proposals
RazorLight
proposals | RazorLight | |
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15 | 11 | |
433 | 1,480 | |
0.2% | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 2 years ago | 7 months ago | |
C# | ||
- | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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proposals
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An intro to TSConfig for JavaScript Developers
target - Specifies the ECMAScript target version for the emitted JavaScript. Defaults to ES3. To ensure maximum compatibility, set this to the lowest version that your code requires to run. ESNext setting allows you to target the latest supported proposed features.
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Writing RFCs
TC39
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Pipeline Operator great again!
Current Status: You'd have to check the TC39 proposals repository or the official proposal text for the most recent status. As of my last update, it had not yet reached Stage 4 (final stage) of the TC39 process, which means it wasn't part of the ECMAScript specification yet.
- Set methods proposal reaches stage 3
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Upcoming ECMAScript features I'm excited about
More proposals can be found on the official GitHub page.
- What to learn in 2022
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Updates from the 89th TC39 meeting
There were a couple of other proposals that made stage 1 too, can see here.
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Don't make me think, or why I switched to Rails from JavaScript SPAs
The working group most in charge of JS is ECMA's TC-39 (TC => Technical Committee) [0]. They've been taking a very deliberate, slow path to expanding the "standard" library because they take a very serious view of backwards compatibility on the web. Some proposals were shifted because of conflicts with ancient versions of things like MooTools still out in the wild, for instance. (This was the so-called "Smooshgate" incident [1].)
This may speed up a bit if the Built-In Modules proposal [2] passes, which would add a deliberate `import` URL for standard modules which would give a cleaner expansion point for new standard libraries over adding more global variables or further expanding the base prototypes (Object.prototype, Array.prototype, etc) in ways that increasingly likely have backwards compatibility issues.
TC-39 works all of their proposals in the open on Github [3] and it can be a fascinating process to watch if you are interested in the language's future direction.
[0] https://tc39.es/
[1] https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2018/03/smooshgate
[2] https://github.com/tc39/proposal-built-in-modules
[3] https://github.com/tc39/proposals
- O que são RFCs e como elas funcionam na linguagem PHP
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Ask HN: Where are the resources for complex architectures for Node.js?
My biggest pointer would be to remember that Java & JavaScript aren't named that way by coincidence. They're two different approaches to a similar problem. Java suffers from Enterprise Development (eg: Enterprise FizzBuzz[0]), JavaScript suffers from Ultimate Accessibility (eg: how many questions on Stack Overflow conflated jQuery and JS?).
> How should exceptions be managed? [...] Has there been a debate about best practice? Where can I find it?
I suggest you handle the errors you can and otherwise let it crash.[1][2] Debates in NodeJS-land have steered towards more monadic/Result-like structures and working synchronous-looking try/catch onto async/await. NodeJS and its various components are open source, you'll have a lot of luck looking around on GH for issues & PRs related to a feature -- same for the language, ECMAScript[3] officially.[4]
Since you mentioned Clojure, have you looked at ClojureScript?[5] That may be a good entry to JS authors & articles you'd enjoy.
> I have the impression that NodeJS is a bit more magical than the JVM [...] Is that correct? Where are good resources on this subject?
As other replies have mentioned, you're really talking about V8[6] for the "JSVM" executing that code. A thing I've seen throw some people for a loop is how minimalist the specification actually is.[7] The magic in NodeJS is certainly from V8 and the rate of optimizations there but also libuv,[8] what actually powers the infamous event loop.
Hope that helps!
[0]: https://github.com/EnterpriseQualityCoding/FizzBuzzEnterpris...
[1]: Borrowing from Erlang, see Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors, Joe Armstrong, page 104 "Error Handling Philosophy" https://erlang.org/download/armstrong_thesis_2003.pdf
[2]: _Most_ kinds of errors will cause the process to crash if you don't handle them, https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v16.x/docs/api/errors.html . Promise rejections don't (yet) though it emits an error, and callback-based APIs will always consist of an [error, data] tuple for the arguments
[3]: https://github.com/tc39/proposals
[4]: Because Oracle owns the trademark, of course: http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&entry=
[5]: https://clojurescript.org/
[6]: https://v8.dev/docs
[7]: "ECMAScript as defined here is not intended to be computationally self-sufficient; indeed, there are no provisions in this specification for input of external data or output of computed results. Instead, it is expected that the computational environment of an ECMAScript program will provide not only the objects and other facilities described in this specification but also certain environment-specific objects, whose description and behaviour are beyond the scope of this specification except to indicate that they may provide certain properties that can be accessed and certain functions that can be called from an ECMAScript program." https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-overview
[8]: https://github.com/libuv/libuv
RazorLight
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Introducing TopazView: A Lightweight and Powerful View Engine
Yes, I have used Razor pages in non-website applications before where I needed to load the cshtml templates from a different source. I have written Line of Business apps (think WinForms or WPF) where the reporting spits out HTML with tables and charts. There are a number of similar projects to yours out there which I have used in the past such as RazorLight or RazorMachine.
- A Handlebar and Puppeteer Equivalent in C#?
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Sending HTML based emails. Is there an easier way to dynamically generate the document?
Your mileage may vary but I've had good luck with the RazorLight library for generating HTML emails from a template with data merged in. Under the hood, it uses the ASP.NET Razor engine for applying a model to a template.
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Email template engine
We use https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight in combination with serverless functions.
- Rendering HTML (C# windows forms) not working after deploy
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Generating html in a hosted service
you could use a razor based engine to generate html based on a view model (your data). take a look at: https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight i use it to generate html emails
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Don't make me think, or why I switched to Rails from JavaScript SPAs
Rails has a templating system for generating emails (standard HTML/ERB files). If you're running an ASP.NET Web API (not MVC) the best way of doing that I've found is via Razorlight which you have to set up manually - https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight
With Rails the standard is pretty much Devise or Omniauth (or both) - does everything for you. I've never found anything for ASP like Devise which gives you an entire login system with all the required views/migrations in a couple commands.
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How would you setup a e-mail template / content in .NET in order to reference to templates when sending mail?
I use RazorLight: https://github.com/toddams/RazorLight
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How to render a Razor view from a Console application?
Razor Light
- How do you manage transactional email templates?
What are some alternatives?
DIPs - D Improvement Proposals
RazorEngine - Open source templating engine based on Microsoft's Razor parsing engine
peps - Python Enhancement Proposals
scriban - A fast, powerful, safe and lightweight scripting language and engine for .NET
proposal-set-methods - Proposal for new Set methods in JS
Handlebars.Net - A real .NET Handlebars engine
Nim - Nim is a statically typed compiled systems programming language. It combines successful concepts from mature languages like Python, Ada and Modula. Its design focuses on efficiency, expressiveness, and elegance (in that order of priority).
DotLiquid - .NET Port of Tobias Lütke's Liquid template language.
temporal-polyfill - Polyfill for Temporal (under construction)
Mustache Sharp - An extension of the mustache text template engine for .NET.
proposal-change-array-by-copy - Provides additional methods on Array.prototype and TypedArray.prototype to enable changes on the array by returning a new copy of it with the change.
SmartFormat.NET - A lightweight text templating library written in C# which can be a drop-in replacement for string.Format