dep-tree
Gource
dep-tree | Gource | |
---|---|---|
9 | 81 | |
1,244 | 11,146 | |
- | - | |
9.3 | 0.0 | |
22 days ago | 15 days ago | |
Go | C++ | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
dep-tree
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Show HN: Visualize the Entropy of a Codebase with a 3D Force-Directed Graph
The portion of the code in charge of rendering lives inside the `internal/entropy` (https://github.com/gabotechs/dep-tree/tree/main/internal/ent...).
Force-directed is an algorithm for displaying graphs in a 2d or 3d space, which simulates attraction/repulsion based on the dependencies between the nodes, the wikipedia page explains it really well https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Force-directed_graph_drawing
> Love it, I think dependency trees are super underused data for static analysis.
Definitely, specially for evaluating "the big picture" of a codebase
- Show HN: I Made a Tool for Visualizing the Entropy of a Code Base in the Browser
- Show HN: I Made a Tool for Visualizing the Entropy of a Code Base
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About Software Complexity...
If you like Dep Tree, feel free to stop by the GitHub repository and give it a star. Check out the README and you will find out that Dep Tree is far more than just a cool visualization tool; it can actually help you enforce your code base decoupling!
- Show HN: Render your JS or TS project's file dependency graph in the terminal
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Rendering a Rust project's file dependency tree in the terminal
I am working on dep-tree, a CLI tool for rendering and linting source code file dependency trees, https://github.com/gabotechs/dep-tree, and I recently added support for the Rust language (previously, only TypeScript and JavaScript where supported).
- dep-tree - a tui application for rendering your TS/JS project's dependency tree written in Go
Gource
- π Versionner et builder l'eBook de son Entretien Annuel d'Evaluation sur Git(Hub)
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Animating Source Code Evolution
The underlying technology, https://gource.io/, has probably been mentioned here before, but it's a superb tool which produces beautiful animations, so deserves another airing.
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Show HN: Visualize the Entropy of a Codebase with a 3D Force-Directed Graph
This is really cool. And as OP pointed out, I really like the pipeline integration. Like when linting catches function-level complexity, but in a cross functional way. I prefer to think of programs in layers where the top layers can import lower layers, but never the other way (and also very cautious on horizontal imports). Something like this would help track that.
From the visualization perspective, it reminds me a lot of Gource. Gource is a cool visualization showing contributions to a repo. You see individual contributors buzzing around updating files on per-commit and per-merge.
https://github.com/acaudwell/Gource
- Gource: Software Version Control Visualization
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Preporuka alata za vizuelizaciju koda
NeΕ‘to kao gource?
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Show HN: Hackreels β Animate your code in HD
Yeah, I was completely distracted trying to figure out what `import { Button, icons } from "ui"` was derived from. Looks like `
That being said, I do like the overall idea of animating code changes. Calls back to that old Facebook sketching app[0] that would let us share replays, and I am a fan of the stories that Gource[1] can tell.Ultimately, though, the sequential text file is a bad metaphor for code. Best thing for it is to split your modules across files.
0. Can't remember the name of it, but something similar is https://sketchtoy.com/
1. https://gource.io/
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[Asking for feedback] News visualization idea
If the goal is to create a fun animation, then have a look at https://gource.io/ for inspiration.
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The SQLite Project visualized with Gource
From https://github.com/acaudwell/Gource
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I see a lot of screenshots of "horribly complex git repos" with like 5 branches that are mildly confusing to follow in this subreddit... I feel like I'm obligated to share this. As part of my job I am personally responsible for managing releases in this repository. (Yes, this is real.)
I wonder what your history would look like in Gource: https://gource.io/
- Gource β Animate your Git history
What are some alternatives?
protolint - A pluggable linter and fixer to enforce Protocol Buffer style and conventions.
Sourcetrail - Sourcetrail - free and open-source interactive source explorer
typex - [TOOL/CLI] - Filter and examine Go type structures, interfaces and their transitive dependencies and relationships. Export structural types as TypeScript value object or bare type representations.
metrics - π An infographics generator with 30+ plugins and 300+ options to display stats about your GitHub account and render them as SVG, Markdown, PDF or JSON!
slack-term - Slack client for your terminal
vircadia-native-core - Vircadia open source agent-based metaverse ecosystem.
viddy - π A modern watch command. Time machine and pager etc.
ccache - ccache β a fast compiler cache
do - βοΈ A dependency injection toolkit based on Go 1.18+ Generics.
git-of-theseus - Analyze how a Git repo grows over time
linux - Linux kernel source tree