bun
scany
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bun
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React Server Components Example with Next.js
At Node Conference 2023, Jarred Sumner (creator of Bun) showed a demo of server components in Bun, so there is at least partial support in that ecosystem. The Bun repo provides bun-plugin-server-components as the official plugin for server components. And while I haven’t looked at it in-depth, Marz claims to be a “React Server Components Framework for Bun”.
- Bun – A fast all-in-one JavaScript runtime
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From Node to Bun: A New Dawn for JavaScript Engines?
Continuously evolving, Bun is currently optimized for MacOS and Linux, with ongoing efforts towards Windows compatibility. Tailored for resource-constrained environments like serverless functions, it emerges as an ideal solution. The Bun team is committed to achieving comprehensive Node.js compatibility and seamless integration with prevalent frameworks. For those intrigued by Bun's potential and want to give it a try, more information is available on its website at https://bun.sh/.
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Bun - The One Tool for All Your JavaScript/Typescript Project's Needs?
Let’s say you are interested in learning more about Bun and probably give it a try. Bun has a website, where you can learn more about Bun and its features (including all the benchmark data captured in this issue), and here is the link.
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Bun 1.1
Looks like it, it seems the 2% are mostly odd platform specific issues that the authors' did not deem very important (my assumption for the release happening anyway). AFAIK this[1] PR tries to fix them.
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Bun-ify Your Project
Bun has a solution for it. First of all, it already has a list of trusted dependencies. For them, Bun will execute all necessary scripts by default. Otherwise, you can add it to trustedDependecies in your package.json file. In Bun community usage of trustedDependencies is a hot topic. There are several suggestions on how to improve it.
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I have created a small anti-depression script
Install Node.js (or Bun, or Deno, or whatever JS runtime you prefer) if it's not there
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JSR: The JavaScript Registry
I think maybe I was unclear. I'm talking about writing libraries that abstract across these differences and provide a single API, as sibling describes. I already know it's possible. I made a simple filesystem abstraction here[0] and a very simple HTTP library that uses it here[1]. They both work in Node/Deno and the browser. Unfortunately I ran into issues with Bun's slice implementation[2]. But I suspect there's a much better way of detecting and using the different backends.
[0]: https://github.com/waygate-io/fs-js
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SelectorHound: The tool for Sniffing out CSS Selectors
For, for more speed (requires installing bun first):
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OpenCommit: feature-rich CLI to generate meaningful git commit messages now supports local models via Ollama 🤯🔫
OpenCommit is a CLI to generate commit messages, you can try it right now by running npx opencommit in any repo you have changed code in. I suggest you use bunx opencommit (install Bun) or install OpenCommit globally npm i -g opencommit and then run oco which is a shorthand.
scany
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Are there any decent ORMs in Golang?
When I don't use one, I'm typically using SQLx or (if using Postgres) pgx with scany https://github.com/georgysavva/scany (slightly better API than SQLx and great performance since you can use the native interface from pgx if desired whereas many database drivers only offer the text-based interface).
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How do you handle scanning of db.Rows?
If you want something like sqlx and you already know you're using pgx, a better choice is probably https://github.com/georgysavva/scany since you can use the native interface and get the same key features.
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Building a Simple TODO App with Gin-gonic in Zerops: A step-by-step Guide
github.com/georgysavva/scany (v1.1.0)
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SQL Query Strategy for complex structs
I like to use pgxscan from https://github.com/georgysavva/scany
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Does gorm worth learning?
There's also bqb. We use it in production at our company -- much better than raw SQL. If you couple it with something like scany then you get more of the ORM benefits without the complexity.
What are some alternatives?
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
sqlx - general purpose extensions to golang's database/sql
GORM - The fantastic ORM library for Golang, aims to be developer friendly
ngrok - Unified ingress for developers
nvm - Node Version Manager - POSIX-compliant bash script to manage multiple active node.js versions
godotenv - A Go port of Ruby's dotenv library (Loads environment variables from .env files)
fastify - Fast and low overhead web framework, for Node.js
go-pg - Golang ORM with focus on PostgreSQL features and performance
xlsx - Go library for reading and writing XLSX files.
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
usql - Universal command-line interface for SQL databases