graphql-api
paisa
graphql-api | paisa | |
---|---|---|
5 | 21 | |
26 | 2,130 | |
- | - | |
4.7 | 9.6 | |
3 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
ISC License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
graphql-api
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Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
I created an open source library that turns structured text data (YAML) in a Git repository on the fly into a GraphQL API with CRUD queries / mutations.
All that is needed in the repository is a plain text GraphQL schema file that defines what the data structures look like. The Git repository itself can be located on GitHub, GitLab, or in the local filesystem.
https://github.com/commitspark/graphql-api
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Ask HN: Tell us about your project that's not done yet but you want feedback on
I'm working on https://commitspark.com , a headless CMS where all data is stored in a GitHub repository with branching/merging workflow support for content.
Reading/writing content from/to GitHub happens through an Open Source API library I released. For the content data schema, I simply require a plaintext GraphQL type file inside the repository. The schema then automatically determines the API structure as well as the editor-friendly UI that I can generate on the Commitspark website when you log in via GitHub.
Even though Commitspark is already publicly available, it is still 100% a side-project that doesn't earn me any money (yet).
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Show HN: I Turned GitHub into a CMS
Hi HN,
I built Commitspark, a Git-based headless CMS that runs on top of GitHub.
The primary purpose is to enable non-technical content editors to take advantage of Git workflows based on branches, pull requests and merges, without them having to learn Git.
Behind the scenes, everything content-related is driven by GraphQL and an open source library I released ( https://github.com/commitspark/graphql-api ), and for all the workflow features like PRs, commenting and diffs, I built a CMS-centric view onto GitHub using the GitHub API.
For content editors, this should feel the same as working in any other headless CMS, except now with support for much more powerful workflows. For developers, this means all the strengths of Git and GitHub can now also be applied to content (pipelines, tags, commit hashes for caching, branches for migrations, etc.).
There are many other things I am also excited about here that I'm happy to discuss, so please leave your questions below.
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Vercel Visual Editing: Click-to-edit content for headless CMSes
Have you considered that content might come from Git? If so, how would content branches fit into this?
(Disclosure: I'm building a library that turns a Git repository into a branch-enabled GraphQL content management API. See https://github.com/contentlab-sh/contentlab )
- Show HN: Contentlab – Run a GraphQL Content Management API on Top of Git
paisa
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Trakk: expense trakking app
My attempt at solving the same problem https://paisa.fyi. It builds on top of https://plaintextaccounting.org/ principles and is available as a CLI/Desktop App.
- Paisa - Personal Finance Manager
- Da li biste koristili ovakvu aplikaciju za pracenje licnih finansija i troskova?
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Paisa – Personal Finance Manager
I came across this on hackernews: https://paisa.fyi/
- Paisa – Open-Source Personal Finance Manager
- Show HN: Paisa – Open-Source Personal Finance Manager
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Ghostfolio: Open-Source Wealth Management Software
Looks nice. Aside from the fact that the site is under heavy load (hug of death), I’ve been exploring such projects off late myself.
Also, I found https://github.com/ananthakumaran/paisa to be a really clean and well implemented project on similar lines. It already handles a bunch of asset classes familiar to the country I’m residing in which is tempting me to give it a shot sometime soon!
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Ask HN: Tell us about your project that's not done yet but you want feedback on
I am building a Web UI called paisa[1] to visualize personal finance data. We currently have very good command line tooling for this (ledger/hledger/beancount). A Web UI will make it even easier to see what's going on with your finances.
I am interested in knowing what are the common problems you face with command line approach that can be solved via a Web UI
[1]: https://github.com/ananthakumaran/paisa
[2]: https://paisa-demo.ananthakumaran.in/
- Ask HN: How do you manage your personal finances?
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Please tell me the fastest way to analyze the expenses from bank statemẹnts and catẹgorise them accordingly
I am working on a self hosted personal finance tool called paisa. It has a rudimentary import page
What are some alternatives?
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