Directus
appsmith
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Directus | appsmith | |
---|---|---|
206 | 233 | |
25,113 | 31,240 | |
2.3% | 2.4% | |
9.9 | 10.0 | |
4 days ago | 28 minutes ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
Directus
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Form to DB
I don't know, it's something I've wanted many times.
Recently I discovered https://directus.io/ which comes pretty close and it's open source.
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Open-Source Headless CMS in 2024
Directus: The Shape-Shifting Maverick
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A Year of Self-Hosting: 6 Open-Source Projects That Surprised Me in 2023
The Backend to Build Anything or Everything | Directus
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Prismic.io is increasing our price by *1900%* over Christmas
Along those lines, Iβve been happy with Directus as a backend for my little blog.
I using Directus CMS on several projects with pretty complicated flows, api extensions etc. probably there will be some work if you move. I liked Directus is because it's standard SQL I can always move my DB and documents to another solution. I don't use their hosted solution but they have an unlimited offering for $100 / month.
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Why Is the Django Admin "Ugly"?
It depends on your skillsets, but I'd highly recommend https://directus.io/ especially if you need "slickness" to raise money otherwise try a pyhat stack if you hate javascript.
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Building a Blog in Django
The admin is extremely unacceptable for anything beyond trivial borderline trivial use cases, and the modifications you'd have to make are just awful especially the more interactive something needs to be. The extremely tight integration between models and the modeladmin is a blessing and curse.
The people who like Django,also tend to overload it to do everything. This makes sense at small companies. The only place I really see Django at large companies is as an api using DRF or something.
For internal admins, I've been lobbying to use https://directus.io/ at my company.
- Show HN: I built a Python web framework from scratch
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I need recommendations for creating an API. Start from scratch, or are there projects I can build from?
I initially looked into CMS's like Strapi and Directus to possibly handle my admin UI + API all at once. I haven't found anything that looks like it can do this yet, but I'd be very happy to be proven wrong. I would prefer it to be based in .NET or Node.js since I am more familiar with those, but there's no reason I couldn't do PHP either.
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Pros and cons of off-the-shelf solutions for creating a control panel
- We want a solution that creates CRUD (create, read, update, delete) quickly and requires minimal effort. - We want to be able to create some sort of complex interface if the task requires it. - We make cool, beautiful projects, so we want a visually pleasing solution. - We want the solution to be independent of the language on the back-end, because, for example, we started with PHP, Laravel, but over time node.js, Go appeared in the stack. In short, we want fast, beautiful and custom. We've had time to poke at various off-the-shelf solutions that we've been advised. They're good, but: - they are created specifically for some frameworks / languages like laravel, node.js - they can only generate CRUDs with a rigidly defined structure, where you can't implement or customize anything of your own. - they can't be styled Here's what we've been looking at Control Panels for Laravel: https://demo.backpackforlaravel.com/admin/dashboard Not a very pretty solution in our opinion. And the promo page has nice screenshots, not the demo "well such". https://orchid.software/en/ Not particularly functional, but neatly done https://nova.laravel.com They have a beautiful, but rigidly set strutkrua, you can not create castmon interfaces, stylize them. Just do CRUD and that's it. And it's paid https://filamentphp.com/ Analog to Nova, with essentially the same problems. For node.js: https://adminjs.co Nice promo, and the demo is way behind As standalone dashboards: https://strapi.io/ Very cool, but for other purposes. It's more of an entity builder with an interface and API https://pocketbase.io/ Similarly, it's an entity builder with an interface and API https://directus.io/ This is a backend builder. https://filamentphp.com/It is purely for php, you can't customize styles, you can't create your own interfaces. It is possible to create only tables and forms by template, and we remember that we want flexibility, independence from the language and the ability to create their own interfaces and customize them https://flatlogic.com This is also more of a backend builder. Direct competitors: https://github.com/refinedev/refine https://marmelab.com/react-admin/is probably the best solution that is currently on the market, they have been developing for a long time, they are our favorite. To the disadvantages we considered the following points: quite an old project, and somewhere the technology is already outdated, unsympathetic interface, old UI libraries. Huge documentation, itβs simply to create CRUD but hard to work without immersion. After all this there is only one conclusion: you need to do it yourself....
appsmith
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A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
appsmith β Low code project to build admin panels, internal tools, and dashboards. Integrates with 15+ databases and any API.
- Why I'm skeptical of low-code
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How to build a Google Meet AI assistant app in 10 minutes without coding
Effective communication and efficient meeting management are key to a team's success in the modern workplace. Recognizing this, we will develop an AI-powered meeting assistant app to transform Google Meet recordings into automatically generated meeting notes with key takeaways and action items. The blog post is tailored for every creator from developers to no-coders who are interested in the intersection of AI and productivity tools. It's particularly useful for those with limited AI-development experience and who want to build AI applications by using simple low-code tools like Unbody and Appsmith.
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π₯π₯ Our awesome OSS friends π
Appsmith- Build build custom software on top of your data.
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The Ultimate Guide to Building Internal Tools in 2024
Suggest features and help to guide Appsmithβs future: Appsmith's community keeps us at the forefront of internal tools with feature requests for the latest third-party integrations and robust community support.
- Ask HN: Why did Visual Basic die?
- Exploring Top 9 Retool Alternatives for Enterprise Applications in 2023
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How to Write a Great Readme
> https://github.com/appsmithorg/appsmith
That is more of a GitHub landing page than a readme.
> An effective README file needs to tell your audience what your project does, how to use it, and how they can help out.
The readme starts with a `a` image tag nested within a `p`.
One spot where your readme misses the mark: it can't be read outside of github (or some rendering engine). Markdown is supposed to be human readable. Instead you say "here's how app smith works" and then plop a big image. That doesn't help anybody understand what your project does by reading the readme. Images and diagrams are super helpful, but they should accompany thoughtful prose. This is also important as an accessibility consideration.
The contributors sections are dumb. Github is a better tool to use to view contributors (https://github.com/appsmithorg/appsmith/graphs/contributors). Other projects before github would have an authors and/or contributors file. I don't care about the contributors when I'm trying to understand how your project works, it's just shameless marketing in that position.
You have a "getting started in 100 seconds" image CTA in your features section. Doesn't make any sense to me.
Overall I'd suggest focusing on improving your readme to be more useful and less of a marketing tool (it can still market its value lightly) and instead explain how the software works and how to get up and running with it.
Overall I'd score your readme 4/10.
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Managing AI-powered Java App With API Management
In this tutorial, we explored the OpenAI ChatGPT API to generate responses to prompts. We created a Spring Boot application that calls the API to generate responses to prompts. Next, you can introduce additional features to your integration by updating the existing apisix.yml file. Also, you check out the branch name called with-frontend and run the project to see the UI interface built using Appsmith that works with APISIX.
What are some alternatives?
ToolJet - Low-code platform for building business applications. Connect to databases, cloud storages, GraphQL, API endpoints, Airtable, Google sheets, OpenAI, etc and build apps using drag and drop application builder. Built using JavaScript/TypeScript. π
budibase - Budibase is an open-source low code platform that helps you build internal tools in minutes π
supabase - The open source Firebase alternative.
Strapi - π Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS. Itβs 100% JavaScript/TypeScript, fully customizable and developer-first.
react-admin - A frontend Framework for building data-driven applications running on top of REST/GraphQL APIs, using TypeScript, React and Material Design
Appwrite - Build like a team of hundreds_
KeystoneJS - The most powerful headless CMS for Node.js β built with GraphQL and React
Metabase - The simplest, fastest way to get business intelligence and analytics to everyone in your company :yum:
nocodb - π₯ π₯ π₯ Open Source Airtable Alternative