fresh
eleventy πβ‘οΈ
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fresh | eleventy πβ‘οΈ | |
---|---|---|
124 | 244 | |
11,849 | 16,213 | |
1.3% | 1.8% | |
9.7 | 9.3 | |
6 days ago | 4 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
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.
fresh
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What's Your Favorite Tech Stack and Why?
Deno: Deno with one of it's frameworks (like Fresh
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π§ 50 Articles to Level Up
The road to Fresh 2.0 (https://github.com/denoland/fresh/issues/2363) by Marvin Hagemeister Can't wait for seeing the end of the road! All in all great changes ahead.
- The Road to Fresh 2.0
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Fly.it Has GPUs Now
Because I have secret magical powers that you probably don't, it's basically free for me. Here's the breakdown though:
The application server uses Deno and Fresh (https://fresh.deno.dev) and requires a shared-1x CPU at 512 MB of ram. That's $3.19 per month as-is. It also uses 2GB of disk volume, which would cost $0.30 per month.
As far as post generation goes: when I first set it up it used GPT-3.5 Turbo to generate prose. That cost me rounding error per month (maybe like $0.05?). At some point I upgraded it to GPT-4 Turbo for free-because-I-got-OpenAI-credits-on-the-drama-day reasons. The prose level increase wasn't significant.
With the GPU it has now, a cold load of the model and prose generation run takes about 1.5 minutes. If I didn't have reasons to keep that machine pinned to a GPU (involving other ridiculous ventures), it would probably cost about 5 minutes per day (increased the time to make the math easier) of GPU time with a 40 GB volume (I now use Nous Hermes Mixtral at Q5_K_M precision, so about 32 GB of weights), so something like $6 per month for the volume and 2.5 hours of GPU time, or about $6.25 per month on an L40s.
In total it's probably something like $15.75 per month. That's a fair bit on paper, but I have certain arrangements that make it significantly less cheap for me. I could re-architect Arsène to not have to be online 24/7, but it's frankly not worth it when the big cost is the GPU time and weights volume. I don't know of a way to make that better without sacrificing model quality more than I have to.
For a shitpost though, I think it'd totally worth it to pay that much. It's kinda hilarious and I feel like it makes for a decent display of how bad things could get if we go full "AI replaces writers" like some people seem to want for some reason I can't even begin to understand.
I still think it's funny that I have to explicitly tell people to not take financial advice from it, because if I didn't then they will.
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Deno in 2023
Deno has also created a Next.js competitor, Fresh. I found it a few weeks ago and am starting to go through the docs, looks like a good overall concept. https://fresh.deno.dev/
- React is actively harmful if your website is static
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We need an official backend web framework
https://fresh.deno.dev/ - Fresh embraces the tried and true design of server side rendering and progressive enhancement on the client side.
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Hacktoberfest 2023 Recap
Along the way, I not only got the oppurtunity to revise old concepts that had blurred in my memory, but also learnt about new technologies like Fresh.js, a framework from Deno (a js runtime engine) that uses Preact, a React Routing library and used Chakra UI for the first time.
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Why Can't I Just Use This Function? The Struggles with Code Reusability in JS
A whole project might be released as a server or framework. Frameworks like fresh, and astro) both have had things deep within them that I've wanted to reuse, within fresh it's the esbuild configuration, and islands functionality, and within astro it's the rendering of astro files themselves.
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JavaScript First, Then TypeScript
The Fresh framework by Deno cited an improved developer experience due to tighter feedback loops.
eleventy πβ‘οΈ
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Converting BlogCFC blog to Eleventy
This post outlines the steps for migrating an existing BlogCFC blog to a JamStack, with a focus on using Eleventy.
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Ask HN: What's the simplest static website generator?
I suggest you to try out eleventhy (https://www.11ty.dev/)
Quite simple to start, and a nice system to add some scripting and styles without the requirement of bringing in a framework.
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Eleventy - Create a global production flag
A production flag enables you to run activities in dev or production such as minifying assets, showing draft posts, etc. There isn't a built-in flag or function that comes with eleventy (11ty) specifically for this. However we have this info at our fingertips.
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Ask HN: Looking for lightweight personal blogging platform
I can't recommend Eleventy enough!
https://www.11ty.dev
I converted my WordPress blog to Eleventy 4 years ago and never looked back, it's been delightful!
https://www.joshcanhelp.com/taking-wordpress-to-eleventy/
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Removing React is just weakness leaving your codebase
Itβs 2024, and you are about to start a new project. Do you reach for React, a framework you know and love or do you look at one of the other hot new frameworks like Astro, Enhance, 11ty, SvelteKit or gasp, plain vanilla Web Components?
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VS Code - Fix a task automation issue - `The terminal process failed to launch (exit code: 127`
The "dev" script is running the eleventy server in dev mode. The details of the script are not important for this discussion, but to round out the background here is an abbreviated version of my package.json:
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Eleventy vs. Next.js for static site generation
Eleventy is a fast and powerful SSG that really shines when it comes to pure static site generation because it does not require the loading of a client-side JavaScript bundle in order to serve content.
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You don't need JavaScript for that
The irony is using a JavaScript-based static site generator to make the site: https://www.11ty.dev
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Why You Should Write Your Own Static Site Generator
https://doublejosh.com/post/186193119278/metalsmithjs-is-sti...
Then two years ago I needed a more robust SSR system based on React, so I went with GatsbyJS. It's insanely mature and intuitive, but as we all know that community and business is now drying up too. But the framework is still great.
Now everyone sings the praises of NextJS, which can be used for SSR but is intended for applications and active server endpoints. But more complexity doesn't mean better.
I'm keen to try other simple frameworks when the result is a static site. I may give https://www.11ty.dev a shot.
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From Jason: my custom digital garden in 11ty
11ty is a lightweight static site generator. I chopped up my HTML and used the 11ty starter template called eleventy-base-blog as the structural foundation for the site.
What are some alternatives?
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. βοΈ Star to support our work!
remix - Build Better Websites. Create modern, resilient user experiences with web fundamentals.
Hugo - The worldβs fastest framework for building websites.
qwik - Instant-loading web apps, without effort
SvelteKit - web development, streamlined
Gatsby - The best React-based framework with performance, scalability and security built in.
Next.js - The React Framework
Publii - The most intuitive Static Site CMS designed for SEO-optimized and privacy-focused websites.
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML
Grav - Modern, Crazy Fast, Ridiculously Easy and Amazingly Powerful Flat-File CMS powered by PHP, Markdown, Twig, and Symfony