lsif-go
dark
lsif-go | dark | |
---|---|---|
6 | 43 | |
114 | 1,608 | |
- | 1.1% | |
10.0 | 9.9 | |
8 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Go | F# | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
lsif-go
-
srctx: A golang library for automatically evaluating the function level impacts of Git Diff
curl -L https://github.com/sourcegraph/lsif-go/releases/download/v1.9.3/src_linux_amd64 -o /usr/local/bin/lsif-go chmod +x /usr/local/bin/lsif-go lsif-go -v
-
Codegraph – static code analyzator / code diagramer
Very nice. For those interested, you can get similar information using SourceGraph and LSIF in a standardized, language agnostic form: https://lsif.dev/. It still generally requires build information for each project/language, unfortunately.
- srctx: a LSIF parser for understanding what happened in every lines of your code
- Steve Yegge Joins as Head of Engineering of Sourcegraph
-
“Zoom Out”: The missing feature of IDEs
Doing it as a comment would be pretty awful. But anyway I guess the author is looking for https://lsif.dev/
-
Byfrost Indexer working with Go
If you want an example of using go compiler frontend for static analysis, checkout https://github.com/sourcegraph/lsif-go, this powers our precise code navigation indexing for Go and solves your issue of not having type information when using tree-sitter (the code is a bit hard to follow because a lot of work went into making it as fast as possible, but feel free to find your way to our Discord where we could answer questions). Dont try to reimplement type checking, its all there waiting to be used ; )
dark
- Darklang
-
WASM_of_OCaml
Yes. Darklang was originally in OCaml using js_of_ocaml, and we ported it to F# using Blazor (https://github.com/darklang/dark/tree/main/backend/src/Wasm). It works.
We found that in dotnet 6, the code was much slower, with long startup times and a much bigger download, than in js_of_ocaml. It also had a lot of issues in running in a Webworker, which wasn't the case for js_of_ocaml.
In dotnet 7, the webworker issues are better and AOT is easier, so startup is faster. Download sizes are still bad, and it's still slower than js_of_ocaml.
However, dotnet allows almost any code to run in WASM, which js_of_ocaml had large limitations. This meant a decent chunk of functionality had to be worked around to make separate js vs native targets, which also was a massive pain and took a long time. Dune's virtual targets wasn't ready at the time - I think we were one of the test cases for it.
-
It's so unfortunate they decided to go with the Clojure/Haskell type syntax, as opposed to something friendlier like Elixir. A lot of people will not even try this language as a result. [Unison]
Why should I use this instead of https://darklang.com/
-
Cloud, Why So Difficult?
First it was probably Dark. They made a lot of noise some years ago, but then I never heard of them again (looking at their current website, looks like they moved on to AI now, obviously).
-
New open-source programming language for DevOps engineers by the creator of the CDK
Reminds me of Darklang. Personally, I don't think vendoring cloud services into a language is going to be beneficial. I'm curious how the language deals with vendor updates. Do I have to upgrade the language then? If so, I see a lot conflicts coming from this. Then it comes down to Javascript or HCL, the HCL bit makes me think that the below statement is not as truthy as it is on the surface:
-
Darklang Release 9
We still don't have all that many users (~100 active), so I'm not sure you'll find an answer here. But we collect that sort of feedback publicly, which might answer your question: https://github.com/darklang/dark/discussions/categories/feed...
-
Making Something Waspy: A Review Of Wasp
I wish I could remember what took me to YCombinator's website on the 10th of October, 2022. That was when I first heard about Wasp and another language called DarkLang. After I learned about Wasp, I was intrigued and curious to know how it works, which led me to join the discord server the next day.
-
Using Rust at a Startup: A Cautionary Tale
Some languages that try to integrate an HTTP server and a database:
Ur/Web: http://impredicative.com/ur/
Dark (Darklang): https://darklang.com/
-
The Current State of Infrastructure From Code
There are others in this space I did not assess like Encore, Shuttle, Modal, and Dark. These were not assessed for the sake of time. If you're interested in IfC, I encourage you to take a look at these others.
-
Finally, we have support for negative numbers!
Oh, finally! I was waiting to build my serverless CRUD webapp in Dark (OCaml + JavaScript and Fsharp?) until they had support for returning negative numbers on a GET request!
What are some alternatives?
scip - SCIP Code Intelligence Protocol
nvim-ts-rainbow - Rainbow parentheses for neovim using tree-sitter. Use https://sr.ht/~p00f/nvim-ts-rainbow instead
codegraph - CodeGraph - Tool that create a graph of code to show dependencies between code entities (methods, classes and etc).
Bracket-Pair-Colorizer-2 - Bracket Colorizer Extension for VSCode
difftastic - a structural diff that understands syntax 🟥🟩
unison - A friendly programming language from the future
codequery - A code-understanding, code-browsing or code-search tool. This is a tool to index, then query or search C, C++, Java, Python, Ruby, Go and Javascript source code. It builds upon the databases of cscope and ctags, and provides a nice GUI tool.
nanos - A kernel designed to run one and only one application in a virtualized environment
emerge - Emerge is a browser-based interactive codebase and dependency visualization tool for many different programming languages. It supports some basic code quality and graph metrics and provides a simple and intuitive way to explore and analyze a codebase by using graph structures.
liquibase - Main Liquibase Source
community - Issue tracker for the community team at Sourcegraph
terraform-cdk - Define infrastructure resources using programming constructs and provision them using HashiCorp Terraform