Motor Admin
nocode
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Motor Admin | nocode | |
---|---|---|
18 | 108 | |
1,907 | 59,407 | |
2.1% | - | |
6.0 | 0.0 | |
3 months ago | 16 days ago | |
Ruby | Dockerfile | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
Motor Admin
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Experience using Retool and Ruby on Rails
Tangential: MotorAdmin is a pretty reasonable, mountable, Rails-based option.
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Create Stand-alone Ruby 3.1.3 Executables For Any Platform
I'm using it to pack BrowserUp, a command line app that can run load tests in Ruby using your own Ruby/Capybara/Selenium/Cuprite libraries (note: still alpha, ping if interested). Motor Admin ships a web app with a no-code admin utility. I think Shopify would have been way better off using this for their latest command line interface rather than taking on a Node dependency, but they might not have realized this was an option, so that's part of why I'm sharing this.
- Self-hosted Low-code/no-code Admin Panel
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Adminer: Database management in a single PHP file
There seems enough competitors when this looks like a tool from 20 years ago with limited functionality.
If you somehow do not use the obvious GUI tools like TablePlus, Postico or SequelAce but prefer web based, there are some that actually look modern.
https://www.getmotoradmin.com/
https://www.nocodb.com/
https://redash.io/
For readonly usage, Metabase is good.
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Show HN: No-code alternative to Retool, Appsmith, Internal, etc.
You should check Motor Admin open-source tool (disclaimer: I'm the creator of the tool): https://github.com/motor-admin/motor-admin
>Auto-generating the GUI from SQL schema, similar to the original Django Admin
Thats exactly how Motor Admin works :)
- Ask HN: Tools to visualize data in SQL database?
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Show HN: Open-source admin panel for Supabase
The link posted here is to a Supabase-specific landing page.
Their main home page doesn't mention Supabase: https://www.getmotoradmin.com/
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Anyone here experienced with active admin?
If you want a more codeless approach (not as customizable, but it already looks good and works fine out of the box), I suggest Motor Admin. You just plop it in your project, run a few migrations and it's ready to go. From that point forward, you can add forms, graphs, and query all of your models without coding as much.
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Motor Admin - An Open Source no-code admin panel for your application
Github
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Ask HN: What do you think about the no-code movement?
There are many open-source no-code tools so you can gain full control over your data/application with them as well as contribute into the source code.
For instance, you can deploy an admin panel with https://www.getmotoradmin.com/ (plug) and save a lot of time building custom internal tools.
nocode
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I'm Excited about Darklang
> "no cruft: no build systems, no null, no exception handling, no ORMs, no OOP, no inheritence hierarchies, no async/await, no compilation, no dev environments, no dependency hell, no packaging, no git, no github, no devops: no yaml, no config files, no docker, no containers, no kubernetes, no ci/cd pipelines, no terraform, no orchestrating, no infrastructure: no sql, no nosql, no connection poolers, no sharding, no indexes, no servers, no serverless, no networking, no load balancers, no 200 cloud services, no kafka, no memcached, no unix, no OSes"
I'll be honest, I did the same and at first thought Darklang was a troll project along the lines of https://github.com/kelseyhightower/nocode.
Either this is one hell of a project that is taking on all problems (and will consequently fail), or this pitch is misguided. The majority of what is listed there have nothing to do with languages.
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Thinking Inside The Box: Relational Style Joins in SurrealDB
I hope this clears some of the fears of missing out (FOMO) that you might have about SurrealDB not having traditional SQL joins. You can still do the things you need to do such as with the subqueries. When it comes to the traditional joins though, we think about it more in terms of the joy of missing out (JOMO) because the best way to reduce errors in your code is by writing less code, as seen in our record links example.
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Vanilla Design: The Best React UI Library Ever
Vanilla Design is a super lightweight, ultra high-performance React UI library. Vanilla Design Team places a great emphasis on code size and performance, drawing inspiration from the nocode philosophy, which has significantly boosted the security and maintainability of Vanilla Design. It's like they've added an extra layer of bulletproofing and polish to their creation!
- efficiencyHack
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Ask HN: How Airtable / Notion's Database is implemented?
There are some open source competitors to Airtable and Notion that can provide good insight. Check out https://github.com/kelseyhightower/nocode
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Does Debian always have this many "release critical" bugs at release?
Well 100 is a number. And here is the relation: https://sources.debian.org/stats/ and here is how to get 0 bugs: https://github.com/kelseyhightower/nocode
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Looking for partner to start hosting service
This is my background and i years of experience hosting this..
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Sunt masterele online worth it?
Asta kelseyhightower/nocode: The best way to write secure and reliable applications. Write nothing; deploy nowhere. (github.com) are mii de forkuri si zeci de mii de stelute, activitate masiva la 'issues' - mii, sute de 'pull requests', clar ca rezolva o problema reala, nu?
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My manager wants me to code a bug free application
Well, you can write a bug-free application..
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Show HN: Gut – An easy-to-use CLI for Git
First off, congratulations on entering the Computer Science!
Second, I am not sure what is a bigger joke here, the project itself and the OP's innocuous and cute self-promotion or the fact that this post landed the HN's front page.
0. Terms and definitions.
"You" refers not to the author of the tool but to the dear reader who happens to stumble upon this comment in the stream of random screen scrolling.
1. Comment body.
Couple of things about CS classes and specifically about programming classes. They will teach you everything but the most important engineering principles. And you'll have to adjust your learnings once you leave the campus gate behind and enter the wilderness of real tasks and challenges.
The first biggest lesson I learnt as a CS graduate was that the most beautiful, efficient and valuable software program is the one that does not exist, literally no code[0]
The second biggest lesson I learnt as a CS graduate was YAGNI[0]. You never ever write a single line of code, even touch the keyboard until you are absolutely sure you have exhausted all possible options to solve your problem without getting your hands dirty with programming.
The third biggest lesson I learnt as a CS graduate was RTFM[2]. It is so exciting to go to conferences and see people present fancy slides and watch youtube videos with lollipop coloured pictures explaining some complex topics in a eli5 style. Or read blog posts on a gazillion of websites posted by unknown unknowns but yet coming so convincing as if they were written by John Carmack or ChatGPT 5. But then none of them tell you the whole truth and show you the full picture. It is only official documentation, manuals and boring reference specifications that can help you find what you are looking for. And you will need to learn the skill of grinding hunderds of pages of badly styled refdocs to find that really nitty gritty quirky feature that consumed your whole day in finding out why your code does not work as expected. That's where you will start proceeding to the official docs and source code (if needed) before anything else (even Stackoverflow!).
There have been so many git wrappers around, you can probably try them all (tig, jj, gh-cli, gitui, lazygit, gix, you google it). But then, no matter how much effort their authors invest in those tools, there will always be inconsistency between git and its wrapper and you find yourself resorting to git to do what was supposed to be covered by the bespoke tool. And then you learn to respect git, understand its concepts as they were designed, learn some bash and git aliases[3], ditch all those tools (or the majority of them) and proceed with your personal tailored toolbox where if you find something odd you adjust it for your needs within 10 minutes and chill out.
[0] - https://github.com/kelseyhightower/nocode
[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_aren%27t_gonna_need_it
[2] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RTFM
[3] - https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Git-Aliases
What are some alternatives?
JHipster - JHipster, much like Spring initializr, is a generator to create a boilerplate backend application, but also with an integrated front end implementation in React, Vue or Angular. In their own words, it "Is a development platform to quickly generate, develop, & deploy modern web applications & microservice architectures."
swagger-core - Examples and server integrations for generating the Swagger API Specification, which enables easy access to your REST API
motor-admin-rails - Low-code Admin panel and Business intelligence Rails engine. No DSL - configurable from the UI. Rails Admin, Active Admin, Blazer modern alternative.
ArnoldC - Arnold Schwarzenegger based programming language
docker-adminer - Database management in a single PHP file
fpcupdeluxe - A GUI based installer for FPC and Lazarus
Sequel-Ace - MySQL/MariaDB database management for macOS
fetlang - Fetish-themed programming language
ruby-packer - Packing your Ruby application into a single executable.
lowdefy - The config web stack for business apps - build internal tools, client portals, web apps, admin panels, dashboards, web sites, and CRUD apps with YAML or JSON.
pascalabcnet - The new generation Pascal programming language for .NET
dotfiles - My configuration files and personal collection of scripts.