goformat
urwid
goformat | urwid | |
---|---|---|
7 | 19 | |
20 | 2,729 | |
- | 0.6% | |
0.0 | 9.4 | |
almost 6 years ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Python | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
goformat
-
Minimalist Rust formatter as an alternative to rustfmt?
Likewise, gofmt implementing what you argue for resulted in the creation of goformat. There's a limit to how much you can force people on these things and, more importantly, there are formatting decisions which are more than mere bikeshedding in the eyes of the programmers to the point where they consider it more productive to maintain the formatting by hand if that's what it takes.
-
Go is better than Rust (for networked server side applications meant for scale)?
I'm the guy who would only run rustfmt once every week or so, when my codebase was in a clean state where I could use git gui to cherry-pick the changes that were in line with my stubborn insistence on my own style and revert the rest. I'm also the guy who would have considered writing goformat if someone else didn't.
-
Why is rust so pedantic about code formatting and style?
Enough people disagree with that for goformat to exist.
-
rustfmt opt-in instead of opt-out
Same. I used to insist on cargo +nightly rustfmt and a massive stable of "I don't have a portrait-oriented monitor" rustfmt.toml tweaks which I'd only apply when I have a clean git gui on hand to cherry-pick away unwanted changes, but I've mellowed out and the rustfmt handling of things like assert! has evolved so, now, I just put use_small_heuristics = "Max" in my rustfmt.toml as an analogue to the people who choose goformat over gofmt.
-
Need a line-preserving gofmt tool
anyways, regardless of what I think, perhaps this library could help? Or at least be a good starting point to build your own: https://github.com/mbenkmann/goformat
-
What do you NOT like about Rust?
You'd prefer that people like me follow the road the Go ecosystem did and write goformat as a replacement for gofmt or just continue to hand-format everything?
-
Why most rustfmt options are still unstable?
Because Go syntax is ridiculously simple, there's not much room for opinion. And even considering that, there is already an alternative gofmt with custom options.
urwid
-
Fx – Terminal JSON Viewer
Pretty cool! I actually wrote something VERY similar a couple of years ago: sless[1]. It's a tool for viewing json-based structured logs. Just like your tool, you can explore into a json object. The difference is, it expects the input to have many json objects, newline separated, and it shows few keys as a preview of the object, to make looking for something in the log easier. It's not quite complete but basic browsing works. It was mainly written to learn more about Urwid[2], a library similar to Curses.
1: https://github.com/dpedu2/sless
2: https://urwid.org/
-
Any guide to creating a terminal application?
In addition to the other great libraries already mentioned, since you're in Python you may want to consider urwid, it's really robust and has a lot of built-ins.
- Menus in Python
-
Grab raw keyboard inputs
To go full in on the latter case, people often use libraries like Cursive (akin to urwid for Python but without the horrendously confusing error messages caused duck typing) or tui.
-
Textual: The Definitive Guide - Part 1.
If you have experience with text user interfaces in the past, you might come across other frameworks such as urwid, curtsies, asciimatics, prompt-toolkit to name a few. Nevertheless, If you have not, you are just fine because you are in the right place to learn about TUIs in general and using Textual specifically. I’ll show you how to develop a wordle clone step by step.
- Is there a library for creating interactive long running terminal applications?
-
How can I make a TUI?
Check also urwid. It's more likely a modern text-based interface library for Python. https://github.com/urwid/urwid
-
What is the correct way to create a console application?
Curses seems difficult to use but you should investigate whether it works with what you want to do. https://urwid.org/ seems fun as an alternative.
-
Print colour in terminal
You can also take a look at https://urwid.org/
-
I looking for a TUI liberary/framework with good aesthetics.
urwid is Python, and looks good.
What are some alternatives?
serenity - A Rust library for the Discord API.
textual - The lean application framework for Python. Build sophisticated user interfaces with a simple Python API. Run your apps in the terminal and a web browser.
project-error-handling - Error handling project group
python-prompt-toolkit - Library for building powerful interactive command line applications in Python
prettier-plugin-rust - Prettier Rust is an opinionated code formatter that autocorrects bad syntax.
blessed - Blessed is an easy, practical library for making python terminal apps
rustfmt - Format Rust code
Toga - A Python native, OS native GUI toolkit.
rust-cpython - Rust <-> Python bindings
kivy - Open source UI framework written in Python, running on Windows, Linux, macOS, Android and iOS
PyO3 - Rust bindings for the Python interpreter
rich - Rich is a Python library for rich text and beautiful formatting in the terminal.