design-patterns-for-humans
Nest
design-patterns-for-humans | Nest | |
---|---|---|
9 | 312 | |
43,415 | 64,419 | |
- | 1.3% | |
3.5 | 9.9 | |
4 months ago | 3 days ago | |
TypeScript | ||
- | 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.
design-patterns-for-humans
- Ask HN: How to handle Asian-style âFamily name firstâ when designing interfaces
- Cool Github repositories for Everyone
-
15 tools and resources every developer should know about in 2022
2. Design patterns for humans
-
[OC] My job search as a self-taught software engineer with no professional work experience
For the first point, what really helped me is taking a look at the various design patterns that are usually used. However, do not force a design pattern into code, it should come naturally to you which pattern fits to a problem. A great resource I can recommend is the README.md file on this GitHub project.
-
UNITY Question: How would one develop a random loot generation based on rarity/prefix using scriptable objects that effect the item stats without hardcoding each individual item variant?
I'd recommend reading gang of four design patterns https://github.com/kamranahmedse/design-patterns-for-humans
-
Testing with NestJS like a Pro
If you want to learn more about design patterns, don't forget to take a look at Design Patterns for Humans, it's an incredible repository with many interesting examples that you can apply when you want to use a design pattern to solve a specific problem.
-
Generating Trees Images, Part 2. Geometry, Graphics and DOM
Ideally, we would write a facade for those methods and provide an API like:
- Design Patterns for Humans
-
How does cacheing in classes actually work?
https://github.com/kamranahmedse/design-patterns-for-humans#-singleton
Nest
-
NestJS tip: how to change HTTP server timeouts
When using the NestJS framework, sometimes you may need to change some default timeout. You can define them just like you'd do in a plain Node.js HTTP server like so:
-
Containerize your multi-services app with docker compose
Back: a graphQL server built with Nestjs
-
Full Stack Web Development Concept map
NestJS - opinionated more scalable, but harder to learn docs
-
Don't go all-in Clean Architecture: An alternative for NestJS applications
Pragmatically, we can apply this to a Nest application by creating an Interface for our services, separating the Presenter layer (Controller) from the Use Case (Services):
- Utilizando Testcontainers para Testes de Integração com NestJS e Prisma ORM
-
A Gentle Introduction to Containerization and Docker
Itâs a text document that contains all the commands a user could call to assemble an image. Letâs check an example of a Dockerfile for a nodejs app in this case it will be a NestJS app and then explain each part.
-
Scalable REST APIs with NestJS: A Testing-Driven Approach
describe('Create bookmarks', () => { const dto: CreateBookmarkDto = { title: 'NestJS', link: 'https://nestjs.com/', }; it('should create bookmark', () => { return pactum .spec() .post('/bookmarks') .withHeaders({ Authorization: 'Bearer $S{userAt}', }) .withBody(dto) .expectStatus(201) .stores('bookmarkId', 'id')//store the bookmark id in the variable bookmarkId .expectBodyContains(dto.title) .expectBodyContains(dto.link) }); });
-
Rust GraphQL APIs for NodeJS Developers: Introduction
In my usual NodeJS tech stack, which includes GraphQL, NestJS, SQL (predominantly PostgreSQL with MikroORM), I encountered these limitations. To overcome them, I've developed a new stack utilizing Rust, which still offers some ease of development:
-
A Step-by-Step Guide to Implement JWT Authentication in NestJS using Passport
The purpose of this article is to provide a step-by-step guide for implementing authentication system in a NestJS project using the Passport middleware module.
-
From Frontend to Backend
That's exactly where I am. My manager gave me these links, that cover a lot of those words the backend uses, so I can identify what they mean and how to use them. 1. For inspiration and concepts: https://github.com/Sairyss/domain-driven-hexagon 2. Suggested to read the documentation for nest.js. They apply such concepts I don't understand: https://nestjs.com/
What are some alternatives?
awesome-mlops - A curated list of references for MLOps
SailsJS - Realtime MVC Framework for Node.js
Advance-Python-Notes - Reference matrial for the advance python workshop
Koa - Expressive middleware for node.js using ES2017 async functions
Tech-Interview-Cheat-Sheet - Studying for a tech interview sucks. Here's an open source cheat sheet to help
loopback-next - LoopBack makes it easy to build modern API applications that require complex integrations.
data-making-guidelines - :blue_book: Making Data, the DataMade Way
feathers - The API and real-time application framework
Java - All Algorithms implemented in Java
Ts.ED - :triangular_ruler: Ts.ED is a Node.js and TypeScript framework on top of Express to write your application with TypeScript (or ES6). It provides a lot of decorators and guideline to make your code more readable and less error-prone. âď¸ Star to support our work!
C-Plus-Plus - Collection of various algorithms in mathematics, machine learning, computer science and physics implemented in C++ for educational purposes.
Moleculer - :rocket: Progressive microservices framework for Node.js