denim
awesome-nim
denim | awesome-nim | |
---|---|---|
3 | 9 | |
39 | 1,052 | |
- | - | |
8.1 | 4.9 | |
16 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Nim | Nim | |
MIT License | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
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.
denim
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My Node.js is a bit Rusty
Related: you can write a Node.js module in Nim with Denim: https://github.com/openpeeps/denim
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Nim v2.0 Released
Somewhat related, you can call Nim code from Node.js/Bun using Denim: https://github.com/openpeeps/denim. It works by creating a Node add-on.
This is great for reusing Nim code in a web app, and possibly for performance critical code.
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Node vs Flask for Scaling
Something I'm just starting for one of my projects, is to use Node on front-end and back-end (mostly for GraphQL). Then write the majority of the back-end in Nim and compile it to a Node add-on with Denim (https://github.com/openpeeps/denim). Nim can call Python with Nimpy if I ever need to call it.
awesome-nim
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Nim v2.0 Released
Ones that have not been mentioned so far:
nlvm is an unofficial LLVM backend: https://github.com/arnetheduck/nlvm
npeg lets you write PEGs inline in almost normal PEG notation: https://github.com/zevv/npeg
futhark provides for much more automatic C interop: https://github.com/PMunch/futhark
nimpy allows calling Python code from Nim and vice versa: https://github.com/yglukhov/nimpy
questionable provides a lot of syntax sugar surrounding Option/Result types: https://github.com/codex-storage/questionable
ratel is a framework for embedded programming: https://github.com/PMunch/ratel
cps allows arbitrary procedure rewriting to continuation passing style: https://github.com/nim-works/cps
chronos is an alternative async/await backend: https://github.com/status-im/nim-chronos
zero-functional fixes some inefficiencies when chaining list operations: https://github.com/zero-functional/zero-functional
owlkettle is a declarative macro-oriented library for GTK: https://github.com/can-lehmann/owlkettle
A longer list can be found at https://github.com/ringabout/awesome-nim.
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Hamarosan itt a Nim programozási nyelv 2.0.0-s változata
Hasznos cuccok hozzá: https://github.com/ringabout/awesome-nim
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Nim 2.0.0 RC2
Ecosystem-wise - a brief subset of Nim packages:
https://github.com/ringabout/awesome-nim
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Twenty five thousand dollars of funny money
One can, of course, go much further than simply distinct number types: https://github.com/ringabout/awesome-nim#science
(Unchained seems maybe the most featureful of those units packages.)
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An Intuition for Lisp Syntax
> This is useful for compiler programmers, or maybe also those writing source code analyzers/optimizers, but is that it?
It is also useful for anyone wanting to implement language-level features as simple libraries. Someone else brought up Nim here: it's a great example of what can be done with metaprogramming (and in a non-Lisp language) as it intentionally sticks to a small-but-extendable-core design.
There's macro-based libraries that implement the following, with all the elegance of a compiler feature: traits, interfaces, classes, typeclasses, contracts, Result types, HTML (and other) DSLs, syntax sugar for a variety of things (notably anonymous functions `=>` and Option types `?`), pattern matching (now in the compiler), method cascading, async/await, and more that I'm forgetting.
https://github.com/ringabout/awesome-nim#language-features
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Nim: Curated Packages
Just under their table of contents, they say that "This list is fairly outdated." and point you to https://github.com/xflywind/awesome-nim - and that repo seems to have recent updates.
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Nim Community Survey 2021 Results
Thanks for making these, I actually had no idea these existed! I don't "need" them now but seeing these gives me ideas for projects and makes future things easier.
I wish discovery of community libraries was higher, I'm constantly discovering libraries that do amazing things 'hidden' away. I know there's https://nimble.directory/ and https://github.com/xflywind/awesome-nim but most of the time I end up using a search engine for something specific if I think of it.
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Prologue: A powerful web framework written in Nim
awesome-nim: https://github.com/xflywind/awesome-nim
What are some alternatives?
nodejs - Alternative StdLib for Nim for NodeJS/JavaScript targets, hijacks NodeJS StdLib for Nim
prologue - Powerful and flexible web framework written in Nim
node-webrtc - node-webrtc is a Node.js Native Addon that provides bindings to WebRTC M87
nim-chronos - Chronos - An efficient library for asynchronous programming
genepi - Automatic generation of N-API wrapper from a C++ library
awesome-prologue - Plugins for prologue written in Nim.
nim-webui - Use any web browser as GUI, with Nim in the backend and HTML5 in the frontend.
prologue-examples - A repository to host examples for Prologue framework written in Nim language.
gintro - High level GObject-Introspection based GTK3/GTK4 bindings for Nim language
nimtraits - Automatic trait implementation for nim types
napi-rs - A framework for building compiled Node.js add-ons in Rust via Node-API
enu - A Logo-like 3D environment, implemented in Nim