cody
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cody | Strapi | |
---|---|---|
18 | 453 | |
1,593 | 59,548 | |
28.4% | 1.5% | |
9.9 | 10.0 | |
7 days ago | 1 day ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
cody
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Ollama is now available on Windows in preview
Cody (https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody) supports using Ollama for autocomplete in VS Code. See the release notes at https://sourcegraph.com/blog/cody-vscode-1.1.0-release for instructions. And soon it'll support Ollama for chat/refactoring as well (https://twitter.com/sqs/status/1750045006382162346/video/1).
Disclaimer: I work on Cody.
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My 2024 AI Predictions
Have you tried Cody (https://cody.dev)? Cody has a deep understanding of your codebase and generally does much better at code gen than just one-shotting GPT4 without context.
(disclaimer: I work at Sourcegraph)
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🚀 7 AI Tools to Improve your productivity: A Deep Dive 🪄✨
3️⃣ Cody AI 🤖
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An ex-Googler's guide to dev tools
Author of the post here—as another commenter mentioned, this is indeed a bit dated now, someone should probably write an updated post!
There's been a ton of evolution in dev tools in the past 3 years with some old workhorses retiring (RIP Phabricator) and new ones (like Graphite, which is awesome) emerging... and of course AI-AI-AI. LLMs have created some great new tools for the developer inner loop—that's probably the most glaring omission here. If I were to include that category today, it would mention tools like ChatGPT, GH Copilot, Cursor, and our own Sourcegraph Cody (https://cody.dev). I'm told that Google has internal AI dev tools now that generate more code than humans.
Excited to see what changes the next 3 years bring—the pace of innovation is only accelerating!
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LocalPilot: Open-source GitHub Copilot on your MacBook
I'm sorry to hear that. We have made a lot of improvements to Cody recently. We had a big release on Oct 4 that significantly decreased latency while improving completion quality. You can read all about it here: https://about.sourcegraph.com/blog/feature-release-october-2...
We love feedback and ideas as well, and like I said are constantly iterating on the UI to improve it. I'm actually wrapping up a blog post on how to better leverage Cody w/ VS Studio, that'll be out either later today or sometime tomorrow. As far as feedback though: https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody/discussions/new?category... would be the place to share ideas :)
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Show HN: Ollama for Linux – Run LLMs on Linux with GPU Acceleration
Ollama is awesome. I am part of a team building a code AI application[1], and we want to give devs the option to run it locally instead of only supporting external LLMs from Anthropic, OpenAI, etc. Those big remote LLMs are incredibly powerful and probably the right choice for most devs, but it's good for devs to have a local option as well—for security, privacy, cost, latency, simplicity, freedom, etc.
As an app dev, we have 2 choices:
(1) Build our own support for LLMs, GPU/CPU execution, model downloading, inference optimizations, etc.
(2) Just tell users "run Ollama" and have our app hit the Ollama API on localhost (or shell out to `ollama`).
Obviously choice 2 is much, much simpler. There are some things in the middle, like less polished wrappers around llama.cpp, but Ollama is the only thing that 100% of people I've told about have been able to install without any problems.
That's huge because it's finally possible to build real apps that use local LLMs—and still reach a big userbase. Your userbase is now (pretty much) "anyone who can download and run a desktop app and who has a relatively modern laptop", which is a big population.
I'm really excited to see what people build on Ollama.
(And Ollama will simplify deploying server-side LLM apps as well, but right now from participating in the community, it seems most people are only thinking of it for local apps. I expect that to change when people realize that they can ship a self-contained server app that runs on a cheap AWS/GCP instance and uses an Ollama-executed LLM for various features.)
[1] Shameless plug for the WIP PR where I'm implementing Ollama support in Cody, our code AI app: https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody/pull/905.
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Cody – The AI that knows your entire codebase
Awesome. The repository is at https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody for anyone who hasn't seen it yet.
Great to hear you're getting a ton of value out of it!
On the annoying parts, yeah, we want to improve these.
Overly positive English prose in Markdown is probably a function of the underlying LLM in use (Claude/GPT-4, plus experimental support for others). I guess the risk is that we overcorrect too far and suddenly the Markdown suggestions are off-putting. If you have any specific examples you'd feel comfortable posting to https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody/discussions/358, that would be helpful.
On inline suggestions (autocomplete), we are under much tighter latency constraints than for chat or commands, so the context used for autocomplete is lighter right now. This is a huge area of effort for us, and we're watching completion acceptance rate really closely. We are making autocomplete use embeddings for context in more cases, and @beyang is adding a fast local context search path as well.
On the VS Code extension APIs used, yes, there are some new proposed APIs that are not yet freely available to extensions that will help. For now, the new `Cody: Fixup` command is much smoother UX than the inline comment `/fix whatever`—give that a try and let us know if that is better.
Thanks!
Hi we are tracking Sublime requests here: https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody/discussions/10
I’m sorry about that. Our code (https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody), which is open source (Apache 2), doesn’t do anything to move the cursor, so I have no idea how that would have happened. Would you be willing to try to repro that in an issue or give us some more info so we can look into it?
Strapi
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The Mechanics of Silicon Valley Pump and Dump Schemes
Strapi
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Open-Source Headless CMS in 2024
Strapi: The Code Anarchist
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Best website builder for a news website
https://strapi.io/ https://prismic.io/ https://bubble.io/ https://hygraph.com/ https://www.sanity.io/
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Different flavors of content management
A headless one is responsible only for data management and providing an API for other applications to show this data. When talking about headless CMS, Strapi or Sanity comes to my mind first, but there are many more.
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I need recommendations for creating an API. Start from scratch, or are there projects I can build from?
I initially looked into CMS's like Strapi and Directus to possibly handle my admin UI + API all at once. I haven't found anything that looks like it can do this yet, but I'd be very happy to be proven wrong. I would prefer it to be based in .NET or Node.js since I am more familiar with those, but there's no reason I couldn't do PHP either.
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Open Source: Strapi v4 - Formula field
A plugin for Strapi Headless CMS that provides an integration with powerful mathjs library.
- Launch HN: GitStart (YC S19) – Remote junior devs working on production PRs
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Pros and cons of off-the-shelf solutions for creating a control panel
- We want a solution that creates CRUD (create, read, update, delete) quickly and requires minimal effort. - We want to be able to create some sort of complex interface if the task requires it. - We make cool, beautiful projects, so we want a visually pleasing solution. - We want the solution to be independent of the language on the back-end, because, for example, we started with PHP, Laravel, but over time node.js, Go appeared in the stack. In short, we want fast, beautiful and custom. We've had time to poke at various off-the-shelf solutions that we've been advised. They're good, but: - they are created specifically for some frameworks / languages like laravel, node.js - they can only generate CRUDs with a rigidly defined structure, where you can't implement or customize anything of your own. - they can't be styled Here's what we've been looking at Control Panels for Laravel: https://demo.backpackforlaravel.com/admin/dashboard Not a very pretty solution in our opinion. And the promo page has nice screenshots, not the demo "well such". https://orchid.software/en/ Not particularly functional, but neatly done https://nova.laravel.com They have a beautiful, but rigidly set strutkrua, you can not create castmon interfaces, stylize them. Just do CRUD and that's it. And it's paid https://filamentphp.com/ Analog to Nova, with essentially the same problems. For node.js: https://adminjs.co Nice promo, and the demo is way behind As standalone dashboards: https://strapi.io/ Very cool, but for other purposes. It's more of an entity builder with an interface and API https://pocketbase.io/ Similarly, it's an entity builder with an interface and API https://directus.io/ This is a backend builder. https://filamentphp.com/It is purely for php, you can't customize styles, you can't create your own interfaces. It is possible to create only tables and forms by template, and we remember that we want flexibility, independence from the language and the ability to create their own interfaces and customize them https://flatlogic.com This is also more of a backend builder. Direct competitors: https://github.com/refinedev/refine https://marmelab.com/react-admin/is probably the best solution that is currently on the market, they have been developing for a long time, they are our favorite. To the disadvantages we considered the following points: quite an old project, and somewhere the technology is already outdated, unsympathetic interface, old UI libraries. Huge documentation, it’s simply to create CRUD but hard to work without immersion. After all this there is only one conclusion: you need to do it yourself....
What are some alternatives?
Appwrite - Build like a team of hundreds_
KeystoneJS - The most powerful headless CMS for Node.js — built with GraphQL and React
AdminJS - AdminJS is an admin panel for apps written in node.js
Ghost - Independent technology for modern publishing, memberships, subscriptions and newsletters.
ApostropheCMS - A full-featured, open-source content management framework built with Node.js that empowers organizations by combining in-context editing and headless architecture in a full-stack JS environment.
Directus - The Modern Data Stack 🐰 — Directus is an instant REST+GraphQL API and intuitive no-code data collaboration app for any SQL database.
react-admin - A frontend Framework for building data-driven applications running on top of REST/GraphQL APIs, using TypeScript, React and Material Design
appsmith - Platform to build admin panels, internal tools, and dashboards. Integrates with 25+ databases and any API.
sanity - Sanity Studio – Rapidly configure content workspaces powered by structured content
nocodb - 🔥 🔥 🔥 Open Source Airtable Alternative
GrapesJS - Free and Open source Web Builder Framework. Next generation tool for building templates without coding
supabase - The open source Firebase alternative.