devrc
erdtree
Our great sponsors
devrc | erdtree | |
---|---|---|
8 | 57 | |
64 | 2,247 | |
- | - | |
6.3 | 7.3 | |
3 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT 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.
devrc
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Automate your Python project with Makefile (2021)
I have been using Makefile for over 10 years in all of my projects, and here are some features I've always found lacking in Makefile:
1. There is no way to display documentation for commands and accepted parameters. Yes, you can write a special task that will display comments, but you have to copy it from project to project.
2. The need to pass named parameters when calling tasks. I want to write `make serve localhost 3000` instead of `make serve bind=localhost port=3000`
3. I've always had the need in different projects to use the same commands, so I had to copy tasks from project to project. I need a central place with commands that I can apply to any project.
4. The ability to write tasks in different languages. In some cases, it's easier to write in Python or TypeScript/Deno.
5. And most importantly, it is difficult to write commands in Makefile that can be used in different environments. For example, I need to run commands on different groups of servers: production and staging. This could look like: `make production TASK1 TASK2` or `make stage TASK1 TASK2`. In other words, the production/stage task sets up the parameters for executing tasks in a specific environment. It might be possible to call commands in this way with Makefile, but it seems too complicated.
As a result, I decided to write my own utility for task automation: https://github.com/devrc-hub/devrc
It solves all of the above problems and has other interesting features and also written in Rust .
- devrc: Task automation tool with embedded Deno runtime for developers written in Rust
- Task automation tool with embedded Deno runtime for developers written in Rust
- Show HN: Task automation tool with Deno runtime for developers written in Rust
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devrc: task automation tool for developers written in Rust
I create some examples with loops and filters:
- Show HN: Task Automation Tool for Developers
erdtree
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How can someone who has primarily worked in Web/Mobile development break into systems engineering?
The most substantial project that I have to show for my knowledge of the lower level topics is this project I work on in my spare-time called erdtree and I'm really banking on that to stand-in as "experience" in the absence of professional systems experience.
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In search of Rust projects to contribute
I'm working on this little project called erdtree and could use a bit of help adding information about file owners and permissions for the windows build if you're interested. No worries if not :)
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fn main() at the top or bottom?
I actually do put my main function in the middle
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Announcing οΈβπ erdtree v3.1 οΈβπ
User feedback really helps drive erdtree's development so happy to accept input if you have any! And yeah et became erd because of name clashes with a lot of other existing packages.
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Hosting a free 2-hour Rust intro course tomorrow over Google Meets
I'm a self-taught developer working professionally as a director of engineering who writes Rust on weekends. I've been using Rust now for a little over 2 years and am the author and maintainer of this little command-line tool called erdtree. Before I was a programmer I did extensive tutoring in various subjects like organic chemistry, biochemistry, physics, calculus, etc..
- erdtree: a modern, multi-threaded, general purpose disk usage and filesystem utility that combines aspects of tree, du, wc, ls, and find.
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What's everyone working on this week (23/2023)?
Took a healthy break from this little open-source project I've been iterating on.. ready to get back to it this weekend :]
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ls, tree, du, etc. - which do you prefer and why?
I personally use erdtree, it even uses icons to differentiate various kinds of files
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Creating a project to show off your skills
Hereβs a project that I work on in my spare time. I initially worked on a very bare bones version on a 6-hour plan ride back in spring of 2022 because I was bored and wanted to work on something challenging without the need for internet. After two days I posted a naive version onto GitHub and after like 6 months it got around 100 stars on GitHub so I then decided to give it special attention in January of this year and have been iterating on it since.
What are some alternatives?
rab - Rusty Armor Builds - Monster Hunter Rise Armor Set Creation Tool
broot - A new way to see and navigate directory trees : https://dystroy.org/broot
just - π€ Just a command runner
funix - A command to install the Flutter sdk
cargo-make - Rust task runner and build tool.
ERSaveIDEditor - ELDEN RING savedata SteamID64 editor (convert cracked to legit)
move-links - CLI utility to move (or rename) your files to a new location and redirect all of its symbolic links, to the new path
wg - Coordination repository of the embedded devices Working Group
mask - π A CLI task runner defined by a simple markdown file
hoard - cli command organizer written in rust
Nake - Magic script-based C# task runner for .NET Core
cloc - cloc counts blank lines, comment lines, and physical lines of source code in many programming languages.