glimesh.tv
stimulus_reflex
glimesh.tv | stimulus_reflex | |
---|---|---|
5 | 45 | |
453 | 2,209 | |
0.4% | 0.9% | |
5.7 | 7.4 | |
10 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Elixir | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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glimesh.tv
- Glimesh is a next gen live streaming platform built by and for the community
- The future is coming...
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Glimesh|(Twitch Alternative) Next-Gen Live Streaming
Source Code
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We Got to LiveView
We use Phoenix and LiveView to power all of our non-video interactions on Glimesh.tv[0] and the immediate out of the box features and performance are unmatched. LiveView allowed us to get a completely real time updating channel where streamers can edit their metadata (game, title, viewer count, etc) and all of the viewers can see it in real time. Not to mention we implemented a distributed chat system that sends message updates in real time to both browser clients and API clients. Both of these features combined amount to less than 1000 lines of code and "just work" across multiple web nodes.
It can be daunting to jump into such a strange world as a LiveView environment may look (Elixir syntax, OTP terminology, etc) but honestly once you dig in deeper, everything just makes sense. LiveView (and HEEx) continue to be very simple to understand abstractions on top of the rock solid OTP platform. It's a joy to build real time applications using it, and I very much appreciate the "developer experience" focus both Chris & Jose have for us Elixir devs!
I'm excited for the launch of Phoenix 1.6 and HEEx is shaping up to be a complete replacement for your traditional SPA + Backend API, and using one consistent language for your full stack really has very freeing & powerful benefits, especially for small teams!
[0] https://github.com/Glimesh/glimesh.tv/
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Glimesh is an open source, next-gen live streaming platform built by the community that puts streamers & community first and not the advertisers. It is currently in alpha.
You're also right on the subscription statement in the FAQ, I've submitted a bug for us to fix here: https://github.com/Glimesh/glimesh.tv/issues/687
stimulus_reflex
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Coming to grips with JS: a Rubyist's deep dive
Then there are stack-specific libraries: StimulusReflex for Rails, Phoenix LiveView, Laravel Livewire, Unicorn and Tetra for Django, Blazor for .NET, … and the list goes on.
- Почему я программирую на Ruby
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RailsWorld 2023: Hotwire Edition
Morphing and the concept to do refreshes after broadcast are hardly new. Stimulus Reflex has employed morphing to update the page for years, and CableReady::Updatable, which allows listening to model requests for refreshes, has also been around for a while. But I am excited to see these concepts being adopted in Turbo and becoming more mainstream.
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Unicorn – A full-stack web framework for Django
Stimulus Reflex (Ruby), which predates Hotwire, also deserves a mention, though most of its momentum seemed to stall when Hotwire was announced.
https://docs.stimulusreflex.com/
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Is there Ruby LiveView Framework?
Hi there, not crazy experienced on the topic but after some research i made for personal reasons i found https://mayu.live/ whick looks interesting (and as mentioned already https://docs.stimulusreflex.com/, seems to be close to Liveview)
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Rails 7 - Turbo Frame and Turbo Stream
StimulusReflex Docs pretty easy to use and release 3.5.0 is coming soon.
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Announcing elm-express
However, the timing may be a little off. In some ways, it feels like the "Express" way of developing for the backend is dying. We are seeing tools that blur the line between backend and frontend, trying to unify how we develop web applications. Tools like Phoenix LiveView, StimulusReflex, Laravel Livewire, Remix, Next.js, and many others are being developed.
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Learning Ruby, Rails & Hotwire?
You can also learn Rails and StimulusReflex
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A powerful search feature with what Rails provides out of the box
Reading the article and the source code, I learned a ton of stuff, as always. In his implementation, Louis is using StimulusReflex (built on top of Stimulus) to achieve this. I was curious about several points:
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The Ultimate Search for Rails - Episode 1
Now that we know that our backend is working as it should, let’s wire up our stuff. I’m gonna skip on Stimulus Reflex setup and configuration and dive right in. You can easily follow the official setup or, if you use import-maps, follow @julianrubisch’s article on the topic. I also know that leastbad has been working on an automatic installer that detects your configuration and sets everything up for you if you care to try it before the next version of SR gets released.
What are some alternatives?
contex - Charting and graphing library for Elixir
hotwire-rails - Use Hotwire in your Ruby on Rails app
live-paint - Demo pixel painting webapp with realtime updates across all connected tabs and browsers
turbo - The speed of a single-page web application without having to write any JavaScript
torch - A rapid admin generator for Elixir & Phoenix
jsbundling-rails - Bundle and transpile JavaScript in Rails with esbuild, rollup.js, or Webpack.
webtransport - WebTransport is a web API for flexible data transport
hotwire-livereload - Live reload gem for Hotwire Rails apps.
Absinthe Graphql - The GraphQL toolkit for Elixir
Stimulus - A modest JavaScript framework for the HTML you already have
phoenix-liveview-counter-tutorial - 🤯 beginners tutorial building a real time counter in Phoenix 1.7.7 + LiveView 0.19 ⚡️ Learn the fundamentals from first principals so you can make something amazing! 🚀