cargo-xtask
askama
cargo-xtask | askama | |
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26 | 28 | |
736 | 3,111 | |
- | - | |
5.4 | 9.3 | |
8 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | ||
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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cargo-xtask
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🏃♂️ Use task.go for your Go project scripts
💡 Inspired by matklad/cargo-xtask and based on 🏃♂️ Write your Rust project scripts in task.rs from the Rust ecosystem.
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clap_completion help requested
Using a cargo-xtask task to generate them as a manual step (inlyne currently does this)
- Cargo xtask: extend cargo with custom commands written in Rust
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Including a cargo command as a dev dependency
As someone else said just is good for that job, or you could implement an xtask helper for these things and setup a suitable development environment with that: https://github.com/matklad/cargo-xtask/
- Cargo xtask: extend stock, stable cargo with custom commands written in Rust
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Going beyond build.rs: introducing cargo-px
Well tools like cornucopia, prisma-rust-client, protoc-gen-tonic, they don't generate in build.rs, but instead provide either a cli to be called ahead of time, or provide a library that can be called by your own binary (which should generally follow the xtask pattern)
- Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here (17/2023)!
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Best way to include a utility command for my crate?
If I understand, this is a tool for when working on the project itself? Akin to a helper script? You could go the cargo install route as already pointed out but there is also the xtask convention.
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We have getrandom at home
For simple cli apps for internal use, such as cargo-xtasks, I prefer pico_args due to its fast compile times.
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Rust for Web Development | An Honest Evaluation
For developer-oriented stuff, there's tools like xshell and cargo-xtask. For operator tasks that need to run in a deployed environment, it's not usually a big lift to add CLI subcommands to your binary. It's certainly more boilerplate and inertia than doing stuff in a live REPL, though, and sometimes difficult to recommend for truly one-off situations.
askama
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Deploying your Rust WASM Game to Web with Shuttle & Axum
I have inlined the CSS here, and you can use Rust-based tooling like Lightning CSS to minify and bundle CSS here. You might also want to create a Rust build script to generate the HTML from a template, using the askama crate (works a little like Jinja).
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Getting Started with Actix Web - The Battle-tested Rust Framework
This adds askama itself as well as the Responder trait implementation for the askama::Template type. askama expects your files to be in a subfolder of the project root called templates by default, so let's create the folder and then create an index.html file with the following HTML code in:
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Getting Started with Axum - Rust's Most Popular Framework
You can also use HTML templating with crates like askama, tera and maud! This can be combined with the power of lightweight JavaScript libraries like htmx to speed up time to production. You can read more about this on our other article about using HTMX with Rust which you can find here.. We also collaborated with Stefan Baumgartner on an article for serving HTML with Askama!
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RustGPT: ChatGPT UI Built with Rust, Htmx, SQLite
This is such a great project, thank you for sharing! It seems like you're getting the usual dump of negativity around HTMX... but as usual, not much coming from anyone who's actually tried to build something small/medium-sized. I keep hearing that this stack "would" fall apart in a bigger project, but I never hear any concrete, empirical descriptions of issues that actually do arise.
I'll offer one here... using HTMX usually means you're going to be writing HTML templates, and HTML templating languages don't have much IDE support. I really miss goto-definition etc. when I'm writing Jinja templates.
That being said, I've personally found Rust/HTMX to be a magnificent combo. I personally find writing backend endpoints in Rust to be no more cumbersome than any other language (after becoming comfortable with Rust)... and there's massive gains from the incredible tooling and type system.
I wonder if you've considered using Askama for your templates? It has a Axum integration that cleans up some of the boilerplate around template rendering. There's also an open PR for block fragments [1], which will make componentization of HTML fragments much easier, as discussed in this essay on the HTMX site [2].
We need more projects like this to demonstrate how useful, highly-interactive apps are made with HTMX. I'd encourage skeptics to try the same before writing it off.
[1] https://github.com/djc/askama/pull/824
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Announcing Stilts v0.1 A new template engine like Askama
This templating languge / engine is heavily inspired by Askama, but brings more rust into your template code. The project is still in early stages and is likely filled with bugs but I wanted to get something out there to get some feedback on.
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Full-Stack-Rust: Which approach in Frontend?
Askama
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Becoming Rustacean:Awesome Free Online Resources to Learn Rust Programming
Rust allows me to mainly only run the application to confirm things work from a business perspective.
For people starting out building stuff in rust - understand that there is a distinction of async code and libraries and can lead to confusing compiler errors if you don't realize there is a distinction. It's simple in hindsight but did cause me to waste hours barking up the wrong trees at first. Other wise just learn about `match` and Result/Option types asap, they're fundamental.
https://github.com/http-rs/tide tide is great to create an http server / routes
https://github.com/djc/askama I use this to template out HTML and it checks all my boxes, dynamic data, passing in functions, control flow.
https://github.com/launchbadge/sqlx sql interface for a variety of backend, async safe.
https://github.com/seanmonstar/reqwest http client to make requests
Rust is amazing, don't let the initial few speed bumps discourage you - building real things with rust is no more challenging today than any other modern language stack.
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Axum Railway Template, looking for peer review
I also Suggest using https://crates.io/crates/askama for Templates. even though it can be hard to get use to and they are compile time only It allows you to use Rust functions directly within the Template code. Which can make your life easier.
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Askama's markdown feature won't let me enable it
It was a bug in askama that was fixed. The solution is to use a newer version that contains the fix, but they have not released a new version of askama since fixing the bug, so 0.11.1 still contains the bug. It seems like 0.12 has been a long time coming but should finally be coming soon: https://github.com/djc/askama/issues/722
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Rust for Web Development | An Honest Evaluation
A good example is Askama, which should look good to folk from the python / django / jinja world: https://github.com/djc/askama
What are some alternatives?
just - 🤖 Just a command runner
tera - A template engine for Rust based on Jinja2/Django
cargo-make - Rust task runner and build tool.
maud - :pencil: Compile-time HTML templates for Rust
bors-ng - 👁 A merge bot for GitHub Pull Requests
minijinja - MiniJinja is a powerful but minimal dependency template engine for Rust compatible with Jinja/Jinja2
rust - Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
handlebars-rust - Rust templating with Handlebars
waihona - Rust crate for performing cloud storage CRUD actions across major cloud providers e.g aws
sailfish - Simple, small, and extremely fast template engine for Rust
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
markup.rs - A blazing fast, type-safe template engine for Rust.