aws-sdk-go
telebot
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aws-sdk-go | telebot | |
---|---|---|
34 | 6 | |
8,549 | 3,639 | |
0.4% | - | |
9.4 | 7.8 | |
5 days ago | 15 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
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.
aws-sdk-go
- my first go project, a CLI application to store IP addresses
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Go 1.21 will (probably) download newer toolchains on demand by default
I'm... really not sure I agree with this, from a philosophical point of view. It feels like this is making "eh, we'll just upgrade our Go version next quarter" too easy; ultimately some responsibility toward updating your application's Go version to work with what new dependencies require should fall on Us, the application developers. Sure, we're bad at it. Everyone's lived through running years-old versions of some toolchain. But I think this just makes the problem worse, not better.
Its compounded by the problem that, when you're setting up a new library, the `go` directive in the mod file defaults to your current toolchain; most likely a very current one. It would take a not-insignificant effort on the library author's part to change that to assert the true-minimum version of Go required, based on libraries and language features and such. That's an effort most devs won't take on.
I'd also guess that many developers, up-to this point if not indefinitely because education is hard, interpreted that `go` directive to mean more-of "the version of go this was built with"; not necessarily "the version of go minimally required". There are really major libraries (kubernetes/client-go [1]) which assert a minimum go version of 1.20; the latest version (see, for comparison, the aws-sdk, which specifies a more reasonable go1.11 [2]). I haven't, you know, fully audited these libraries, but 1.20 wasn't exactly a major release with huge language and library changes; do they really need 1.20? If devs haven't traditionally operated in this world where keeping this value super-current results in actually significant downstream costs in network bandwidth (go1.20 is 100mb!) and CI runtime, do we have confidence that the community will adapt? There's millions of Go packages out there.
Or, will a future version of Go patch a security update, not backport it more than one version or so, and libraries have to specify the newest `go` directive version, because manifest security scanning and policy and whatever? Like, yeah, I get the rosy worldview of "your minimum version encodes required language and library features", but its not obvious to me that this is how this field is, or even will be, used.
Just a LOT of tertiary costs to this change which I hope the team has thought through.
[1] https://github.com/kubernetes/client-go/blob/master/go.mod#L...
[2] https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go/blob/main/go.mod
- How to get better on golang
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Send an Email through AWS SES with GoLang
This email was sent with " + "Amazon SES using the " + "AWS SDK for Go.
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Looking for library recommendations: Django -> Golang port
I figured I'd ask the community for some recommendations for the following capabilities that Django + python stack is giving me at the moment: 1. Amazon SES Mailing (considering - aws-sdk-go) 2. Django Admin (considering go-admin 3. Django Signals (considering syncsignals 4. Celery (No contenders here)
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S3 upload with progress
I've been trying to implement some logging of progress when uploading objects to S3. My code is building on this example and can be found here.
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Background process in Lambda using SQS
Now that you have everything you need, let’s install the AWS SDK for Go library.
- Node.js 18 support in Lambda added to Go SDK
- Node.js 18 Runtime support added to Golang SDK
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AWS and its complicated shit needs to die
Counterpoint 2: Amazon is bad and should feel bad for making this an internal and embedding it in the Credentials struct.
telebot
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Botlib: Telegram Bots in C by Antirez
But then it's hard to imagine much better than the existing Telebot library, which is a very elegant and idiomatic Go.
https://github.com/tucnak/telebot
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How is Go used in Linux based environments in various companies?
I use https://github.com/tucnak/telebot, which has been a joy to work with. It'd take a bit of time to decouple my actual business logic from the bot portions of my code so I can't share that, but it isn't far off from the examples within the README on that repo.
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How to send data to a WebApp opening with either menu or inline buttons with Telebot Go API
I understand that it is possible to initialise a WebApp opened from Telegram using either a menu or inline button. Ideally I want to provide the Telegram client's contact list to the WebApp. If anyone can provide an example of how to do that I would be very grateful. I'm using the https://github.com/tucnak/telebot API for Go but if there is a better API in another language that anyone recommends I'd be happy to use that.
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Developing Send-To-Kindle Telegram Bot
Created bot credentials using BotFather For integration with Telegram, I found a bot framework for Go - Telebot The setup was pretty easy:
- Telebot V3: Telegram bot framework released!
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The bot comes to life
We are ready to start the implementation. We'll be using the Telebot Go library. Telebot is a framework that is going help us a lot interacting with the Telegram Bot API (setting up the bot, handling requests, sending messages, etc).
What are some alternatives?
minio-go - MinIO Go client SDK for S3 compatible object storage
telegram-bot-api - Golang bindings for the Telegram Bot API
Moto - A library that allows you to easily mock out tests based on AWS infrastructure.
webhooks - :fishing_pole_and_fish: Webhook receiver for GitHub, Bitbucket, GitLab, Gogs
botocore - The low-level, core functionality of boto3 and the AWS CLI.
anaconda - A Go client library for the Twitter 1.1 API
twitter-scraper - Scrape the Twitter frontend API without authentication with Golang.
github - Go library for accessing the GitHub v3 API
cachet - Go(lang) client library for Cachet (open source status page system).
telegraph
goamz
go-tgbot - Golang telegram bot API wrapper, session-based router and middleware