cheerp-meta
sk-experiments
cheerp-meta | sk-experiments | |
---|---|---|
2 | 3 | |
973 | 2 | |
0.5% | - | |
5.7 | 7.4 | |
8 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
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.
cheerp-meta
-
Ask HN: Real-world examples of WASM usage
Yours is a fair question. I think that, right now, adoption of WebAssembly is quite limited. On the other hand (here at LeanigTech) we are extremely bullish about its potential.
We believe that this technology would be adopted more with better tooling. Our main contribution to this space is Cheerp: A C++-to-WebAssembly _and_ JavaScript compiler (https://github.com/leaningtech/cheerp-meta/). It is designed to seamlessly take advantage of Wasm without sacrificing easy access to Web APIs, all from within C++ with no need of post-processing and glue code.
We know for a fact that amazing products can be build with Cheerp, because we have done it ourselves.
CheerpX is a x86 virtual machine running in the browser, fully written in C++ and compiled with Cheerp. It includes a JIT-compiler that is able to analyze x86 binary code and emit new WebAssembly modules on the fly.
Our most impressive demo yet (WebVM) is available here: https://webvm.io/
-
A JavaScript optimizing compiler
A similar project, for WebAssembly so with limited scope is this: https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wizer. And somehow similar but limited on LLVM IR a colleague worked on this for Cheerp (the compiler used here as backend): https://github.com/leaningtech/cheerp-meta/wiki/Cheerp-PreExecuter.
sk-experiments
-
Build library using JavaScript, Webpack and Workspaces
A guide on building library using Webpack and Yarn workspaces. The explained goal and source code is in this repository.
-
Send data using JSONP
{ "version": "0.1.0", "name": "jsonp", "description": "Send data using html script tags", "author": "Kostic Srecko", "repository": { "type": "git", "url": "git+https://github.com/srele96/sk-experiments.git" }, "bugs": { "url": "https://github.com/srele96/sk-experiments/issues" }, "scripts": { "start": "nodemon server" }, "dependencies": { "express": "^4.18.1" }, "devDependencies": { "nodemon": "^2.0.18" } }
-
GraphQL learning path
My work is in this repository.
What are some alternatives?
wizer - The WebAssembly Pre-Initializer
numjs - Like NumPy, in JavaScript
PSI - Private Set Intersection Cardinality protocol based on ECDH and Bloom Filters
darl2-bot - Hello, I'm Darlyn, below you have a bot for whatsapp available in any open source editor and termux.
EmGlue - 🕸️ Glue C++ to your browser! Universal bindings for JavaScript/Wasm using Glue and Embind.
codecrumbs - Learn, design or document codebase by putting breadcrumbs in source code. Live updates, multi-language support and more.
perspective - A data visualization and analytics component, especially well-suited for large and/or streaming datasets.
Collabora Online - Collabora Online is a collaborative online office suite based on LibreOffice technology. This is also the source for the Collabora Office apps for iOS and Android.
clang-wasm - How to build webassembly files with nothing other than standard Clang/llvm.
ChakraCore - ChakraCore is an open source Javascript engine with a C API.
obs-studio-node - libOBS (OBS Studio) for Node.Js, Electron and similar tools
walt - :zap: Walt is a JavaScript-like syntax for WebAssembly text format :zap: