go-gui-projects
kubectl
go-gui-projects | kubectl | |
---|---|---|
10 | 13 | |
1,516 | 2,688 | |
1.9% | 0.9% | |
4.3 | 9.2 | |
10 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | ||
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
go-gui-projects
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Deciding between Rust or Go for desktop applications
Here's a list of Go UI libraries and here's an article about Rust UI libraries. In general, Go has a broader ecosystem, however, Rust has Tauri, which, if you're coming from a web background, will be right up your alley, so you'll be able to put stuff on the screen, while gradually learning about Rust and set up RPCs in the Rust part of your application that you can then call from JS.
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React and Go for desktop app
May could be one of these.
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Using a xib file with Go
Go doesn’t really have any GUI stuff in the standard library, but there are a few different projects listed here. I would suggest scanning that list for some Mac/xib related libraries. macDriver is one that specifically mentioned Apple.
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What are pros and cons of Go?
GUI (of course there are now solutions , https://golangr.com/gui/ https://z-kit.cc/ https://developer.fyne.io/ more at here: https://github.com/go-graphics/go-gui-projects )
- Writing GUI apps in Go
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golang GUI packages
and many https://github.com/go-graphics/go-gui-projects
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Hello Everyone I have a question Can I make programs with go (golang)? Or it is only a web language? For example: can I make a program like a calculator or an executable?
Go code compiles to executables, and you can cross compile (make windows exe on linux for example). But like other people have said, it doesn't have any GUI packages in core. There are many options out there in the community, see this. Some though use native GUI's like WinUI, so that makes the cross-compile not so useful. Instead there are packages that use toolkits like GTK2 for cross-platform code. There is also an interesting package called Fyne that have made their own toolkit in Go. But lately I have been using a package that uses the web browser as its GUI, and it is called Wails V2.
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GUI for Go
Go is a language typically used for backend related systems so as far as I know GUI support is fairly limited. Here is a list of options though if you really want to use go: https://github.com/go-graphics/go-gui-projects.
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Compiled programming langauge with good cross platform GUI support?
Go - GUI Libraries
- Golang Gui
kubectl
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What are these orphaned PVC objects?
Check https://github.com/kubernetes/kubectl/issues/151
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Setting kubectl context via env var
I have read this issue, and up to now it seems not possible to change the kubectl context via an env var: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubectl/issues/1154
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Deciding between Rust or Go for desktop applications
However, I would encourage people to take a look at what the code looks like before assuming the Go developer experience on this was positive. Bear in mind that's just the top level kubectl command and some helper functions, the subcommand definitions take up a several more files split into a few more packages. Then you're still not even done, because code that uses the parsed flags still has to redundantly check things that couldn't be enforced at the type level, something Go folks like to pretend is a good thing for some reason.
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Recommendations on file/dir/module structure, common dependencies, and/or anti-patterns for writing CLI tool in Rust
kubectl is for sure battle tested, but it involves very Kubernetes specific implementations and is going to be too complicated for the first pointer
- Recommendations on building a simple DSL REPL?
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Why Go and Not Rust?
> context.Background() is typically only used when one doesn’t care about the result. If you did care about the result, you should be passing the parent context to preserve the circuit breaker timeout in case the operation takes too long.
Not necessarily. You would use context.Background in a test situation. It's also commonly used for short-lived applications like a CLI invocation. You can see kubectl uses context.Background quite a lot: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubectl/search?q=context.backg...
> I think the level of pain you experience from mutable references in Rust depends on if you’re coming from an OOP or FP background. I have a FP background and so the patterns I use to build code already greatly restrict mutation. You can usually change code that updates data immutably (creating a new copy of it) with mutable code in rust because the control flow of your program already involves passing that new version back to the caller which also satisfies the borrow checker in most situations.
There has to be a better solution to needlessly copying data.
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kubectl - Create PV/PVC
This is particularly useful for academic purposes, and makes somehow convinient to get the yaml template of k8s objects. I was looking for this as well due to an upcoming ckad test i have. Unfourtunately due to not being considered best practice the request for it was dismissed. https://github.com/kubernetes/kubectl/issues/1073
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Must `kubectl apply` twice to allow CRD usage?
I see, apologies, I did misunderstand. This is actually a known race condition between kubectl (or even helm, or any Kube API client) issuing the requests to deploy CRs that depend on CRDs while those CRDs are still being installed on the API server. Simply put, kubectl makes these requests too quickly. There is no solution to this currently aside from deploying CRDs separately from the resources they expose. See this kubectl issue: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubectl/issues/1117, and there are some links in the comments to other issues echoing the same problem in helm and elsewhere.
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What's the number one annoyance that drives you crazy about Kubernetes?
Go add --no-really-all if you really want it: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubectl
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How to change a POD label via client-go?
You could take a look at how kubectl actually does it: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubectl/blob/master/pkg/cmd/label/label.go
What are some alternatives?
windigo - Windows API and GUI in idiomatic Go.
helm - The Kubernetes Package Manager
giu - Cross platform rapid GUI framework for golang based on Dear ImGui.
robusta - Kubernetes observability and automation, with an awesome Prometheus integration
go-astilectron - Build cross platform GUI apps with GO and HTML/JS/CSS (powered by Electron)
kubernetes - Production-Grade Container Scheduling and Management
gotk3 - Go bindings for GTK3
client-go - Go client for Kubernetes.
nucular - GUI toolkit for go
cli - GitHub’s official command line tool
fyne - Cross platform GUI toolkit in Go inspired by Material Design
Mattermost - Mattermost is an open source platform for secure collaboration across the entire software development lifecycle..