gomodest-template
turbo
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gomodest-template | turbo | |
---|---|---|
8 | 55 | |
92 | 24,661 | |
- | 2.4% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
over 2 years ago | 2 days ago | |
HTML | Rust | |
MIT License | Mozilla Public 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.
gomodest-template
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Golang Web Framework that works hand in hand with Alpine.js
Its too early for a roadmap. I have tried different approaches and rejected them: https://github.com/adnaan/gomodest-template, https://github.com/goliveview/examples. I want the library to be have a great UX, good for moderately complex apps while building tech which is maintainable(no new rendering layer engine). I could use some help brainstorming the approaches though.
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Show HN: A Full-Stack Web Framework Written in Go
Oh wow someone finally went ahead with the server rendered js in Go ! Looks great. I have been experimenting various ways to build web apps in Go: https://github.com/adnaan/gomodest-template. I have landed on pursuing one approach more deeply: server rendered html templates over websockets. Don’t have a lot of code right now but here are some examples: https://github.com/goliveview/examples.
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Requesting early feedback on goliveview(a library to build reactive user interfaces using go, html/template & stimulusjs)
Since early this year, I started working on https://gomodest-template.fly.dev/samples, https://github.com/adnaan/gomodest-template to experiment with various ways to build user interfaces in Go, html and a bit of javascript. Now, I have taken all the learnings from gomodest-template and started working on https://github.com/goliveview/ . Its super early work.
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Realtime app using hotwire/turbo streams, gorilla/websocket and html/template
So I have been exploring server side rendered Go web apps using only sprinkles & spots of javascript: source: gomodest-template , live demo .
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Ask HN: What novel tools are you using to write web sites/apps?
I have built an app template which uses Go html/template package to render html on the server. The app is enhanced using sprinkles of javascript(stimulusjs, svelte single file components) on the client, wherever needed.
1. template: https://github.com/adnaan/gomodest-template
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gomodest-template updates (a template to build dynamic web apps quickly using Go, html/template and javascript)
gomodest-template
turbo
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dev.to wrapped 2023 🎁
# src Dockerfile: https://github.com/vercel/turbo/blob/main/examples/with-docker/apps/web/Dockerfile FROM node:18-alpine AS alpine # setup pnpm on the alpine base FROM alpine as base ENV PNPM_HOME="/pnpm" ENV PATH="$PNPM_HOME:$PATH" RUN corepack enable RUN pnpm install turbo --global FROM base AS builder # Check https://github.com/nodejs/docker-node/tree/b4117f9333da4138b03a546ec926ef50a31506c3#nodealpine to understand why libc6-compat might be needed. RUN apk add --no-cache libc6-compat RUN apk update # Set working directory WORKDIR /app COPY . . RUN turbo prune --scope=web --docker # Add lockfile and package.json's of isolated subworkspace FROM base AS installer RUN apk add --no-cache libc6-compat RUN apk update WORKDIR /app # First install the dependencies (as they change less often) COPY .gitignore .gitignore COPY --from=builder /app/out/json/ . COPY --from=builder /app/out/pnpm-lock.yaml ./pnpm-lock.yaml COPY --from=builder /app/out/pnpm-workspace.yaml ./pnpm-workspace.yaml RUN pnpm install # Build the project COPY --from=builder /app/out/full/ . COPY turbo.json turbo.json RUN turbo run build --filter=web # use alpine as the thinest image FROM alpine AS runner WORKDIR /app # Don't run production as root RUN addgroup --system --gid 1001 nodejs RUN adduser --system --uid 1001 nextjs USER nextjs COPY --from=installer /app/apps/web/next.config.js . COPY --from=installer /app/apps/web/package.json . # Automatically leverage output traces to reduce image size # https://nextjs.org/docs/advanced-features/output-file-tracing COPY --from=installer --chown=nextjs:nodejs /app/apps/web/.next/standalone ./ COPY --from=installer --chown=nextjs:nodejs /app/apps/web/.next/static ./apps/web/.next/static COPY --from=installer --chown=nextjs:nodejs /app/apps/web/public ./apps/web/public CMD node apps/web/server.js
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.dockerignore being ignored by docker-compose? no space left on device
Following this example: https://github.com/vercel/turbo/tree/main/examples/with-docker/apps/web. Except I'm using pnpm. Edit Reddit Codeblocks are horrible and keeps removing all formatting.
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How to Win Any Hackathon 🚀🤑
The Dockerfile might seem a bit complicated (it is), but the reason for that is mostly just turborepo and the need for good caching. Realistically, you will only need to change the last line, if at all. It is based on this awesome Github Issue.
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PURISTA: Build with rimraf, esbuild, Turbo & git-cliff
PURISTA is organized in a monorepo. During the development and build process, Turbo is used to execute different tasks and steps on multiple packages with one command.
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How I approach and structure Enterprise frontend applications after 4 years of using Next.js
Turbo repo
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Vercel Integration and Next.js App Router Support
Previously we mapped each Vercel project to a single Supabase project. With this release, we're introducing the concept of project 'Connections'. Supabase projects can have an unlimited number of Vercel Connections. This is especially useful for monorepos using Turborepo.
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How Turborepo is porting from Go to Rust
One detail I enjoy from this post is that sometimes you can just call a CLI[0]. It's easy to spend a lot of time figuring out how to expose some Rust/C code as a library for your language, but I like the simplicity of just compiling, shipping the binary and then calling it as a subprocess.
Yes, there's overhead in starting a new process to "just call a function", but I think this approach is still underutilized.
[0]: https://github.com/vercel/turbo/blob/c0ee0dea7388d1081512c93...
- App Router example repos
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Setting up a project for Server and Client inside VS Code?
You can have it in the same repo. Just don't do any weird stuff where you are importing backend into frontend or something like that. But the best way would be to set up a Monorepo, that way you could have shared packages and the tools manages the dependencies. There a few build tools you can choose to help with this. Turborepo and NX are the most popular. But honestly these are complex to configure yourself.
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Fhtagn – a tiny CLI programs tester written in Awk
I've been using https://www.prysk.net/ for the past few months, and I really like the simplicity of running a programming and using standard tools to validate the output and any system changes. Here's a bunch of tests in the turborepo codebase if anyone is interested https://github.com/vercel/turbo/tree/main/turborepo-tests/in...
What are some alternatives?
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML
create-t3-app - The best way to start a full-stack, typesafe Next.js app
parcel - The zero configuration build tool for the web. 📦🚀
buck2 - Build system, successor to Buck
Turbolinks - Turbolinks makes navigating your web application faster
nx - Smart Monorepos · Fast CI
qwik - Instant-loading web apps, without effort
morphdom - Fast and lightweight DOM diffing/patching (no virtual DOM needed)
importmap-rails - Use ESM with importmap to manage modern JavaScript in Rails without transpiling or bundling.
gomodest - A complex SAAS starter kit using Go, the html/template package, and sprinkles of javascript.