livebook
Genie.jl
Our great sponsors
livebook | Genie.jl | |
---|---|---|
79 | 21 | |
4,390 | 2,178 | |
3.1% | 1.0% | |
9.8 | 8.7 | |
1 day ago | 7 days ago | |
Elixir | Julia | |
Apache 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.
livebook
- Arraymancer – Deep Learning Nim Library
-
Setup Nx lib and EXLA to run NX/AXON with CUDA
LiveBook site
-
Interactive Code Cells
I prefer functional programming with Livebook[1] for this type of thing. Once you run a cell, it can be published right into a web component as well.
[1] - https://livebook.dev
-
What software should I use as an alternative to Microsoft OneNote?
If you're a coder, Livebook might be worth a look too. I certainly have my eyes on it.
-
Advent of Code Day 5
Would highly recommend looking at Jose's use of livebook to answer these. It makes testing easier. It's old but still relevant. Video link inside
- Advent of Code 2023 is nigh
-
Racket branch of Chez Scheme merging with mainline Chez Scheme
That's hard to say. Racket is a rather complete language, as is F# and Elixir. And F# and Racket are extremely capable multi-paradigm languages, supporting basically any paradigm. Elixir is a bit more restricted in terms of its paradigms, but that's a feature oftentimes, and it also makes up for it with its process framework and deep VM support from the BEAM.
I would say that the key difference is that F# and Elixir are backed by industry whereas Racket is primarily backed via academia. Thus, the incentives and goals are more aligned for F# and Elixir to be used in industrial settings.
Also, both F# and Elixir gain a lot from their host VMs in the CLR and BEAM. Overall, F# is the cleanest language of the three, as it is easy to write concise imperative, functional, or OOP code and has easy asynchronous facilities. Elixir supports macros, and although Racket's macro system is far more advanced, I don't think it really provides any measurable utility over Elixir's. I would also say that F# and Elixir's documentation is better than Racket's. Racket has a lot of documentation, but it can be a little terse at times. And Elixir definitely has the most active, vibrant, and complete ecosystem of all three languages, as well as job market.
The last thing is that F# and Elixir have extremely good notebook implementations in Polyglot Notebooks (https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-dotne...) and Livebook (https://livebook.dev/), respectively. I would say both of these exceed the standard Python Jupyter notebook, and Racket doesn't have anything like Polyglot Notebooks or Livebook. (As an aside, it's possible for someone to implement a Racket kernel for Polyglot Notebooks, so maybe that's a good side project for me.)
So for me, over time, it has slowly whittled down to F# and Elixir being my two languages that I reach for to handle effectively any project. Racket just doesn't pull me in that direction, and I would say that Racket is a bit too locked to DrRacket. I tried doing some GUI stuff in Racket, and despite it having an already built framework, I have actually found it easier to write my own due to bugs found and the poor performance of Racket Draw.
-
Runme – Interactive Runbooks Built with Markdown
This looks very similar to LiveBook¹. It is purely Elixir/BEAM based, but is quite polished and seems like a perfect workflow tool that is also able to expose these workflows (simply called livebooks) as web apps that some functional, non-technical person can execute on his/her own.
- Livebook: Automate code and data workflows with interactive notebooks
- Elixir Livebook is a secret weapon for documentation
Genie.jl
-
Tidyverse 2.0.0
Julia seems to be doing a better job catching up to R in this space than Python. I haven't used it personally, but the demos of Genie Framework are impressive: https://github.com/GenieFramework/Genie.jl / https://genieframework.com/
-
Show HN: Genie Cloud – no-code platform to build and deploy Julia web apps
Hi everyone! I’m Adrian, co-founder of Genie Cloud. Genie Cloud is the no-code platform to quickly build & deploy Julia web apps. It is designed for R&D and data science teams using Julia, who need to share their work with interactive web apps.
Genie Cloud is very simple: import (or write) the Julia code, build the GUI with the drag & drop editor, and deploy the apps in one-click. No frontend code, server stack or hosting to worry about. With Genie Cloud you can build anything, from interactive dashboards to ML demos to production-grade apps.
Genie Cloud is built on top of the open source Genie Framework (https://genieframework.com/), the most popular Julia web framework (I’m also the creator and maintainer of Genie Framework).
At the moment we are in private beta. You can learn more and sign up to get access here: https://www.geniecloud.io/. Looking forward to your thoughts and questions!
-
Julia outside of academia?
I used Julia through my PhD but then started working at a consulting company and had to use Python except for few proof of concepts I built in Julia. Luckily for me, now I'm working at Genie so I finally get to use Julia professionally :)
-
GUI library suggestion for school project
Have you checked https://genieframework.com/? It's the most popular web dev framework in Julia.
- Help With Next Language Decision
-
Show HN: Genie Builder, no-code UI plugin for building data apps
Hi! Genie Builder is a free VSCode plugin that makes it easy to build web GUIs for Julia applications (and in future, Python apps too). Users can simply drag & drop UI elements to create interactive dashboards and data apps, without writing any frontend code.
The tool is designed for data scientists and researchers who need to expose their data models to business users with an interactive web application, but lack the software development skills to build one.
Genie Builder completely eliminates the need to learn frontend development to code the UI. And very soon, we’re also going to support one-click cloud deployments to make it easy to build AND deploy data apps - no frontend nor devops skills required.
I’m Adrian, the creator of the open-source Genie web framework ([https://genieframework.com/](https://genieframework.com/)). Genie offers low-code libraries for building data applications - just like Streamlit or Dash, but for JuliaLang. We developed Genie Builder because of feedback from our open source community who needs more productive data tooling.
-
Beginner's Series to Rust
Yep, I'm a PHP dev and often do simple JS/jQuery to support my backend code. I have a very general interest in data science and embedded programming, meaning one day I might start doing something with them, but for now, I'm interested in those languages for web development. The following frameworks were especially interesting
Go: https://github.com/gin-gonic/gin
Rust: https://rocket.rs/
Julia: https://genieframework.com/
-
Plotting in a GUI with Julia
Check Genie. They're working on an app builder called Genie Cloud.
- GenieFramework – Build web applications with Julia
What are some alternatives?
kino - Client-driven interactive widgets for Livebook
Dash.jl - Dash for Julia - A Julia interface to the Dash ecosystem for creating analytic web applications in Julia. No JavaScript required.
awesome-advent-of-code - A collection of awesome resources related to the yearly Advent of Code challenge.
PlutoSliderServer.jl - Web server to run just the `@bind` parts of a Pluto.jl notebook
interactive - .NET Interactive combines the power of .NET with many other languages to create notebooks, REPLs, and embedded coding experiences. Share code, explore data, write, and learn across your apps in ways you couldn't before.
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
Elixir - Elixir is a dynamic, functional language for building scalable and maintainable applications
PackageCompiler.jl - Compile your Julia Package
axon - Nx-powered Neural Networks
Revise.jl - Automatically update function definitions in a running Julia session
desktop - Building native-like Elixir apps for Windows, MacOS, Linux, iOS and Android using Phoenix LiveView!
Chain.jl - A Julia package for piping a value through a series of transformation expressions using a more convenient syntax than Julia's native piping functionality.