awesome-falsehood
Phoenix
awesome-falsehood | Phoenix | |
---|---|---|
50 | 111 | |
23,045 | 20,600 | |
- | 0.4% | |
7.5 | 9.3 | |
9 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Elixir | ||
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | 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.
awesome-falsehood
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Ask HN: Did you encounter any Leap Year bugs today? How bad was it?
Billing. It always has to be the billing. For a list of all other edge cases, you have: https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood#readme
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24 GitHub repos with 372M views that you can't miss out as a software engineer
Falsehoods Programmers Believe in: https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood
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Why is it still a practice to not allow special characters in name fields?
Also, a list of other falsehood-programmers-believe collections: awesome-falsehood.
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Bjarne Stroustrup Quotes
> I feel like there's a "Fallacies programmers believe about text" that should exist somewhere
I got you covered.
https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood#international...
http://garbled.benhamill.com/2017/04/18/falsehoods-programme...
https://jeremyhussell.blogspot.com/2017/11/falsehoods-progra...
https://wiesmann.codiferes.net/wordpress/archives/30296
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Ask HN: How to handle Asian-style āFamily name firstā when designing interfaces
There's an excellent GitHub repo that lists a lot of common falsehoods regarding names. I'm not sure how useful it'll be to OP, but the repo in general should probably have way more attention than it already does.
https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood#human-identit...
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Facebook must pay $100.000 to Norway each day for violating our right to privacy
A decent list for this about prices and currency https://gist.github.com/rgs/6509585 and the full list of other falsehoods https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood
- Falsehoods Programmers Believe In
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How to organize structs in the code
If you're interested in this sort of thing there's a whole bunch more: https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood
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Store your epoch times as 64-bit floats
It's saddening to see the number of people who critique the idea of storing time as an unsigned integer by immediately responding that that means that times before 1970 cannot exist. This bespeaks of a continuing poor knowledge of the subject, despite all of the "falsehoods that programmers believe about" documentation that has grown up.
* https://github.com/kdeldycke/awesome-falsehood#dates-and-tim...
Microsoft, for one example, has been modelling times as a 64-bit unsigned 100-nanosecond count since 1601 (proleptic-Gregorian proleptic-UTC) for about 30 years, now.
* https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/minwinba...
Daniel J. Bernstein in the late 1990s chose a 0 point for an unsigned count so far back that it pre-dates most estimates of the point of the Big Bang.
* http://cr.yp.to/libtai/tai64.html
1970 is not the mandatory origin for every timescale. (Indeed, in the early years of Unix itself there wasn't even a stable origin for time.) It is not a valid reason for dismissing the idea of storing time as an unsigned integer.
It's also sad to note that the headlined page's first sentence has one of the very falsehoods that programmers believe about time in it.
Phoenix
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Idempotent seeds in Elixir
A standard Phoenix app contains a priv/repo/seeds.exs script file, which populates a database when it is run, so that developers can work with a conveniently prepared environment.
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Ask HN: Did you encounter any Leap Year bugs today? How bad was it?
There was one in the Phoenix Framework (Elixir) about issuing certificates with an invalid end date: https://github.com/phoenixframework/phoenix/issues/5737
Interestingly, Azure had this bug some years ago too leading to an outage. https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/summary-of-windows-az...
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Aplicando MVVM en Phoenix LiveView
Official website: https://www.phoenixframework.org/
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Things I like about Gleam's Syntax
Since you mention Rails, have you seen https://www.phoenixframework.org/
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Building Apps with Tauri and Elixir
Thus, we set out to build a desktop application using a LiveView from the Phoenix Framework in Elixir. For the uninitiated, a LiveView is a process that receives events, updates its state, and renders updates to a page as diffs. The LiveView programming model is declarative: instead of saying āonce event X happens, change Y on the pageā, events in LiveView are regular messages which may cause changes to its state.
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Has anybody compared Phoenix Framwork vs. Blazor?
It seems though like Phoenix is similar like Blazor Server (using web socket), but Phoenix is: SEO friendly (first render is plain html) Light weight, scales well and concurrency is first class Easy to develop (runs a local server so you see live updates) Compiled With auth out of the box https://www.phoenixframework.org/
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Ask HN: Why isn't Phoenix/Elixir more mainstream?
Sorry to hear this. Phoenix v1.7 changed how it structures files in disk and that broke quite some of the getting started material. However, the guides are always kept up to date, so you can give it a try: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/overview.html
You can also see the resources on this page listed by year: https://github.com/phoenixframework/phoenix/blob/main/guides... - the recent launched ones are most likely up to date.
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Emoji Generator with AI
Yes! I love Elixir :) [Phoenix LiveView](https://www.phoenixframework.org/) is really amazing. I feel so fast working in it. I got hooked after watching Chris McCord's ['Build a real-time Twitter clone in 15 minutes'](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZvmYaFkNJI&embeds_referring...), and things have improved a lot since then.
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Ask HN: What's the best modern back end?
I still work on a lot of Java projects. As of JDK 17 Java has most of "ML the good parts" and has the same scalable, reliable and high-performance threading Java is famous for. JAX-RS provides a Sinatra style framework that makes it easy to write JSON API back ends. JDK 21 is just about to come out as a long term supported version and it will be even better.
I do my side projects in Python with aiohttp and think it is a lot of fun even though people tell me it is suicide (I guess if you block the thread you are in trouble)
I think "Next.js" really wants a node.js backend which has the big advantage that you can share code with the front end and back end. It's basically single-threaded but I know people who are happy with it.
The system I'd most like to try is
https://www.phoenixframework.org/
which is just great if you want to do stuff with websockets that is more interactive than what most people are doing.
- Ask HN: Leetcode for Back End and Server Development
What are some alternatives?
libphonenumber - Google's common Java, C++ and JavaScript library for parsing, formatting, and validating international phone numbers.
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.
nocode - The best way to write secure and reliable applications. Write nothing; deploy nowhere.
sugar - Modular web framework for Elixir
tinygettext - A simple gettext replacement that works directly on .po files
hotwire-rails - Use Hotwire in your Ruby on Rails app
awesome-gbadev - A curated list of Game Boy Advance development resources
kitto - Kitto is a framework for interactive dashboards written in Elixir
vscode-gitlens - Supercharge Git inside VS Code and unlock untapped knowledge within each repository ā Visualize code authorship at a glance via Git blame annotations and CodeLens, seamlessly navigate and explore Git repositories, gain valuable insights via rich visualizations and powerful comparison commands, and so much more
trot - An Elixir web micro-framework.
awesome-remote-job - A curated list of awesome remote jobs and resources. Inspired by https://github.com/vinta/awesome-python
RIG - Create low-latency, interactive user experiences for stateless microservices.