homechart
hitchstory
homechart | hitchstory | |
---|---|---|
17 | 23 | |
147 | 84 | |
6.8% | - | |
0.0 | 9.1 | |
24 days ago | 19 days ago | |
TypeScript | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
homechart
- How to add documentation to your product life cycle
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NFC Tags for tracking chores?
That's a really neat idea. Something like that could absolutely be added, Homechart already has a lot of those capabilities already. I opened an issue for it: https://github.com/candiddev/homechart/issues/236
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Homechart install from binary on FreeBSD
Yea, you won't be able to execute it because it's built for Linux and won't run on FreeBSD. Right now you need to run some kind of Linux to use Homechart, but I can look at adding FreeBSD support if you're going to stick with it long term. I opened an issue here for it: https://github.com/candiddev/homechart/issues/232
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Struggling to self host on Unraid with Docker
Someday you can configure Homechart from the UI (https://github.com/candiddev/homechart/issues/128), but I'm not sure how feasible it would be to configure the DB that way.
- Homechart App unavailable in App Store (France)
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What services do you NOT self-host and why?
Feel free to drop some ideas/help me understand what you'd do if it were open source here: https://github.com/candiddev/homechart/issues/151
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Android app not connecting to self-hosted environment
Other languages are planned (starting with german: https://github.com/candiddev/homechart/issues/50), but it's just me working on this and I'm a lazy American. I have an idea to make the translations crowd/open sourced, so folks can contribute translations and they will make their way into the product.
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CRM for Family Life
Documents/Invoices
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Gotify
Thank you! I created an issue to get this added, feel free to comment with more details and subscribe: https://github.com/candiddev/homechart/issues/152
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What's Next (v2022.07)
Inventory Labeling
hitchstory
- Hitchstory – Type-safe StrictYAML Python integration testing framework
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Winner of the SF Mistral AI Hackathon: Automated Test Driven Prompting
I built something like this too:
https://github.com/hitchdev/hitchstory/blob/master/examples%...
- Prompt Engineering Testing Framework
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Non-code contributions are the secret to open source success
I took the same approach to "docs are tests and tests are docs" with integration testing when I created this library: https://github.com/hitchdev/hitchstory
I realized at some point that a test and a how-to guide can and should actually be the same thing - not just for doctests, but for every kind of test.
It's not only 2x quicker to combine writing a test with writing docs, the test part and the docs part reinforce each other:
* Tests are more easily understandable when you attach written context intended for human consumption.
* Docs are better if they come attached to a guarantee that they're valid, not out of date and not missing crucial details.
* TDD is better if how-to docs are created as a side effect.
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Ask HN: Are there any LLM projects for creating integration tests?
I have created a project for easily writing this type of test with YAML:
https://github.com/hitchdev/hitchstory
I dont think that this type of task is really appropriate for an LLM though. It is better to use hard abstractions for the truly deterministic stuff and for other stuff where you may need to do subtle trade offs (e.g. choosing a selector for the search bar) an LLM will generally do a bad job.
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Should you add screenshots to documentation?
For those interested in the concept of having permanently up-to-date documentation with screenshots I built this testing framework based upon the idea that good documentation can be a autogenerated artefact of good tests:
https://github.com/hitchdev/hitchstory
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How to add documentation to your product life cycle
I don't like gherkin. It's it has very awkward syntax, it's not type safe, it's very verbose, it has no ability to abstract scenarios and rather than being a source for generating the documentation it tries to be the documentation.
Nonetheless, there is a small number of projects where they either work around this or it doesn't matter as much. I find that most people that apply gherkin to their projects find it doesn't work - usually for one of the above reasons.
I built https://github.com/hitchdev/hitchstory as an alternative that has straightforward syntax (YAML), very strict type safety (StrictYAML), low verbosity, and is explicitly designed as a source for generating documentation rather than trying to be the documentation.
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Beyond OpenAPI
I built this because I had the same idea: https://github.com/hitchdev/hitchstory
If the specification can be tested and used to generate docs and can be rewritten based upon program output then the maintenance cost for producing docs like these plunges.
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Optimizing Postgres's Autovacuum for High-Churn Tables
-c fsync=off -c synchronous_commit=off -c full_page_writes=off
I got the answer from Karen Jex at Djangocon 2023.
I used it to build some integration tests which exhibit best practices: https://github.com/hitchdev/hitchstory/tree/master/examples/...
I considered using tmpfs but I wanted to cache the entire database volume and couldnt figure out how to do that with podman.
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Elixir Livebook is a secret weapon for documentation
This is incredible work.
To anyone curious, I highly recommend:
- https://hitchdev.com/hitchstory/approach/
- https://hitchdev.com/hitchstory/why-not/
From the overall RDD/BDD type home page:
- https://hitchdev.com/hitchstory/
The entire product site is a thing of richly informative beauty.
---
My only question was whether the generated 'docs' snippets would add value over just reading the story in your DASL. Any markdown site generator (such as the chosen Material for MKDocs) can just embed the ```yaml anyway. But then I realized what was generating e.g. …
- https://hitchdev.com/hitchstory/using/engine/rewrite-story/
… and how superior that is to typical docs, especially typical docstring or swagger factories.
What are some alternatives?
grocy - ERP beyond your fridge - Grocy is a web-based self-hosted groceries & household management solution for your home
bumblebee - Pre-trained Neural Network models in Axon (+ 🤗 Models integration)
Organizr - HTPC/Homelab Services Organizer - Written in PHP
testy - test helpers for more meaningful, readable, and fluent tests
actual-server - Actual's server
ospec - Noiseless testing framework
wg-easy - The easiest way to run WireGuard VPN + Web-based Admin UI.
jsverify - Write powerful and concise tests. Property-based testing for JavaScript. Like QuickCheck.
vaultwarden
examples - Tests that rewrite themselves. Tests that rewrite your docs.
wg-easy - The easiest way to run WireGuard VPN + Web-based Admin UI. [Moved to: https://github.com/wg-easy/wg-easy]
explorer - Series (one-dimensional) and dataframes (two-dimensional) for fast and elegant data exploration in Elixir