low-code-backend-dockered
TanStack Query
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low-code-backend-dockered | TanStack Query | |
---|---|---|
9 | 56 | |
43 | 39,711 | |
- | 2.7% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
about 2 years ago | 5 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
- | 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.
low-code-backend-dockered
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Ask HN: Hunting for a Framework
> 1. Hasura - DB + Basic APIS, 2. Ory.sh for Auth/Authz
Great choices!
3. React on the frontend
Here I'd go with Elm, and a generated GraphL API client. Here an example to play with (which btw also includes ZomboDB for ElasticSearch integration into Postgres)
https://github.com/cies/low-code-backend-dockered
> 4. Windmill.dev
Look awesome, never heard of it. Tnx
> If you like code-focused solution: Rails, Laravel and Django are good options.
I think Kotlin/KTor, while not as full featured, is a much better alternative due to the strong typing discipline.
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A Love Letter to Ruby and Rails
I was a big Rails, Ruby and dynamic typing fanboy. But then my project grew in size and I changed my beliefs.
I'd not start a big project in any language without: null-safety, proper sum-types, type inference.
Hence I like Kotlin, and KTor seems to be a good Sinatra/Flask like in that arena.
Another interesting development I find no-code/low-code tools for the backend, like Hasura. This allows me to "just expose Postgres over GraphQL" with very little code (mainly configuration). That combined with type-safe client library generation for a typesafe frontend language like Elm gives me all the power I need in a very different paradigm. Something worth considering.
Small example Hasura+Elm project: https://github.com/cies/low-code-backend-dockered
- Best way to create web application?
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Hasura Super App - A reference application for the real-world with Hasura, Next.js, and TypeScript
My plug: https://github.com/cies/elm-hasura-dockered
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Django for Startup Founders: A better software architecture for SaaS startups
I agreed. Then did a project[1] with Hasura and a generated client lib in Elm and I'm no longer looking back. If I can get away with "no backend code" I'll do it again in a heart beat.
[1] https://github.com/cies/elm-hasura-dockered
- Show HN: Fully dockered, typesafe front end starter-kit with Elm and Hasura
- Demo of strong type safety with GraphQL using Elm and Hasura
- Fully dockered Elm-Hasura starter kit
- Fully dockered Elm-Hasura starter kit: strong typesafety from db schema to frontend code
TanStack Query
- Best Next.js Libraries and Tools in 2024
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This is your sign(al) to try TanStack Query & Angular
To ensure that we get the best TanStack Query experience possible we are also encouraged to share feedback and participate in the discussion on GitHub, which you can check out here!
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React Query Mutations Offline React-Native
I trust you found this information beneficial. For further details, please refer to the conversation on this GitHub issue here
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Nx - Highlights of 2023
Tanstack - Tanstack has evolved to an entire ecosystem consisting of the famous Tanstack (or React) Query, Tanstack Table, now also Tanstack Router and Tanstack Form. It started with Tanstack Query, which adopted Nx and Nx Cloud. Zack talked about this collab with Dominik, and we also had Dominik on our Nx live stream. Now, all the above-mentioned Tanstack libs have adopted Nx, and there's more coming.
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SQLSync – Stop Building Databases
"I’m building SQLSync because I want to make client-side applications easier to build without us having to reinvent the wheel each time."
Kinda ironic no?
Anyway, since the article is also about React, I can't recommend enough React Query [1] if you don't want to worry about caching data to reduce calls to the database and managing/refreshing stale data. It simplified so much my job.
[1] https://tanstack.com/query
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React Basics: Essential Knowledge for Every React Developer
Combine state with data fetching with react-query This should be the second choice since you have to fetch data anyway Skip this option if you are using trpc or prefer not to use react-query
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Tanstack's React Query Kicked `onSuccess`, `onError`, and `onSettled` Out of `useQuery`: Now What?!
onSuccess, onError and onSettled have been removed from Queries. They haven't been touched for Mutations. Please see this RFC for motivations behind this change and what to do instead.
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TanStack Query(a.k.a. React Query) v5 announced
so cacheTime was really confusing because it seemed like "this is the amount time we cache data for", but that's not what it is. So a rename had to happen. We had some discussion on the public roadmap (https://github.com/TanStack/query/discussions/4252) about what it's gonna be. I'm usually against abbreviations, simply because there's always someone who doesn't understand what it means. But all other suggestions like inactiveCacheTime also had room for interpretation. gc is an abbreviation that is known well enough (think git gc), and it's also not an option that you will customize on a daily basis (usually once, globally).
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Explicit Design, Part 6. Cross-Cutting Concerns and Extendable Infrastructure
By the way, I think that useSWR and React Query take on too much. They go too deep into the multiple application layers, making themselves no longer “non-opinionated,” and in some cases, using them becomes inconvenient. There are libraries that implement the SWR standard and do not use hooks, but there are not many of them.
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13 Must Know Libraries for a React Developer
TanStack Query is an open source data fetching library in React developed by Tanner Linsley. It has more than 1.7 million weekly downloads on NPM and more than 35k stars on GitHub as of August 2023.