Elm
coffeescript
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Elm | coffeescript | |
---|---|---|
198 | 54 | |
7,446 | 16,432 | |
0.6% | - | |
5.4 | 3.4 | |
about 1 month ago | 28 days ago | |
Haskell | CoffeeScript | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
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.
Elm
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Ludic: New framework for Python with seamless Htmx support
Elm [1] is based on a similar idea. Build your app from pure functions that return HTML tags.
- Learning Elm by porting a medium-sized web front end from React (2019)
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Can you make your own JavaScript by implementing ECMAScript standard?
You also wouldn't really be creating your own new programing language. You would be creating something that can run JavaScript by following JavaScript standards and syntax. You might be able to add some non-standard features of your own on top of those standards, or include your own standard library of helpers or utilities, but you can't completely make a new or alternative language and then load it in the browser (or at least not by reimplementing ECMAScript standards... you actually can make your own language that runs within any Javascript enviroment, if you provide an interpreter or compiler that transforms it into valid JS. Some people have done something like this, eg Elm: https://elm-lang.org/).
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What is the best way to present the user the results of Haskell computations?
You should at least have a look at https://elm-lang.org/ it is a pure functional language like Haskell (although with fewer fancy syntax/type classes) but it has some lovely libraries for visualisation and even with plain elm (+ elm-ui) doing string transformations can be easily done.
- Course using F#: Write your own tiny programming system(s)
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Building React Components Using Unions in TypeScript
I get it. However, the whole point of using Unions to narrow your types, ensure only a set of possible scenarios can occur, and only access data of a particular union when it’s safe to do so. That’s some of what pattern matching can provide, and 100% of what using switch statements in TypeScript with their Discriminated Unions can provide. Yes, it’s not 100% exhaustive, but TypeScript is not soundly typed, and even Elm which is still has the same issue TypeScript does: You’re running in JavaScript where anything is possible. So it’s good enough to build with and much better than what you had.
- What's the state of the Elm repo? · Issue #2308 · elm/compiler
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How to render a basic calendar UI in Elm
The beauty of a language like Elm (and other lambda-calculus / functional programming inspired languages) is that there's very little transformation involved in going from an idea to code. And that seems to have a big impact on getting things done.
- Como desenvolvi um backend web em Clojure
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Is it possible to write games like Pac-Man in a functional language?
I think the most fun and approachable way for beginners to build games with functional programming is with Elm [1].
See a few (small, demo) games built by the community in [2] .
Notice Elm has abandoned the FRP approach in favor of Model-View-Update [3].
coffeescript
- CoffeeScript
- Ask HN: Why don't browsers just build a non-JS interpreter?
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alternatives to the javascript ecosystem
That said, there are ways to embrace the JS ecosystem without actually using JavaScript. Many popular languages have transpilers that will convert code written in that particular language into something that will run natively in a web browser (in other words, JavaScript). Even TypeScript is a language that gets transpiled into JavaScript, so it's not that outrageous of a concept, it just gets more difficult to do the further you get away from languages that don't already look like JavaScript.
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Vanilla+PostCSS as an Alternative to SCSS
As a front-end web developer, do you still use CoffeeScript or jQuery? Unlikely, as TypeScript, ES/TC39 and Babel (and the retirement of Internet Explorer thanks to @codepo8 and his EDGE team) have helped to transform JavaScript into some kind of a modern programming language.
- Por que Elm é uma linguagem tão deliciosa?
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An Introduction for TypeScript
CoffeeScript
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Why React isn't dying
On the other hand, companies choose React because that's where all the developers are. If you want to build something that can be maintained years from now, you better not choose the next hype train that goes straight to nowhere (remember CoffeeScript ?). You want something battle tested that has stood the test of time, where you won't have trouble finding developers to scale once you need to. And nobody ever got fired for choosing React.
- List of languages that compile to JavaScript
- We're breaking up with JavaScript front ends
- Suggestion for coding project
What are some alternatives?
rescript-compiler - The compiler for ReScript.
emacs-ng - A new approach to Emacs - Including TypeScript, Threading, Async I/O, and WebRender.
haskelm - Haskell to Elm translation using Template Haskell. Contains both a library and executable.
purescript - A strongly-typed language that compiles to JavaScript
servant - Main repository for the servant libraries — DSL for describing, serving, querying, mocking, documenting web applications and more!
yew - Rust / Wasm framework for creating reliable and efficient web applications
imba - 🐤 The friendly full-stack language
idris - A Dependently Typed Functional Programming Language
Vue.js - This is the repo for Vue 2. For Vue 3, go to https://github.com/vuejs/core
reflex - Interactive programs without callbacks or side-effects. Functional Reactive Programming (FRP) uses composable events and time-varying values to describe interactive systems as pure functions. Just like other pure functional code, functional reactive code is easier to get right on the first try, maintain, and reuse.
Lua - Lua is a powerful, efficient, lightweight, embeddable scripting language. It supports procedural programming, object-oriented programming, functional programming, data-driven programming, and data description.