lucky
Flask
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lucky | Flask | |
---|---|---|
20 | 135 | |
2,553 | 66,350 | |
0.6% | 0.8% | |
6.9 | 8.7 | |
4 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Crystal | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
lucky
- The New Wave of Programming Languages: Pony, Zig, Crystal, Vlang, & Julia
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Getting Lucky with HTMX
Lucky is a full-stack framework written in the Crystal programming language. One of the neat benefits of using Lucky with Crystal is the typesafety you get.
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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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Marten, a Crystal web framework that makes building web apps productive and fun
I'd love to see two docs there:
- What's different from Lucky https://luckyframework.org/
- What's different from Amber https://amberframework.org/
- Crystal Programming Language
- Lucky is a web framework written in Crystal
- Lucky: A web framework written in Crystal
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Django defaults that will kill your project
> Regarding 1. While this is certainly an issue, itโs an issue for anyone using any framework and a challenge of database-backed web applications everywhere.
No, there are frameworks out there that doesn't allow queries during template rendering. See Lucky for an example, https://luckyframework.org/.
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Medusa: The open-source alternative to Shopify
Lucky: https://luckyframework.org/
- Ask HN: Simplest stack to build web apps in 2021?
Flask
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Ask HN: High quality Python scripts or small libraries to learn from
I'd suggest Flask or some of the smaller projects in the Pallets ecosystem:
https://github.com/pallets/flask
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Rapid Prototyping with Flask, Bootstrap and Secutio
#!/usr/bin/python # # https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/3.0.x/installation/ # from flask import Flask, jsonify, request contacts = [ { "id": "1", "firstname": "Lorem", "lastname": "Ipsum", "email": "[email protected]", }, { "id": "2", "firstname": "Mauris", "lastname": "Quis", "email": "[email protected]", }, { "id": "3", "firstname": "Donec Purus", "lastname": "Purus", "email": "[email protected]", } ] app = Flask(__name__, static_url_path='', static_folder='public',) @app.route("/contact//save", methods=["PUT"]) def save_contact(id): data = request.json contacts[id - 1] = data return jsonify(contacts[id - 1]) @app.route("/contact/", methods=["GET"]) @app.route("/contact//edit", methods=["GET"]) def get_contact(id): return jsonify(contacts[id - 1]) @app.route('/') def root(): return app.send_static_file('index.html') if __name__ == '__main__': app.run(debug=True)
- Microdot "The impossibly small web framework for Python and MicroPython"
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Why do all the popular projects use relative imports in __init__ files if PEP 8 recommends absolute?
I was looking at all the big projects like numpy, pytorch, flask, etc.
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10 Github repositories to achieve Python mastery
Explore here.
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Ask HN: What would you use to build a mostly CRUD back end today?
I may use Flask-Admin initially to offload the "CRUD" operations to have an initial prototype fast but then drop it ASAP because I don't want to write a "flask-admin application" to fight against later on. If the application is mainly "CRUD", then Flask-Admin is suitable.
Now...
Would you do a breakdown/list of all the jobs you've done by sector/vertical and by function/role and by application functionality?
- [0]: https://flask.palletsprojects.com
- [1]: https://flask-admin.readthedocs.io/en/latest
- [2]: https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/2.3.x/patterns/celery
- [3]: https://sentry.io
- [4]: https://posthog.com
- [5]: https://www.docker.com
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Implementing continuous delivery pipelines with GitHub Actions
In the lab to follow, we will be setting up an end-to-end DevOps workflow for a Flask microservice with GitHub Actions, using a self-managed custom runner for maximal control over the pipeline execution environment and automating deployments to a local Kubernetes cluster. Furthermore, we will construct separate pipelines for our "development" and "production" environments to further elaborate on the concepts of continuous deployment and delivery.
- How do you iterate on a library built locally?
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Flask Application Load Balancing using Docker Compose and Nginx
Flask Micro web Framework: You will use Flask to build a Flask web application.
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Open Source Flask-based web applications
In an earlier post I mentioned a bunch of Open Source web applications. Let's now focus on the ones written in Python using Flask the light-weight web framework.
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.
fastapi - FastAPI framework, high performance, easy to learn, fast to code, ready for production
kemal - Fast, Effective, Simple Web Framework
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.
carbon-crystal - Carbon Crystal - Web framework for Crystal Lang
AIOHTTP - Asynchronous HTTP client/server framework for asyncio and Python
grip - The microframework for writing powerful web applications.
quart - An async Python micro framework for building web applications.
raze - Modular, light web framework for Crystal
starlette - The little ASGI framework that shines. ๐
athena - An ecosystem of reusable, independent components
Tornado - Tornado is a Python web framework and asynchronous networking library, originally developed at FriendFeed.