calendlex
cal.com
calendlex | cal.com | |
---|---|---|
6 | 164 | |
176 | 28,745 | |
- | 2.2% | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
about 2 years ago | 4 days ago | |
Elixir | TypeScript | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
calendlex
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Ask HN: Which open source versions of SaaS would you like to see?
well here is another one made with elixir https://github.com/bigardone/calendlex
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Building a simple Calendly clone with Phoenix LiveView (pt. 8)
After confirming the action, we see the corresponding success flash message, and the deleted event type is no longer in the list. And this is it for this part, and we have finally finished with all the logic behind managing event types. In the next part, we will focus on the last part of this series, which is listing and filtering scheduled events. In the meantime, you don't forget to check the final result in the live demo, or have a look at the source code.
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Building a simple Calendly clone with Phoenix LiveView (pt. 6)
It works like a charm, yay! In the next part, we will continue with event types management, implementing the corresponding live views to edit existing even types and create new ones, using more live components and hooks. In the meantime, you can check the final result in the live demo, or have a look at the source code.
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Building a simple Calendly clone with Phoenix LiveView (pt. 3)
To give the finishing touches to the layout and styling, copy the contents of the main CSS file and paste it into your local version, and replace the content of the root and live layouts with the following:
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Building a simple Calendly clone with Phoenix LiveView (pt. 1)
In the next part of the series, we will jump into the action by creating a new Phoenix project and generating the necessary Ecto schemas for modeling both event types and events. In the meantime, you can check the end result here, or have a look at the source code.
cal.com
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Start your own (side) business with open-source in mind
Cal.com is an open-source event-juggling scheduler for everyone, and is free for individuals.
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Setup monorepo with pnpm, typescript and turborepo
Turborepo is a tool that makes it easy to manage monorepos with pnpm and typescript. On large open source porject like cal.com they use it for fast building or running developing tasks like testing or linting. Turborepo depend havily on caching so it would reduce signficantly the time to build or run the tasks as well as CI/CD pipelines time and cost.
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JSONCrack Codebase Analysis — Part 4.2.1.1 — JsonEditor — debouncedUpdateJson
The next codebase to analyse is cal.com. This repo is larger than jsoncrack. It is a monorepo with packages and lots of stuff going behind the scenes.
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What is 10x better than Calendly?
hey, peer here from cal.com. we have an issue where we track all individual caldav implementations: https://github.com/calcom/cal.com/issues/9990
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Open Source alternatives to tools you Pay for
Cal - Alternative to Calendly
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Fellow HSP entrepreneurs, how do you manage your energy and stress?
I force clients who want to talk to me to book a call. I use cal.com (free) and my Google Calendar (which its linked to) only allows calls on specific days/times. I have a few "Call Blocks" where they can book. That let's me do calls in a small section of my week, with ample downtime to recover the rest of the week. I'm still learning how many calls a day I can handle. Currently anything more than 2 is too much.
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🔥🔥 Our awesome OSS friends 😍
Cal.com- Cal.com is a scheduling tool that helps you schedule meetings without the back-and-forth emails.
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The Product Hunt + Fastgen Hackathon
Peer Rich (CEO at Cal.com)
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Cal.com Selfhost Issue: Deploying cal.com on selfhost environment gives prisma is not defined issue.
Has any one deployed cal.com with selfhosted environment. Is yes how would have configured prisma for the same.
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Open Source, EVERYTHING??
Recently I came across a company called cal.com, it's a Calendly alternative, but the catch is the entire software is open source: https://github.com/calcom/cal.com.
What are some alternatives?
TeslaMate - A self-hosted data logger for your Tesla 🚘
Easy!Appointments - :date: Easy!Appointments - Self Hosted Appointment Scheduler
phoenix-liveview-ant-farm - Concurrent ant farm with Elixir and Phoenix LiveView
EteSync Server - The Etebase server (so you can run your own)
tacticalrmm - A remote monitoring & management tool, built with Django, Vue and Go. [Moved to: https://github.com/amidaware/tacticalrmm]
studio - 🎙️ The easiest way to explore and manipulate your data in all of your Prisma projects.
authcompanion - [Deprecated] navigate instead to version 2 of AuthCompanion
Nextcloud - ☁️ Nextcloud server, a safe home for all your data
phoenix-cms - Headless CMS fun with Phoenix LiveView and Airtable
Prisma - Next-generation ORM for Node.js & TypeScript | PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, SQL Server, SQLite, MongoDB and CockroachDB
org-caldav - Caldav sync for Emacs orgmode
bulletproof-react - 🛡️ ⚛️ A simple, scalable, and powerful architecture for building production ready React applications.