filter
hyper
filter | hyper | |
---|---|---|
18 | 97 | |
799 | 13,845 | |
- | 1.2% | |
0.0 | 9.2 | |
over 1 year ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
filter
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Querying and transforming object graphs in Go
Here’s Rob Pike’s (one of the original Go designers) attempt to “see what the hubbub is all about”: https://github.com/robpike/filter
- Future language enhancements to go
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Why Golang instead of Kotlin?
I find the language really solid but asking on r/golang is quite an adventure. It's extremely distant from go's spirit, the grammar is even more rich than Rust. Typical example: let, run, with, apply, and also - they all practically do the same but with a different scope of this and return value. Just looking at the flow API can get your head spinning. To illustrate how much it's completely the opposite of Go, see how Rob Pike pokes fun at map/filter and tells people they should not use it . I guess you can't force all developers to adhere to this mental model, but that's about it, but that's about it, technical arguments are irrelevant except for extremely niche concerns about memory and startup time
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Supporting the Use of Rust in the Chromium Project
I mean sure, let's praise the ergonomics of channels and the reliability of maps. As for datastructures, we already have datastructures at home . They just work fine. Nobody needs more than that because rob pike told us so
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Why isn’t Go used in AI/ML?
Go will never have a map/filter syntax, to the point rob pike even makes fun of it , do you really want to use it for that kind of domain ?
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State of Rust for web backends
Also since generators are mentioned I recently came across this rob pike moment, he implemented a reduce function that takes and returns all interface{} types and uses reflection to check if the call is valid at runtime - that's the most typical Go that can ever be written in 40 lines - all that to make the point that it's useless. Such a great spirit. https://github.com/robpike/filter
- Go 1.21 may have a clear(x) builtin and there's an interesting reason why
- What necessary packages or functions that Go doesn't have?
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Golang is so fun to write
A few points that stood out to me: error handling in Go is generally pretty good. It's much more performant compared to throwing exceptions and the high frequency of error handling helps a lot with debugging and avoiding unexpected errors. What you've described as "poor OOP'ish" is partly true, yes Go does poor OOP, because it doesn't try to do OOP. The language favours composition over inheritance. Strongly applying OOP concepts in Go is simply not using the language in its intended way. For implicit interfaces, it's completely fair that you don't like them, but it's not a disadvantage of the language. I for one find implicit interfaces very intuitive and feel it's the right way for it to be done. No function overloading and lack of ternary operations is absolutely intentional, both of these are overcome by writing more expressive code, which is not a bad thing. Similarly with no built in map/filter/find, these can be achieved using for-loops. Reference https://github.com/robpike/filter for Rob Pike's implementation of filter, stating in the readme that there's not much use for it and to just use for-loops instead. Last thing, enums are expressed using iota: https://go.dev/ref/spec#Iota
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Lies we tell ourselves to keep using Golang
> I didn't get that desire for purity that you gleaned from it.
'Folks who develop an allergic reaction to "big balls of mutable state without sum types" tend to gravitate towards languages that gives them control over mutability, lifetimes, and lets them build abstractions.'
This mutability argument is present throughout the article. Seems like nothing sans Rust or niche functional languages is enough.
> Nil pointer exceptions, for example, don't have to exist anymore..
The language most notorious for those is Java due to almost everything being passed via a nullable reference. When everything can be nullable, how can you know where to check for it? Go addresses this to an extent by explicitly separating pointers from values. Values are the default and cannot be nil, so the opportunity for null dereferences is greatly diminished. It's not a perfect solution, but it's not nothing either.
> and yet they do in Go because they couldn't be bothered to add sum types.
Damn those lazy Go devs!
> Its type system is barely a step above a dynamic language.
Turns out even a basic type system is a huge improvement over none. Just being able to restrict values to concrete types goes a long way.
> You have to write the same imperative looping code over and over because Rob Pike would rather just use a for loop than something mildly expressive like map or filter (https://github.com/robpike/filter).
There are arguments to be made either way, but I definitely agree generics (along with iterators) should have been there since day 1.
> Every function that does meaningful work is littered with if err != nil { return err }.
One big positive of this that I don't see in other languages is every `return` in a function must be on the start of a line. That is, every single exit path of a function is easily findable by visually scanning
hyper
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The Linux Kernel Prepares for Rust 1.77 Upgrade
> If you are equally picky and constrain yourself to parts of the ecosystem which care about binary size, you still have more options and can avoid size issues.
What's an example of this for, say, libcurl? On my system it has a tiny number of recursive dependencies, around a dozen. [0] Furthermore if I want to write a C program that uses libcurl I have to download zero bytes of data ... because it's a shared library that is already installed on my system, since so many programs already use it.
I don't really know the appropriate comparison for Rust. reqwest seems roughly comparable, but it's an HTTP client library, and not a general purpose network client like curl. Obviously curl can do a lot more. Even the list of direct dependencies for reqwest is quite long [1], and it's built on top of another http library [2] that has its own long list of dependencies, a list that includes tokio, no small library itself.
In terms of final binary size, the installed size of the curl package on my system, which includes both the command line tool and development dependencies for libcurl, is 1875.03 KiB.
[0] I'm excluding the dependency on the ca-certificates package, since this only provides the certificate chain for TLS and lots of programs rely on it.
[1] https://crates.io/crates/reqwest/0.11.24/dependencies
[2] https://crates.io/crates/hyper/0.14.28/dependencies
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json-responder 1.1: dynamic path resolution
hyper-based HTTP server generating JSON responses. Written in Rust.
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I pre-released my project "json-responder" written in Rust
tokio / hyper / toml / serde / serde_json / json5 / console
- How Turborepo is porting from Go to Rust
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Signway - a pre-signed URLs gateway written in rust, specifically designed for allowing LLM based client apps to directly query OpenAI's api securely.
Using Rust here was immensely helpful, using libraries made by the community like https://github.com/hyperium/hyper really powered up the development of Signway, so glad to see this kind of awesome crates made public. Hope that it continues to be like that despite the current controversies.
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Problem with YouTube embed thumbnail...
- Discord sends a slightly weird request by specifying content length (a bug in hyper we've not yet upgraded to fix, https://github.com/hyperium/hyper/commit/fb90d30c02d8f7cdc9a643597d5c4ca7a123f3dd)
- Hyper – A fast and correct HTTP implementation for Rust
What are some alternatives?
Weaviate - Weaviate is an open-source vector database that stores both objects and vectors, allowing for the combination of vector search with structured filtering with the fault tolerance and scalability of a cloud-native database.
reqwest - An easy and powerful Rust HTTP Client
ply - Painless polymorphism
tokio - A runtime for writing reliable asynchronous applications with Rust. Provides I/O, networking, scheduling, timers, ...
go-onnxruntime - Unofficial C binding for Onnxruntime in Golang.
Warp - Warp is a modern, Rust-based terminal with AI built in so you and your team can build great software, faster.
nihongo
actix-web - Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework for Rust.
go-funk - A modern Go utility library which provides helpers (map, find, contains, filter, ...)
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
goonnx - Go language bindings for ONNX runtime
curl-rust - Rust bindings to libcurl