glimesh.tv
surface
glimesh.tv | surface | |
---|---|---|
5 | 11 | |
453 | 1,994 | |
0.4% | 0.6% | |
5.7 | 7.9 | |
10 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Elixir | Elixir | |
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.
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
surface
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htmlgui.nvim - Create html + css + lua apps with neovim as 'browser'. ( proof of concept )
I should have been more clear that my intent was to create/use a compiler for some kind of component syntax. There are lots of them, from Surface (Elixir), Blade (PHP/Laravel), and JSX (React, Vue, Etc)
- Would you still choose Elixir/Phoenix/LiveView if scaling and performance weren’t an issue to solve for?
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Why I selected Elixir and Phoenix as my main stack
There I learned more deeply about LiveView and Surface UI.
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Something similar to Vuetify for Phoenix LiveView?
I think Surface is the ideal candidate for this. But it doesn’t have the components you are looking for but you can build anything with it. Hopefully, in future we can have set of headless components built using Surface 🤞
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Single source of truth with Phoenix LiveView
I have worked with Phoenix LiveView and Surface-UI for about a year; I would like to share some of the things I learned the hard way.
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Course/Extensive tutorials for Phoenix 1.6?
This is just an idea, but what about implementing using Phoenix.View(via use MyAppWeb, :view in your module)? Then assign I think has access to @conn. Then maybe work some magic to still allow Phoenix.Component syntax - but at this point, this is something I believe is a flow that might be in development. Try investigating / asking in Surface, because that is a lot more similar to React in its approach. In fact, I think Surface is where more aggressive features are pushed out, and ironed-out features get included into Phoenix. This was the case for Phoenix.Component, and HEEX.
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Porting files generated by phoenix to surface
This post is intended to get you started with surface provided components. I provided the original code and surface versions so you can compare the differences yourself without installing anything. After installing surface following the installation guide https://surface-ui.org/getting_started add surface_bulma in your mix.exs, this will allow you to use the table component.
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We Got to LiveView
I totally get the "Am I doing this the right way?" feeling, especially coming from Rails where everything was so opinionated and wanting to stay idiomatic.
Phoenix, while it does have opinions, is far less opinionated in the sense that it doesn't do it darndest to force you into certain conventions (for example, if your module name doesn't match your file name, Phoenix won't complain). Its generators do try and push you toward using good DDD practices (which is my opinion is a GREAT thing), but of course the generators are completely optional.
I don't have experience writing large LiveView apps but I would say that if you are familiar with any component-based frameworks (like React), I would take a look at SurfaceUI[1]. It simplifies a few "gotchas" in LiveView (though I would say they are very minor gotchas and worth learning about at some point) and gives you a component-rendering syntax more like React. Once you get going, you'll learn that LiveView doesn't have all the headaches that come with bigger React apps (like having to memoize functions or comparing props to avoid a re-render and whatnot). The recent release candidate for Phoenix 1.6 has made strides for a cleaner component syntax, but if you're having trouble with LiveView, Surface might bring some familiarity.
[1] https://github.com/surface-ui/surface
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Phoenix 1.6.0-RC.0 Released
Have you seen Surface UI? Pretty cool. Collection of LiveView components. https://surface-ui.org/
- Surface UI – A server-side rendering component library for Phoenix
What are some alternatives?
contex - Charting and graphing library for Elixir
react_phoenix - Make rendering React.js components in Phoenix easy
live-paint - Demo pixel painting webapp with realtime updates across all connected tabs and browsers
torch - A rapid admin generator for Elixir & Phoenix
stimulus_reflex - Build reactive applications with the Rails tooling you already know and love.
phx_component_helpers - Extensible Phoenix liveview components, without boilerplate
phoenix_live_view - Rich, real-time user experiences with server-rendered HTML
webtransport - WebTransport is a web API for flexible data transport
Raxx - Interface for HTTP webservers, frameworks and clients
Absinthe Graphql - The GraphQL toolkit for Elixir
plug - Compose web applications with functions