js-ts-csharp
awesome-dotnet
Our great sponsors
js-ts-csharp | awesome-dotnet | |
---|---|---|
16 | 22 | |
122 | 18,258 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.7 | |
almost 2 years ago | 11 days ago | |
C# | ||
- | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
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.
js-ts-csharp
-
We migrated to SQL. Our biggest learning? Don't use Prisma
The thing is, if you're comfortable with TypeScript, it's really more or less just a small step to C#.
A small repo here: https://github.com/CharlieDigital/js-ts-csharp
And a practical example of a Playwright web scraper in C# and TypeScript: https://github.com/CharlieDigital/playwright-scrape-api
"Too many keywords" is the weirdest objection to a programming language versus actually using the language to build something practical.
-
Why isn’t dotnet core popular among startups?
[1] https://github.com/CharlieDigital/js-ts-csharp
-
Is it a bad idea to build a marketplace app using .Net core?
Modern C# isn't that big of a lift from TypeScript. If you can write TypeScript, you can write C#. Much easier transition than say Go or Rust. See also: https://github.com/CharlieDigital/js-ts-csharp
-
Ryujinx: Experimental Nintendo Switch Emulator written in C#
> ...this project is a nice showcase how versatile C# and .NET is
C# and .NET are highly underrated/underappreciated because of some early flops and the Microsoft branding.
It's converging with TypeScript in the best way possible[0] and has some really great language features that even TS is lacking (really powerful switch expressions, for example).
It seems like the natural option for teams that want to move from TypeScript to a compiled, multi-threaded, statically typed language but it seems that there's a lot of teams that would rather use Go or Rust; neither of which are as easy to step up to from TypeScript, IMO.
-
I'm on the JS/TS/Node stack is it worth learning another stack (C#)?
Should it be C#? I think the transition to C# is the easiest because of how similar TypeScript and C# are at some levels (small repo here showing the similarities: https://github.com/CharlieDigital/js-ts-csharp)
-
Is C# a good language if I don't plan on using any Microsoft solutions (Windows, Azure, visual studio, sql server)?
I have a small repo here that shows just how similar the JS, TS, and C# are: https://github.com/CharlieDigital/js-ts-csharp
-
7 Reasons for Startups to Choose ASP.NET Over Node.js
For me, I use TypeScript and C# almost interchangeably now. Most of the patterns I would implement in C# I can also implement in TypeScript. It's very easy to move between them (exhibit A and exhibit B).
-
Front-end
Bonus: TypeScript is soooo similar to C#; completely worth your time to learn it.
- GitHub - CharlieDigital/js-ts-csharp: A repository demonstrating functional techniques with C# 10 and the similarities between JavaScript, TypeScript, and C#.
- Building the same app in JavaScript, TypeScript, and C#
awesome-dotnet
-
Developer should-know websites
Github .Net, Node, Cloud, React ... Awesomes
-
Hi there. Is there any libraries or packages out there that’s similar or better than EfSchemaCompare?
When checking for .NET related tools I tend to look at awewsome-dotnet and I couldn't find EfSchemaCompare or any other tool which seems to be related. Might be worth adding it there.
- Some open source repo to explore
- What do YOU use C# for in the real world?
- Learning Path For Go Developer
-
Nuget - Most useful
You can find interesting packages/projects for searching "awesome dotnet" in github. For example: https://github.com/quozd/awesome-dotnet https://github.com/thangchung/awesome-dotnet-core
-
Example of a well designed modern .Net SDK
Probably you might find some inspiration here - https://github.com/quozd/awesome-dotnet
- Ask HN: Examples of Top C# Code?
- What is a tool you use or a bit of code that you like to use that you feel is worth bragging about?
-
Why is there a lack of cool repos?
Have you looked through https://github.com/quozd/awesome-dotnet/blob/master/README.md
What are some alternatives?
Oberon - Oberon parser, code model & browser, compiler and IDE with debugger
tye - Tye is a tool that makes developing, testing, and deploying microservices and distributed applications easier. Project Tye includes a local orchestrator to make developing microservices easier and the ability to deploy microservices to Kubernetes with minimal configuration.
CliWrap - Library for running command-line processes
DOOM-3-BFG - Doom 3 BFG Edition
atldotnet - Fully managed, portable and easy-to-use C# library to read and edit audio data and metadata (tags) from various audio formats, playlists and CUE sheets
rhino - Rhino is an open-source implementation of JavaScript written entirely in Java
FluentMigrator - Fluent migrations framework for .NET
F# - Please file issues or pull requests here: https://github.com/dotnet/fsharp
awesome-dotnet-core - :honeybee: A collection of awesome .NET core libraries, tools, frameworks and software
HonkPerf.NET
PDF.Flow.Examples - Samples, articles, issue reporting and documentation related to Gehtsoft PDF.Flow library.