nestjs-openapi3
Prisma
nestjs-openapi3 | Prisma | |
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1 | 444 | |
24 | 37,241 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
over 1 year ago | 7 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
- | 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.
nestjs-openapi3
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Show HN: Remult – a CRUD framework for full-stack TypeScript
So I spent a lot of time in the Nest ecosystem, and I wrote some nontrivial libraries with a little (not a lot) of uptake (and neither are actively maintained at this point, so these are here mostly for completeness):
https://github.com/eropple/nestjs-auth
https://github.com/eropple/nestjs-openapi3
I was pretty excited by NestJS when I ran into it because, well--I don't mind magic, when it's done right. I quite like Spring Boot, for example. But NestJS's magic is...incorrect, in a lot of ways. The DI container is a little bit scary, with oddly hardcoded ways to register interceptors into request scope (itself necessary because NestJS's logging facilities aren't--or weren't at the time--decorating requests with X-Request-Id or similar, so you had to register your own) and no way to then define interceptor order.
It also has a lot of really overlapping nouns; guards are interceptors but less capable (and @eropple/nestjs-auth didn't use them at all) and the "pipe" concept for validation was itself inscrutable. To make it usable, I ended up just doing everything with decorators and interceptors, all living in request scope. And once I'd gotten it going, it was pretty nice. But it also meant broad incompatibilities with much of the NestJS ecosystem.
Prisma
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A Software Engineer's Tips and Tricks #1: Drizzle
In the world of software development, there are two kinds of developers: those who have never had to complain about ORMs and those who have actually used them. Whether it’s Django ORM for Python, Active Record for Ruby, GORM for Golang, Doctrine for PHP, or Prisma for TypeScript, a common issue persists: writing simple queries is straightforward, but constructing complex or optimized queries can take hours, if not days.
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Stories Behind ZenStack V2!
Support for a Union type #2505
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Deploy Full-Stack Next.js T3App with Cognito and Prisma using AWS Lambda
generator client { provider = "prisma-client-js" binaryTargets = ["native", "rhel-openssl-1.0.x"] } datasource db { provider = "postgresql" // NOTE: When using mysql or sqlserver, uncomment the @db.Text annotations in model Account below // Further reading: // https://next-auth.js.org/adapters/prisma#create-the-prisma-schema // https://www.prisma.io/docs/reference/api-reference/prisma-schema-reference#string url = env("DATABASE_URL") } model Post { id Int @id @default(autoincrement()) name String createdAt DateTime @default(now()) updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt createdBy User @relation(fields: [createdById], references: [id]) createdById String @@index([name]) } // ... rest of the schema
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End-To-End Polymorphism: From Database to UI, Achieving SOLID Design
Unfortunately Prisma hasn’t supported polymorphism yet. As such, you can't use inheritance to model the entity in the same way as in your programming language, as depicted in the above class diagram. The good news is that we could intimate it using table inheritance to imitate it.
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Next.js App Router Course
In this project I am manually declaring the data types. For better type-safety, use Prisma, which automatically generates types based on your database schema.
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Next.js 14: Fetching Data
When you're creating a full-stack application, you'll also need to write logic to interact with your database. For relational databases like Postgres, you can do this with SQL, or an ORM like Prisma.
- Utilizando Testcontainers para Testes de Integração com NestJS e Prisma ORM
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Building an Admin Console With Minimum Code Using React-Admin, Prisma, and Zenstack
Prisma is a modern TypeScript-first ORM that allows you to manage database schemas easily, make queries and mutations with great flexibility, and ensure excellent type safety.
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How to add Passkey Login to Next.js using NextAuth and Hanko
Prisma
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Taming cross-service database transactions in NestJS with AsyncLocalStorage
There have been multiple feature requests to add native support for AsyncLocalStorage to Prisma, but they haven't been met with much enthusiasm from the maintainers. Some people solved it by extending and overriding the client (which is arguably prone to breaking with updates).
What are some alternatives?
json-schema-to-typescript - Compile JSONSchema to TypeScript type declarations
Knex - A query builder for PostgreSQL, MySQL, CockroachDB, SQL Server, SQLite3 and Oracle, designed to be flexible, portable, and fun to use.
openapi-typescript - Generate TypeScript types from OpenAPI 3 specs
Sequelize - Feature-rich ORM for modern Node.js and TypeScript, it supports PostgreSQL (with JSON and JSONB support), MySQL, MariaDB, SQLite, MS SQL Server, Snowflake, Oracle DB (v6), DB2 and DB2 for IBM i.
remult - Full-stack CRUD, simplified, with SSOT TypeScript entities
TypeORM - ORM for TypeScript and JavaScript. Supports MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, MS SQL Server, Oracle, SAP Hana, WebSQL databases. Works in NodeJS, Browser, Ionic, Cordova and Electron platforms.
nestjs-auth - Comprehensive handling of authentication and authorization for NestJS.
Mongoose - MongoDB object modeling designed to work in an asynchronous environment.
MikroORM - TypeScript ORM for Node.js based on Data Mapper, Unit of Work and Identity Map patterns. Supports MongoDB, MySQL, MariaDB, MS SQL Server, PostgreSQL and SQLite/libSQL databases.
graphql - GraphQL (TypeScript) module for Nest framework (node.js) 🍷
lucid - AdonisJS SQL ORM. Supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, MSSQL, Redshift, SQLite and many more