joy
shadow-cljs
joy | shadow-cljs | |
---|---|---|
8 | 20 | |
518 | 2,204 | |
0.0% | - | |
4.3 | 9.1 | |
6 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Clojure | Clojure | |
MIT License | Eclipse Public License 1.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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joy
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Joy: A maximalist web framework for Lisp aficionados
Hmm I see, that link may be a bit unfortunate, as it only shows the introduction to the docs.
More pages are here: https://github.com/joy-framework/joy/tree/master/docs
PS: I did a very minor contribution to Joy once, so minor that I actually forgot about it :) I don't use Joy myself at the moment as I'm using my own framework, but the Joy docs + source code helped me out a lot in figuring out how to do authentication, csrf, etc!
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Coast on Clojure
He made a similar framework for Janet lang in Joy Framework[1] and it's unironically a joy to work with. Joy is one of those tools that is almost enough to make you use a different language imo. Got it where it counts, but still minimal and low mental overhead.
[1]: https://joy.swlkr.com/
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Where is Ruby Headed in 2021?
>Node.js comes so close but anemic standard library
The nodejs API is rather big really. If you're using Ruby as your standard of normal sized almost everything would look small in comparison, but "anemic" is a stretch. You'd really hate Lua.
If you're taking suggestions, you might enjoy Janet[1]. It has a pretty large user API, lots of bells and whistles included in the standard libs like you'd find in Ruby, and lots of different ways to achieve the same result like Ruby. It's been a while since I checked out the ecosystem, but I was _very_ happy with the Joy Framework[2]. It definitely doesn't come close to the scope of Rails, but I think it _does_ near Rails in it's easy of use for the developer with it's scaffolding, controller generation etc.
[1]: https://janet-lang.org/
[2]: https://github.com/joy-framework/joy
- Janet β a Lisp-like functional, imperative programming language
shadow-cljs
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A History of Clojure (2020) [pdf]
* Single-Page App: shadow-cljs for the build concerns (https://github.com/thheller/shadow-cljs), Reagent with Re-frame for complex/large app (https://reagent-project.github.io and https://github.com/day8/re-frame). Even if we now prefer using HTMX (https://htmx.org) and server-side rendering (Hiccup way of manipulating HTML is just amazing, https://github.com/weavejester/hiccup).
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Supercharge Your JS/TS Project with ClojureScript REPL
Now, add shadow-cljs.
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[ANN] Malli 0.11.0 is out - a data-driven data specification library for Clojure/Script
Work with latest shadow-cljs (& closure compiler) #890
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Cherry: ClojureScript to ES6 Module Compiler
You can already develop with ClojureScript on the back-end. A popular ClojureScript compiler, Shadow-CLJS (https://github.com/thheller/shadow-cljs) has a target for Node among many others.
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Why metabase and circle are not using cljs (mostly)?
Hi, I'm looking at Clojurescript again after not having paid attention to it after several years. Are you saying that shadow-cljs does something to deal with the, "I have no idea if this library I want to use works with the Google Closure compiler," problem? If so, what? I'd really like to know.
- Clojure needs a Rails, but not for the reason you think
- shadow.css - CSS-in-CLJS
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Rich Hickey β open-source is Not About You
I don't know, the community in general tend to use macros that are well written. I keep seeing core.async being used (`go`) in Clojure projects, and also various macros for writing HTTP servers (compojure being a popular one which main code interface is a macro `defroutes`).
ClojureScript projects also routinely add support for making asynchronous code look synchronous (like `async/await` in vanilla JavaScript) via macros. shadow-cljs's `js-await` being one of the well-written ones: https://github.com/thheller/shadow-cljs/blob/49fb078b834e64f...
Usage:
(defn my-async-fn [foo]
- Finalmente, depois de dois aninhos no ventre, minha empresa nasceu πΆπ
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ClojureDocs β Community-powered documentation and examples for Clojure
Unclear what "rendering a webpage" entails exactly.
If you want to do frontend development, you can give shadow-cljs a try, the quickstart is pretty quick: https://github.com/thheller/shadow-cljs#quick-start
If you want to just render server-side HTML, something like compojure (HTTP routing) and hiccup (Clojure data -> HTML) is pretty easy and quick to get started with (https://gist.github.com/zehnpaard/2071c3f55ed319aa8528d54d90...).
If you want to generate HTML files to serve with nginx/whatever, you can just use hiccup and `(spit)` the resulting HTML to files on disk.
What are some alternatives?
janet-pobox - Clojure like atoms/spinlocking in Janet
helix - A simple, easy to use library for React development in ClojureScript.
TypeORM - ORM for TypeScript and JavaScript. Supports MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, MS SQL Server, Oracle, SAP Hana, WebSQL databases. Works in NodeJS, Browser, Ionic, Cordova and Electron platforms.
reagent - A minimalistic ClojureScript interface to React.js
janetdocs - A community documentation site for the janet programming language
biff - A Clojure web framework for solo developers.
solargraph - A Ruby language server.
storybook - Storybook is a frontend workshop for building UI components and pages in isolation. Made for UI development, testing, and documentation.
net_skeleton - Async non-blocking multi-protocol networking library for C/C++
re-frame - A ClojureScript framework for building user interfaces, leveraging React
Mongoose - MongoDB object modeling designed to work in an asynchronous environment.
mkcert - A simple zero-config tool to make locally trusted development certificates with any names you'd like.