Gitit
scotty
Gitit | scotty | |
---|---|---|
8 | 19 | |
2,128 | 1,687 | |
- | 0.5% | |
5.8 | 8.0 | |
3 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
LicenseRef-GPL | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
Gitit
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Elixir for Cynical Curmudgeons
You're correct.
It says at the bottom: powered by https://github.com/jgm/gitit
Readme states that: "Gitit is a wiki program written in Haskell. It uses Happstack for the web server and pandoc for markup processing."
- School of Haskell: Basics
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Looking for a simple wiki (web, not desktop) that stores backend as markdown files?
I’ve used the Gitit Wiki. Database is plaintext markdown files under git source control. Renders with pandoc so you get a really good dialect of markdown. The look and feel is a little dated but 8/10 highly recommend.
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Looking for private wiki software on internet
I don't use gitit, but I've had people advocate it to me: https://github.com/jgm/gitit
- Wiki engine using Pandoc and Git
- Is there an open source and deployable collaborative markdown editor with version control (maybe git?)
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Snippet Box - selfhosted and open source code snippet manager with built-in support for Markdown documentation
Instead of SQLite I would prefer if you stored the snippets in a git repo like Gollum or Gitit.
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Archivy - Extensible Self Hosted Knowledge Base - v1 release
I use my own forked version of gitit (dark, full-width theme, with automated toc and some other tweaks) for the last 5 years or so which looks and functions quite similarly. I handled web bookmarking/clipping with xclip (rich text clipboard) + pandoc html-to-markdown.
scotty
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haskell todo list app (beginner)
I would suggest checking out scotty for the http server - it uses warp by default, and is very beginner-friendly.
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HLS issues an error for Setup.hs and Spec.hs (using hspec-discover)
Here's the current commit I'm working with: https://github.com/scotty-web/scotty/commit/3ed8586c046b46dc42740e8ac2e7fe712e84191d
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School of Haskell: Basics
If you're not a fan of the ruby-on-rails / swiss army knife approach that IHP takes, check out Scotty. Add Lucid for Html rendering, and Selda for Postgres. (There are other options for any of these tools if you prefer)
- Scotty (simple web routing) https://hackage.haskell.org/package/scotty
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Use Haskell from Nodejs
Writing a Haskell webserver (maybe using scotty) and call it from node.
- Programming language comparison by reimplementing the same transit data app
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How to change state in a webserver application
I've been looking for this as well, and found the globalstate.hs example in the scotty github repository. It uses a ReaderT of a TVar and shows how to update or read shared state in memory.
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Suggestions for "dashboard" graphics libraries?
I've found htmx and hyperscript talking to scotty to be an easy way to get something like this going while retaining the joys of Haskell on the backend and avoiding the pains of Haskell on the frontend.
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Web development in Haskell
Finally, to add my opinion in the context of some other posts: I'd suggest Scotty (and probably other libraries I'm less familiar with) before Servant in particular, as Servant is a lot to absorb if you're also trying to build fluency in Haskell at the same time. Similarly, I'd advocate for Elmish (disclaimer, it's written by (very talented programmers other than myself at) my company) over Halogen, at least based on the last time I tried Halogen--I found it pretty complex as well. Don't get me wrong, I think Servant and Halogen are both great, just...complex.
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Building a REST API with Haskell
This is an example of REST API built with Scotty a web framework of Haskell and PostgreSQL a relational database. It's a simple API to manage products.
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Options for a frontend of demo for a toy app
Not that I'm much of an expert, but if you're talking about a very barebones static single-page-app, then you could very easily get by just using blaze-html to put your elements on the page, and then scotty is a basic web framework you could use to serve up your app.
What are some alternatives?
Gollum - A simple, Git-powered wiki with a local frontend and support for many kinds of markup and content.
lucid - Clear to write, read and edit DSL for writing HTML
Dokuwiki - The DokuWiki Open Source Wiki Engine
reroute - Another Haskell web framework for rapid development
ikiwiki
json - Haskell JSON library
ngx-export - A comprehensive web framework aimed at building custom Haskell handlers for the Nginx Web Server
scotty-tls - Run your Scotty apps over TLS
MoinMoin - MoinMoin Wiki (1.9, also: 1.5a ... 1.8), stable, for production wikis
scotty-session - Adding session functionality to scotty
wol - A program and library to a send WoL Magic Packet, to remotely start a computer.
fluid - 🐙 Code-generated, Auto-versioned, & Smart Web APIs