HTTP
Browser
HTTP | Browser | |
---|---|---|
6 | 5 | |
2,987 | 2,429 | |
0.1% | - | |
5.8 | 5.6 | |
24 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
HTTP
-
Best Ruby HTTP Clients in 2023
Where's http.rb?
-
Pattern Matching Interfaces in Ruby
I had submitted a PR against this repo, but I believe the two most interesting types to match against are responses and requests:
-
My project: railstart app
http
-
7 Ruby Standard libraries you should get to grips with
In the past I have opted to use the HTTP.rb gem, but for simple tasks it’s really useful to learn Net/http or even open-uri for simple GET requests.
-
The Best Ruby HTTP clients for 2021
I actually like HTTP.rb's API more, but they still can't make a decision about "base URL" API, which is quite valuable for API wrappers, e.g. @client = HTTPLibrary.new('https://api.base.com/v2/') and then @client.get('/foo').
-
Ruby on Rails + Auth0: Authenticating your API with an external authentication service
Everything will be created under the class Auth0, and it'll be using HTTP gem to perform the quests, but feel free to decide over your code organization and tools.
Browser
-
Responsiveness, ERB and Tailwind - looking for best practices
Very interesting, thank you! I didn't know this variant feature on erb files. It would only work after a request is made (and not if a window is resized for example) but it seems powerful. I'll try it for sure. I have used this browser gem in the past which helped me achieve something similar for specific cases, but this seems cleaner.
-
My project: railstart app
browser
-
railstart-niceadmin support more features
- [browser](https://rubygems.org/gems/browser)
-
A gem to know the users devices
I’ve always used the browser gem to detect devices. It wirks really well, and it is still being maintained
-
Has anyone here benchmarked device_detector VS browser gems
I have not benchmarked them but if you're porting old code to Browser beware that sometimes its predicate methods return true, sometimes false, and, sometimes: nil.
What are some alternatives?
Faraday - Simple, but flexible HTTP client library, with support for multiple backends.
Device Detector - DeviceDetector is a precise and fast user agent parser and device detector written in Ruby
httparty - :tada: Makes http fun again!
UserAgent - HTTP User Agent parser
Typhoeus - Typhoeus wraps libcurl in order to make fast and reliable requests.
desktop - The desktop vault (Windows, macOS, & Linux).
excon - Usable, fast, simple HTTP 1.1 for Ruby
hoppscotch-extension - 🧩 Browser extensions to provide more capabilities to https://hoppscotch.io
Unirest - Unirest in Ruby: Simplified, lightweight HTTP client library.
ffsend - :mailbox_with_mail: Easily and securely share files from the command line. A fully featured Firefox Send client.
XSR - XSR - eXtremely Simple REST client
passman - 🔐 Open source password manager with Nextcloud integration