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live | v8go | |
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17 | 10 | |
613 | 3,030 | |
- | - | |
3.8 | 1.8 | |
5 months ago | 8 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
live
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How to Fetch a Turbo Stream
Looks like there are a couple of attempts but my google fu didn't really yield a winner.
https://github.com/while1malloc0/hotwire-go-example
https://github.com/jfyne/live
if that's the case, there is definitely an opening on the market for such tech.
As someone who's been writing web apps since DHTML days, Livewire/Turbo feels like we've finally reached the future.
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The secret weapon of LiveView development is …
You can see all those “live-” attributes in a small example above. We just say: “ live-click=’tempUp’ “ and Live implementation makes all bindings to our backend code and makes a websocket call for the appropriate Go handler.
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Not a Go LiveView developer yet? Try to guess what this code is doing, though.
LiveView implementation for Go raised the same type of feelings in me when I went through this for the first time.
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3 issues LiveView development in Go resolve efficiently for small teams
And here it is, where LiveView programming concepts help us in a great way. LiveView uses websockets to create a persistent connection between the client and the server, which enables the server to push updates to the client in real-time. This allows developers to build interactive user interfaces that can update dynamically in response to user actions or changes in the application state, without the need for traditional page reloads or AJAX requests. LiveView programming style is based on this excellent Live project that is an implementation of the LiveView approach in Go.
- Show HN: A Full-Stack Web Framework Written in Go
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Spas Were a Mistake
I hate SPAs. I would never do another SPA again if it were up to me. It just adds too much mental context switching and overhead. I can develop fully server-side apps that are lighter, run faster, and at least 20% less development effort (I actually compared that for the same task: https://medium.com/@mustwin/is-react-fast-enough-bca6bef89a6). So why would I ever do an SPA again if it were up to me. I would use https://github.com/jfyne/live which is inspired by Phoenix LiveViews. This is my professional opinion having many years of experience in both kinds of web apps.
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Show HN: LiveViewJS – TypeScript back end for LiveView Apps
I've been working on a Go implementation if you fancy trying it out
https://github.com/jfyne/live
- What frontend libraries do exist in Go?
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Looking for early feedback on my new Phoenix LiveView inspired project.
I built it because I love building highly interactive web pages, but the current state of JavaScript leaves me cold. I got really excited when I saw what Phoenix was doing with LiveView and thought I could see the light at the end of the tunnel. There are already a couple of projects also inspired by LiveView (GoLive, live), but I had my own vision that I wanted to realise.
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go-echo-live-view
Josh Fyne started a nice implementation of a Phoenix LiveView Go implementation here: https://github.com/jfyne/live
v8go
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SSR React in Go
Firstly, I used rogchap/v8go to execute JavaScript in a Go environment. I listed other options below.
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I built a local Laravel dev environment that doesn't require PHP at all
Now the only issue I see is that someone who can't be bothered to install PHP and composer will probably not want to install node and npm either. If you could somehow run WASM inside an executable file (maybe something written in Go with https://github.com/rogchap/v8go ? Or an Electron App ?), all you'd need to do is download the executable file on any computer and double click it to start serving a Laravel project.
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Show HN: A Full-Stack Web Framework Written in Go
I only browsed for a wee bit, so take this with some salt, but it _looks_ like the framework is running a JS VM isolate alongside the Go server struct[1], which gets called with whatever script file is being rendered. Since it looks like the render files are, at least in the case of Svelte, individually compiled JS files that are SSR rendered via the V8 isolate, I _believe_ you're correct that there is no CSR (though there might still be JS-hydrated code if the Svelte component included something involving an interactive component).
I think the idea is to ingest a JS "template" and spit out the rendered HTML+JS, kind of like traditional SSR templates, but it could be possible to shoe-horn in an entire client-side router that gets initialized as a DOM object somewhere.
[1] https://github.com/rogchap/v8go
- QuickJS JavaScript Engine – Fabrice Bellard
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Using Javascript plugins in Go
https://github.com/rogchap/v8go is a viable option these days as well.
- Execute JavaScript from Go - JS functions with Go callbacks, update JS objects from Go & more
- V8go v0.5.0 Execute JavaScript from Go
- v8go: JavaScript in Go - v0.5.0 released 🎉 Global Objects, Function Templates, Go callbacks and loads more!
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Plenti — a Svelte SSG for people that don’t like web maintenance bullsh#t
Plenti is a simple open source Static Site Generator (SSG) with a Go backend and Svelte frontend. Jim picked Golang because it is simple, quick and has the ability to generate a binary that can be run on any machine; and Svelte, well, for one, “Svelte is so hot right now” and also because of the power it gives developers to write simple HTML and CSS to create websites. Merging these two technologies was not an easy task, but with V8Go binding the two together, it’s a marriage that works.
- Execute JavaScript from Go
What are some alternatives?
bud - The Full-Stack Web Framework for Go
goja - ECMAScript/JavaScript engine in pure Go
go-app - A package to build progressive web apps with Go programming language and WebAssembly.
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
hlive - HLive is a server-side WebSocket based dynamic template-less view layer for Go.
txiki.js - A tiny JavaScript runtime
loopback-example-facade - Best practices for building scalable Microservices.
quickjs - Public repository of the QuickJS Javascript Engine.
golive - ⚡ Live views for GoLang with reactive HTML over WebSockets 🔌
diffhtml - diffHTML is a web framework that helps you build applications and other interactive content
quickjs-emscripten - Safely execute untrusted Javascript in your Javascript, and execute synchronous code that uses async functions