in a Rails engine
One approach we had with avo-hq/avo was to precompile the assets before we publish a new version and serve them as static assets to the parent app.
RailsAdmin
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Ask HN: Why aren't Django Admin style dashboards popular in other frameworks?
Like most things, it's probably a combination of things.
The Django Admin existed before Django publicly existed. That meant that once anyone started using Django they knew that they should constrain their use of Django in certain ways so that the Django Admin would work with their usage. Features that would be added to Django would be built with the Django Admin in mind.
Many tools like Flask or FastAPI don't have an opinionated model layer like Django. Without that, you can't really create an admin interface programatically. People could be storing their data in any sort of fashion anywhere. How would one build an admin system for something like Flask or FastAPI where there's no convention around how people set up data access? A lot of frameworks out there don't tell you "access your data in this way" or "this is how users will be authenticated." Without those two things, it's hard to really create an admin system.
There are similar systems available for some frameworks, but since they aren't part of the core framework, they don't get the same attention. Someone creates it, but it doesn't have the kind of community buy-in that sustains it. One of the odd things about Django is that the admin system is under `django.contrib` which indicated that they didn't intend for it to be in the core of Django forever, but that's not really how `django.contrib` ended up. It continued to be a core part of Django maintained as part of the framework.
Like I said, there are admin dashboards available in other frameworks like RailsAdmin (https://github.com/railsadminteam/rails_admin) or Core Admin for .NET (https://github.com/edandersen/core-admin) and I'm sure there's more. However, both Rails and .NET provide most of what Django provides (and a lot more than most frameworks). Rails and .NET both have a default data access ORM that a majority of people using those frameworks tend to use. .NET has built-in authentication/authorization so the admin can work off that. Rails doesn't have auth, but RailsAdmin uses some plugins.
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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 didn’t 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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railstart-niceadmin support more features
- [rails_admin](https://github.com/railsadminteam/rails_admin)
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railstart-niceadmin release now!Backend management system based on Bootstrap 5 and NiceAdmin and Rails 7
rails_admin
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Admin Framework for Rails
https://github.com/railsadminteam/rails_admin is very popular and i find it very easy to use.
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🤷♀️ The easiest way to monitor your app in production is email?
It's really helpful to have a way to track what's going on with your application in production, things like: number of user sign ups, status of user accounts, number of X new database entries etc. Out of the box dashboards like Rails Admin are great but only go so far, eventually you will want significant customizations.
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An Easy Admin Panel - Rails 6
Having an admin panel in your Rails application is honestly, to me, the best thing to do when it comes to keeping track of your users and giving them permissions. Finding out how to have an admin panel though, that was tough, mainly because I wasn’t searching for the right thing. The rails_admin gem, so simple but can control so much! The installation and usage is very simple depending on what you are trying to use it on. I should probably tell you, I am using devise with the user having a boolean attribute called admin.
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Ask HN: What is an easy way to create web UIs as a back end dev/data scientist?
Check out Retool: https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/1564
A wswig for internal UI/dashboards has a lot of value for companies that don't have a dedicated internal tools team.
My company had an internal tools teams at one point but it got killed because of other business priorities.
We use https://github.com/sferik/rails_admin, that still requires development time and frontend knowledge, but the framework is terrible.
https://marmelab.com/react-admin/ is much better but also required development time and frontend knowledge.
What are some alternatives?
ActiveAdmin - The administration framework for Ruby on Rails applications.
Administrate - A Rails engine that helps you put together a super-flexible admin dashboard.
Trestle - A modern, responsive admin framework for Ruby on Rails
motor-admin-rails - Low-code Admin panel and Business intelligence Rails engine. No DSL - configurable from the UI. Rails Admin, Active Admin, Blazer modern alternative.
Wallaby - Autocomplete the resourceful actions and views for ORMs for admin interface and other purposes.
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.
Upmin Admin - Framework for creating powerful admin backends with minimal effort in Ruby on Rails.
Godmin - Admin framework for Rails 5+
Forest Admin - 💎 Ruby on Rails agent for Forest Admin to integrate directly to your existing Ruby on Rails backend application.