Ex_Cldr
mint
Our great sponsors
Ex_Cldr | mint | |
---|---|---|
- | 3 | |
424 | 1,328 | |
2.4% | 1.2% | |
6.7 | 7.5 | |
17 days ago | 2 months ago | |
Elixir | Elixir | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
Ex_Cldr
We haven't tracked posts mentioning Ex_Cldr yet.
Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
mint
-
Unpacking Elixir: Resilience
One example is HTTP libraries.
For instance, take Mint (https://github.com/elixir-mint/mint):
> Mint is different from most Erlang and Elixir HTTP clients because it provides a process-less architecture.
Mint is a low-level library which doesn't make attempt to manage processes (including HTTP pooling).
In contrast, Finch (which builds on top of Mint) includes pool management:
https://github.com/elixir-mint/mint#connection-management-an...
It can take someone a bit off guard when they realise that the library they use provide a "default pool" they were not aware of, and that it can become a bottleneck etc.
-
How to implement a disk cache plugin for Elixir's Req HTTP client?
> no error checking at all
Functions that raise always end in `!` in Elixir, or at least they should. Most have alternatives that return error tuples instead which you can pattern match on (this is what I recommend). You can read the docs for `get/2` (as opposed to `get!/2` which raises) here: https://hexdocs.pm/req/Req.html#get/2.
A common pattern is for the `!` version to call the version that doesn't raise, check the result, and raise on error, which is the case here: https://github.com/wojtekmach/req/blob/9de30de0df481ee557ccc...
> and if "body" is JSON, how do you even get the raw body, or can you?
You would set `decode: false` when calling `get!/2: https://hexdocs.pm/req/Req.html#new/1. You can also set this as configuration with https://hexdocs.pm/req/Req.html#default_options/1.
As a closing note I'll mention that Req is intended to be a very high-level, scripting-friendly requests library, similar to Requests in Python. If you don't want conveniences like Req provides, you can either turn them off or use something different, like Finch (which Req is based on, https://github.com/sneako/finch). Other than Req and Finch I'm personally only familiar with HTTPoison, which is significantly older than all of the libraries derived from Mint (like Finch and Req, https://github.com/elixir-mint/mint) but still works. There are many others though, like Gun and Tesla and such.
- ElixirのHTTPクライアントでお天気情報を取得したい(2022年)
What are some alternatives?
trans - Embedded translations for Elixir
finch - Elixir HTTP client, focused on performance
gettext - Internationalization and localization support for Elixir.
gun - HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2, Websocket client (and more) for Erlang/OTP.
linguist - Elixir Internationalization library
Crawly - Crawly, a high-level web crawling & scraping framework for Elixir.
Codepagex - Elixir string encoding conversion - like iconv but pure Elixir
http_proxy - http proxy with Elixir. wait request with multi port and forward to each URIs
ecto_gettext
lhttpc - What used to be here -- this is a backwards-compat user and repo m(
exkanji - A Elixir library for translating between hiragana, katakana, romaji, kanji and sound. It uses Mecab.
ivar - Ivar is an adapter based HTTP client that provides the ability to build composable HTTP requests.