libpython-clj
Laminar
libpython-clj | Laminar | |
---|---|---|
25 | 26 | |
1,029 | 716 | |
1.1% | - | |
5.7 | 8.3 | |
2 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Clojure | Scala | |
Eclipse Public License 2.0 | MIT 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.
libpython-clj
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Pyffi – Use Python from Racket
It’s also worth noting that Clojure has libpython-clj (https://github.com/clj-python/libpython-clj) which offers an interface with Python from another lisp. Here are some advanced ML and dataviz examples using that lib: https://github.com/gigasquid/libpython-clj-examples.
- A Python-compatible statically typed language erg-lang/erg
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Clojure Scripting on Node.js
Basically, you take a programming language and make it work on a platform that meant to be programmed using a different PL. Clojure is hosted by design - it's not Java, but can be used to program for JVM. It ain't Javascript, but can be used to target nodejs and browser; not an [official] CLR language, but you can write .Net programs. You can use Clojure to make Flutter apps with ClojureDart. You can integrate Python into Clojure with libpython-clj. Or write Clojure to target Erlang/OTP; or Rust; or R; There's even a clojure-like language for Lua - Fennel.
There's something about Clojure people like so much, they want it to work atop any platform.
https://github.com/Tensegritics/ClojureDart
https://github.com/clj-python/libpython-clj
https://github.com/clojerl/clojerl
https://github.com/clojure-rs/ClojureRS
https://github.com/scicloj/clojisr
https://fennel-lang.org
- Why Clojure is not widely adopted like mainstream languages?
- Clj-Python: Python bindings for Clojure
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Why is there no Clojure to Python Compiler / Transpiler?
There's this project that's used a lot for taking advantage of Pythons ecosystem through Clojure JVM. https://github.com/clj-python/libpython-clj
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(define (uwu) (display "nya~\n"))
Ahh, makes sense. Well, if you ever wanna steal some of python's thunder, libpython-clj worked great for me lol. Supposedly py4cl fills a similar role in Common Lisp.
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Notebooks suck: change my mind
High quality interop with any python library via libpython-clj including, but not limited to, keras, numpy, matplotlib, and pandas. This includes zero copy paths from many of those.
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Java Bindings for Libpython-clj
libpython-clj now has Java bindings...go tell all your Java friends!
- Best Lisp dialect?
Laminar
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Ask HN: Those making $500/month on side projects in 2024 – Show and tell
My quite niche open source project broke this threshold last year, via Github sponsorships. Of course, I put a lot of time into it, so it's not "passive income" or even "market rate income", but still, without these sponsorships I wouldn't be able to work on it so much.
The project is Laminar, a UI library for Scala.js https://laminar.dev
- The golden age of Kotlin and its uncertain future
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Why would users avoid a library that makes heavy use of macros in Scala 3?
I've noticed that Laminar and the newly released Kyo point that they don't use a lot of macros as a feature. Laminar says "Easy to understand: no macros", while Kyo emphasizes "Note: defer is currently the only macro in Kyo. All other features use regular language constructs." It seems that using less macros is something library users will like.
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Is there any book or course about Scala front-end development?
https://laminar.dev/ might be what you need. Though I wish there was a more beginner friendly (I'm not from front-end world) tutorial for me to follow along.
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Designing an HTML Component system
Have you looked at Laminar and Tyrian? Especially Tyrian seems to be close to what you're looking for.
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The Quest for the Ultimate GUI Framework
For Scala there is Laminar, which has an even flashier website with nice docs. I haven't tested it out though, as I have never used Scala.
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Solid like scala library that has more powerful reactive primitives and lean syntax?
I found this scala library called Laminar which looks super similar to solid. They use signals and has no virtual dom. State changes are represented by signals and events by event streams. Thus they seems to have feature parity with RXJS as they can model all sorts of async stuff. Best part is they get to keep writing their markup in C-style syntax than XML based JSX. It looks super elegant,minimalist and has type safety.
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Solid JS compared to svelte?
This is very true. I really hate svelte single file components. But then I tried JSX for breaking things down. I love solid but I don't feel really good about angle brackets within C style syntax. I saw this Scala library that stick with simple statically typed function syntax than html tags. I don't understand why people still wants to stick with xml like tags. In laminar markup is written like this scala div( h1("Hello world", color := "red"), inputCaption, input(inputMods, name := "fullName"), div( ">>", button("Submit"), "<<" ) ) I wish solid team makes their HyperScript syntax as performant as JSX.
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Ask HN: What companies are embracing “HTML over the wire”?
Laminar (Scala framework) hasn't been mentioned yet so dropping it here as an awesome framework that support HTML-over-the-wire. It can be used together with React, HTMX, and many other frontend frameworks -- but doesn't have to be.
https://laminar.dev/
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10 Years of Scala.js
Scala.js core itself, which I maintain, does not need much innovation. We support all of Scala, and interact with any JavaScript library. That's what the core promises.
If you want to compare to Scala 3, it's worth pointing out that you can use Scala.js with any Scala version >= 2.12.2. In particular, you can use it with Scala 3 and benefit from all its innovations. ;)
Innovation comes mainly from libraries, notably UI libraries. Laminar (https://laminar.dev/) is a great example.
In terms of roadmap, we are mostly working on "boring" stuff: improving performance (of the generated code, and of the linker), fixing bugs when they get reported, etc.
Perhaps, when Wasm gets more features for deeper interoperability with JavaScript (manipulating objects notably), we will take another look at targeting Wasm. People usually expect all languages to target Wasm now, "because it's fast". Truth is, it's fast for languages with linear memory. There is no evidence yet that it will be fast for memory-managed languages with objects and virtual dispatch.
What are some alternatives?
hissp - It's Python with a Lissp.
OutWatch - The Functional and Reactive Web-Frontend Library for Scala.js
spark-nlp - State of the Art Natural Language Processing
tyrian - Elm-inspired Scala UI library.
clerk - ⚡️ Moldable Live Programming for Clojure
Binding.scala - Reactive data-binding for Scala
py4cl - Call python from Common Lisp
Udash - Scala framework for building beautiful and maintainable web applications.
tablecloth - Dataset manipulation library built on the top of tech.ml.dataset
scalajs-react - Facebook's React on Scala.JS
sklearn-clj - Plugin to use sklearn models in metamorph.ml
slinky - Write Scala.js React apps just like you would in ES6