hyperscript
lalrpop
hyperscript | lalrpop | |
---|---|---|
24 | 25 | |
2,589 | 2,883 | |
0.0% | 1.2% | |
0.0 | 7.5 | |
almost 3 years ago | 14 days ago | |
HTML | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache-2.0 or MIT |
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hyperscript
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Ludic: New framework for Python with seamless Htmx support
* https://github.com/hyperhype/hyperscript
There is also a working integration with Django that enables the use of neat-html as a template backend, however it isn't up on GitHub yet.
I find the space of HTML generation libraries which can leverage the power of Python, really interesting.
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Intro to Hyperscript: Rethinking JavaScript
Does anyone else get this confused with https://github.com/hyperhype/hyperscript ?
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DOM to JSON and back
This works like Reactʼs createElement function. Or a library such as hyperscript. Sure, weʼd prefer JSX for its much reduced cognitive load. But our alternative here is the DOM methods such as createElement. Unless we want to load up a bulky library such as React, that is.
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Experimenting with html in object form. How cursed is this?
Consider looking at hyperscript, which is a plain-javascript library for constructing html nodes (NOT a transpiler). Similar to what you have here, but way nicer
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What is the state of the art for creating domain-specific languages (DSLs) with Rust?
In fairness, there's a lot of overlap between embedded DSLs and libraries — a library like Hyperscript for generating HTML in JavaScript is in many ways a DSL, but it's also just a bunch of functions that are easy to put together in a particular way. But this is often good enough!
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Ask HN: What happened to vanilla HTML/CSS/JS development?
Hyperscript (https://github.com/hyperhype/hyperscript) is actually quite nice when you get used to it, and I actually prefer it over JSX. Pair it with something like microh[0], and it gets even better.
[0] https://github.com/fuzetsu/microh
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_hyperscript – a small scripting language for the web
The naming of this project clashes horribly with https://github.com/hyperhype/hyperscript. It's not like it's in a different ecosystem or something. It is a web project that is guaranteed to cause confusion.
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My thoughts on Mithril.js
With Mithril.js, you generate HTML using a hyperscript dialect like this:
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Show HN: A simple Wordle clone in 60 lines, using Hyperscript
I'm confused. Hyperscript is supposed to be an alternative way to writing JSX.
Hyperscript.org doesn't seem to be related to this at all?
https://github.com/hyperhype/hyperscript
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Hyperscript - the hidden language of React
The reason is dead simple. It's exported as h because it's a hypescript function. So what exactly is hypescript?
lalrpop
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nom > regex
And some related parser tools: - https://github.com/kevinmehall/rust-peg - https://github.com/pest-parser/pest - https://github.com/lalrpop/lalrpop
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What is the state of the art for creating domain-specific languages (DSLs) with Rust?
lalrpop
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Letlang — Roadblocks and how to overcome them - My programming language targeting Rust
Rust is a very nice langage for implementing compilers, and has a nice ecosystem for it (logos, rust-peg, lalrpop, astmaker -- this one is mine --, etc...).
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loxcraft: a compiler, language server, and online playground for the Lox programming language
rust-langdev has a lot of libraries for building compilers in Rust. Perhaps you could use these to make your implementation easier, and revisit it later if you want to build things from scratch. I'd suggest logos for lexing, LALRPOP / chumsky for parsing, and rust-gc for garbage collection.
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Question about lexer and parser generators in Rust
Hi! For one of my projects I am currently using lalrpop (https://github.com/lalrpop/lalrpop/tree/master/doc/calculator/src), which is far from complete, but has the basic syntax I was looking for. I took some examples and worked around some lexer stuff but I’m currently happy with it. If you use it and have Intellij stuff installed, you can also use a plug-in for highlighting and SOMETIMES error checking. Otherwise, even VSCode had a great plug-in for highlighting!
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Contrext-free language parsing with procedural macros
How would you compare and contrast this with, say, lalrpop?
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Tools for creating a programming language in rust
lalrpop is great. It's a completely different approach from nom, but for parsing a programming language, I would at least consider it. RustPython uses it.
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Best languages to design a new language in?
I presume LALRPOP handles left recursion just fine.
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Show HN: IQ” – jq for images (using rust, LALRPOP)
I wanted to share an experimental side project I have been working on for some time. I constantly use commands like `jq` and `yq` for processing structured data in my day job and I was curious if a similar idea could be applied to images.
Another goal of mine was to get some exposure to with rust. I discovered the LALRPOP parser generator which really helped moved the project along (https://github.com/lalrpop/lalrpop)
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Writing a new programming language. Part II: Variables and expressions
The key point here is that we are going to depend on the lalrpop library to generate the parser based on the formal grammar we define. Note that we have it as part of the [build-dependencies] section and we only depend on a tiny utility crate called lalrpop-util at runtime. The reason for that is the main lalrpop "magic" would happen during the crate compilation (in the build.rs file) when lalrpop would generate the deterministic pushdown automaton based on our grammar. The code generation logic is not required to be part of our interpreter, we only need a few utility methods from the lalrpop-util for the automaton to operate. You might have noticed that we also enable the lexer feature of lalrpop, because we are going to use lexer provided by lalrpop as well (please refer to the Part I if you do not know what the lexer is).
What are some alternatives?
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
pest - The Elegant Parser
gomponents - View components in pure Go, that render to HTML 5.
nom - Rust parser combinator framework
Alpine
rust-peg - Parsing Expression Grammar (PEG) parser generator for Rust
Vue.js - This is the repo for Vue 2. For Vue 3, go to https://github.com/vuejs/core
combine - A parser combinator library for Rust
reagent - A minimalistic ClojureScript interface to React.js
PEGTL - Parsing Expression Grammar Template Library
window.fetch polyfill - A window.fetch JavaScript polyfill.
chomp - A fast monadic-style parser combinator designed to work on stable Rust.