application
httpbeast
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application | httpbeast | |
---|---|---|
187 | 5 | |
178 | 434 | |
1.1% | - | |
6.1 | 3.5 | |
21 days ago | 3 months ago | |
Nim | ||
- | 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.
application
- Firefly III: A free and open source personal finance manager
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Ask HN: How do you manage your personal finances?
I use buckets https://www.budgetwithbuckets.com/
I track my balances across various sources, updating once a month. I also set my outgoings.
Funnily enough I don't really use the buckets feature too much, simply the graph over time of savings, and ability to set goals / monthly costs for review is enough.
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An open-source alternative to QuickBooks
I haven't used it, but the team (person?) that makes [Buckets](https://www.budgetwithbuckets.com) makes [SimpleFIN](https://www.simplefin.org), which seems like it exposes exactly what you want: simple transaction data from arbitrary banks.
Plaid offers [transactions APIs](https://plaid.com/products/transactions/), but I guess to your point these APIs are geared towards fintech companies, not personal use.
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reccomendations for personal finance apps 💸
Budget with Buckets (paid but with unlimited trial)
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Budgeting software that is as automated as possible?
Budget with Buckets.
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I tried to find a "free" alternative to YNAB
I'll vouch for Buckets. Though I've never actually used YNAB, but I use the YNAB rules and Buckets can do that just fine.
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Rocket Money (Truebill) and Mint. How to escape?
Budget with Buckets
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Ask HN: Those making $0/month or less on side projects – Show and tell
I built a tool for predicting the outcome of matchups in Yahoo Fantasy Hockey (head-to-head category based leagues). I find it helpful for determining what categories to focus on when picking up streamers/free agents.
https://fantasyhockey.fly.dev/
Also, I've seen a few budgeting apps on here. I didn't build [Budget with Buckets](https://www.budgetwithbuckets.com/), but I do think it's a great YNAB alternative _except_ that there is no mobile app. So I built a web app that can be used on mobile.
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Trying to Find software
Buckets https://www.budgetwithbuckets.com/ looks good and promising, mobile app is still in development.
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What do you use for personal budgeting?
YNAB is the canonical budgeting app. I use buckets, a tightarse app that does the same thing.
httpbeast
- Nim v2.0 Released
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Don't be that open-source user, don't be me
Thank you to the author for writing this.
Entitlement in open source is a massive problem, I have experienced it first-hand many times. The problem is that it discourages contributions not only from the existing maintainers but also from people who may volunteer to fix issues in the future. Would you be willing to contribute if most of the issues are just asking for things (often rudely) and not even saying thanks when an issue is resolved?
Unfortunately I have seen far worse examples than the one linked in the article[1]. I would encourage people to not only think twice before acting this way but to also call out people that are acting entitled in open source to discourage such actions.
1 - https://github.com/dom96/httpbeast/pull/35#issuecomment-7218...
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Nim Version 1.6 Released
How to run those benchmarks?
At that Nim release page:
https://nim-lang.org/blog/2021/10/19/version-160-released.ht...
Is link to this benchmark:
https://web-frameworks-benchmark.netlify.app/result
Where nim is 2nd with 200k req/s, but it is using httpbeast:
https://github.com/dom96/httpbeast
That says it would be more useful to use jester:
https://github.com/dom96/jester
Jester has 150k req/s.
But, when looking at these:
https://www.techempower.com/benchmarks/
dragon, actix etc has about 600k req/s .
Also redbean has about 600k req/s, when I tested:
I tested like this:
git clone https://github.com/wg/wrk.git
cd wrk
./wrk -H 'Accept-Encoding: gzip' -t 12 -c 120 http://127.0.0.1:8080/
When I tested https://caddyserver.com v2, it did show about 800k req/s.
It would be very helpful to know how those benchmarks are actually done, so that I could compare what is actually fastest in real world, and not just use some for benchmark tested winning non-realistic code.
- Nim 2.0 – Thoughts
What are some alternatives?
OpenBudgeteer - OpenBudgeteer is a budgeting app based on the Bucket Budgeting Principle
Firefly III - Firefly III: a personal finances manager
firefly-iii-fints-importer - Import financial transactions from you FinTS enabled bank into Firefly III.
GuildenStern - Modular multithreading Linux HTTP+WebSocket server
happyx - Macro-oriented asynchronous web-framework written in Nim with ♥
budgetzero - Open-source, self-hosted, zero-based budgeting.
jester - A sinatra-like web framework for Nim.
nimbus-eth2 - Nim implementation of the Ethereum Beacon Chain
hledger - Robust, fast, intuitive plain text accounting tool with CLI, TUI and web interfaces.
cligen - Nim library to infer/generate command-line-interfaces / option / argument parsing; Docs at
GnuCash - GnuCash Double-Entry Accounting Program.
prologue - Powerful and flexible web framework written in Nim