kemal
illwill
kemal | illwill | |
---|---|---|
14 | 5 | |
3,576 | 377 | |
0.1% | - | |
6.1 | 7.1 | |
11 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Crystal | Nim | |
MIT License | Do What The F*ck You Want To Public 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.
kemal
- The New Wave of Programming Languages: Pony, Zig, Crystal, Vlang, & Julia
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Companies Using Kemal in Production
Add your company to the list https://github.com/kemalcr/kemal/wiki/Companies-using-Kemal-in-Production
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Phoenix on Rails - a Phoenix tutorial for Rails developers
https://luckyframework.org/ . Kemal is even faster but it's mostly for APIs. In my opinion it's on par with Actix with much, much better developer experience.
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How do you find the market in 2023?
It's been around for a while under development. It had it's 1.0.0 release in March 2021. There's been two (online) Crystal conferences, and there's two Crystal books published. There's a decent ecosystem of "shards" and there are a couple of Crystal web frameworks and ORMS that are similar to Sinatra or Rails-like. If you already know Ruby, learning Crystal is super easy.
- Kemal: Fast, Effective, Simple Web Framework for Crystal
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Marten, a Crystal web framework that makes building web apps productive and fun
They’re all good to try IMO, another is https://kemalcr.com which is akin to Sinatra if you just want to get an HTTP server with routes setup quickly.
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Medusa: The open-source alternative to Shopify
Kemal (like Sinatra, I really like this one): https://kemalcr.com/
- Ask HN: Simplest stack to build web apps in 2021?
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Packing Static Files Into Crystal Binaries
As an example, consider this small Kemal application:
- Kemal 1.1.0 released
illwill
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How to detect and even save key presses
smth more advanced than getch: https://github.com/johnnovak/illwill https://forum.nim-lang.org/t/6919
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Is Nim a good language to write Linux TUI applications?
For making TUIs in Nim, there's Illwill. I've played around with it a bit, and it seems pretty nice. For editing id3 tags, there's the Metatag library. I haven't tried it myself though.
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Illwill text input
Ooh, more Norwegians using Nim? I had a look in the issues of Illwill and came across this: https://github.com/johnnovak/illwill/issues/14. Seems like there is a library of widgets and he has created a simple text input one that you could possibly modify to suit your needs (or just use outright). Not sure if it will support UTF-8 characters though, and I'm on my phone at my cabin right now so can't really check.
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Is it worth learning nim? (In my case)
Check out this library, it's pretty great https://github.com/johnnovak/illwill
What are some alternatives?
amber - A Crystal web framework that makes building applications fast, simple, and enjoyable. Get started with quick prototyping, less bugs, and blazing fast performance.
nimwave - TUIs for the terminal, desktop, and web
lucky - A full-featured Crystal web framework that catches bugs for you, runs incredibly fast, and helps you write code that lasts.
promexplorer - A simple tool to explore prometheus exporter metrics
raze - Modular, light web framework for Crystal
tui-rs - Build terminal user interfaces and dashboards using Rust
amethyst - Amethyst is a Rails inspired web-framework for Crystal language
rich-cli - Rich-cli is a command line toolbox for fancy output in the terminal
grip - The microframework for writing powerful web applications.
ansiwave - A modern BBS
kemalyst
mysitemap - generating sitemap.xml for static content sites, alongwith some dynamic links support