graph
connect-go
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graph | connect-go | |
---|---|---|
33 | 26 | |
1,698 | 3 | |
- | - | |
6.4 | 0.0 | |
23 days ago | 7 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
graph
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Digger is trending on GitHub in Golang
Awesome project, and nice to see that it seems to use my graph library (graph) for managing dependencies!
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Dagger V3 Release (generic/concurrency-safe Directed Acyclic Graph)
Why should I use yours over this?
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Any major projects using generics?
Not a major project, but my purely generic graph library gained some traction recently.
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Golang & Data Structures
A new library for graph data structures has recently been released: graph
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Understanding Data Structures & Algorithms using Real-World Libraries
Go: graph
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Have you used generics?
I also think that especially libraries are going to be more generic, primarily libraries for generic container types and data structures. I recently created my first generic library, too (link).
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Visualizing graph structures using Go and Graphviz
Opened an issue for this: https://github.com/dominikbraun/graph/issues/24
- graph: A generic Go library for creating graph data structures and performing operations on them. It supports different kinds of graphs such as directed graphs, acyclic graphs, or trees.
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AVL balanced generic binary trees in Go
Nice! I've recently released a generic graph library as well and I like your iterator approach.
connect-go
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Flutter + gRPC for Desktop and Mobile App Development - Good choice?
In my opinion it's a good idea, it's the architecture we use at work, and it works well for us. The main limitation to be aware of is that many PaaS don't support gRPC traffic (because of the proxies used). For example, DigitalOcean App Platform or Heroku if I remember correctly. If the way you want to host your backend is OK with HTTP/2 and gRPC traffic, then it's not a limitation. One way around this limitation is to use the gRPC-Web protocol, or the Connect protocol (https://connect.build/). Unfortunately, Dart's gRPC client does not support the gRPC-Web protocol outside the web platform. So for a mobile application, it's not usable at the moment. (If this PR were accepted, it would solve the issue: https://github.com/grpc/grpc-dart/pull/557.) As for Connect, no client is currently offered by Buf for Dart. Don't hesitate if you want to know more. That said, I'd advise you to use the Connect implementation for Go to implement your backend. Connect will enable your server to speak all three protocols (gRPC, gRPC-Web and Connect), which is very useful in the long term. What's more, the code is cleaner, and you benefit from official support for observability with OpenTelemetry. If you don't know Buf (the creators of Connect),I suggest you visit their website: https://buf.build/. :-) Good luck!
- How do I provide bot RPC and REST endpoints?
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Building a modern gRPC-powered microservice using Node.js, Typescript, and Connect
As mentioned in the intro, we are going to use Buf and Connect as our tools. We’ll start by installing the dependencies.
- Ask HN: Is it possible to compile TypeScript to Golang?
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gRPC + Envoy + grpc-web = scalable multiplexed streaming?
Its annoying, because the rest of Connect (https://connect.build/) looks really really cool. But its no good for me in a complex app if I can't have multiple streams from the server :/
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Issues with proxying gRPC services to web, and a potential prototype
Consider checking out https://connect.build from https://buf.build. Supports a simpler protocol than grpc-web. Includes a js/ts client for frontend. Then you don’t necessarily need a rest layer, but could leverage the proxy your building.
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Best Web Sever Framework?
Twirp (though I'd move to https://connect.build for my next project) to do JSON based RPC using protobufs.
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GRPC Gateway API Client?
my backend is go via https://github.com/bufbuild/connect-go , it's stable and all open source. just try and test it for your purpose. my project run all in 300 server more....
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my office want to migrate to go programming language, what framework is recommended between chi or fiber?
That said https://connect.build gives you the benefits of gRPC while keeping a wider compatibility with the web.
- When to use gRPC vs GraphQL
What are some alternatives?
grpc-go - The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based RPC
grpc-gateway - gRPC to JSON proxy generator following the gRPC HTTP spec
twirp - A simple RPC framework with protobuf service definitions
protobuf-es - Protocol Buffers for ECMAScript. The only JavaScript Protobuf library that is fully-compliant with Protobuf conformance tests.
btree - BTree provides a simple, ordered, in-memory data structure for Go programs.
be - The Go test helper for minimalists
examples-go - An example Go server built with Connect.
scan - Scan provides the ability to to scan sql rows directly to any defined structure.
NetworkX - Network Analysis in Python
warg - Declarative and Intuitive Command Line Apps with Go
drpc - drpc is a lightweight, drop-in replacement for gRPC
gRPC - The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#)