nix-prisma-example
star-history
nix-prisma-example | star-history | |
---|---|---|
1 | 37 | |
27 | 5,843 | |
- | 2.0% | |
0.0 | 8.8 | |
10 months ago | 10 days ago | |
Nix | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
nix-prisma-example
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The Curse of NixOS
For the system, I like the devos template:
https://github.com/divnix/devos
The idea of flakes is how you define inputs, and you define the system (and packages, and shell etc.) in the outputs using the inputs. The inputs are git repos which point to other flakes. You can mix and match these as much as you want (see the devos repo for examples) and when you build the derivation, it generates a lockfile for exact commits in that point in time what were used in the given inputs.
You commit the lockfile and in the other systems where you pull your config from the repo, it uses exactly those commits and installs the same versions as you did in your other systems.
This was quite annoying and hard to do before flakes. Now it's easy.
The problem what people face with building their system as a flake is combining the packages so you can point to `jq` from the unstable nixos and firefox from the stable train. I think this aspect needs better documentation so it wouldn't be so damn hard to learn (believe me, I know). Luckily there are projects like devos that give a nice template for people to play with (with documentation!)
Another use for flakes is to create a development shell for your repo, an example what I did a while ago:
https://github.com/pimeys/nix-prisma-example
Either have `nix-direnv` installed, enter the directory and say `direnv allow`, or just `nix develop` and it will gather, compile and install the correct versions of packages to your shell. Updating the packages? Call `nix flake update` in the directory, commit the lockfile and everybody else gets the new versions to their shell.
star-history
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Show HN: I've built a locally running perplexity clone
That’s a great project you pulled off. From the time I starred it (10-12h ago I think), and upon re-checking this post, you gained 500+ stars lol.
Visualized in a chart with star-history: https://star-history.com/#nilsherzig/LLocalSearch
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What I learned from looking at 900 most popular open source AI tools
You can actively see a fresh "hype curve" in the transformer-debugger repo that was posted a couple days ago (https://github.com/openai/transformer-debugger) (star history https://star-history.com/#openai/transformer-debugger&Date).
Regardless of the repo's stars or how valuable it really is, at the time I saw it posted to HN, it had 1.6k stars/16 hours. What channel are people listening to to star it so quickly. I'm not implying any nefariousness, mind you, I'm only wondering where all the stargazers were referred from so fast and in such volume.
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What I learned in 6 months of working on a CodeGen dev tool GPT Pilot
I’ve been releasing open-source projects for years now, and I’ve always wanted to see how fast my Github repo is growing compared to other successful repositories on https://star-history.com/. The problem is that on Star History, I’m unable to zoom into the graph, so a new repo that has 1,000 stars cannot be compared with a big repo that has 50,000 because you can’t see how the bigger repo does in its beginning. So, I asked GPT Pilot to build this functionality. It scrapes Github repos for stargazers, saves them into the database, plots them on a graph, and enables the graph to be zoomed in and out.
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Htmx is a great front-end library, but its x account is full of memes
i'm a one man shop in montana, competing w/ Google, Vercel & Facebook for dev mindshare
if i did what everyone else does you never would have heard of htmx
https://star-history.com/#bigskysoftware/htmx&Date
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Htmx and Web Components: A Perfect Match
also: https://star-history.com/#bigskysoftware/htmx&facebook/react...
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Show HN: Like-History.ai
Similar to http://star-history.com for GitHub repos, http://like-history.ai is a tool to help generate the like history of projects on HuggingFace.co
More details: https://twitter.com/Tim_Qian/status/1730245069259575485
- Star History: the missing GitHub star history graph of GitHub repos
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Htmx is part of the GitHub Accelerator
yeah, he was the one that really started the madness:
https://star-history.com/#bigskysoftware/htmx&bigskysoftware...
his video posted on july 7th
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Startups are in first batch of GitHub OS Accelerator
Github star history graph of the batch:
https://star-history.com/#trpc/trpc&termux/termux-app&respon...
- Cursor: A code editor built for programming with AI
What are some alternatives?
nixos-beginners-handbook - The missing handbook for NixOS beginners
receiptline - Markdown for receipts. Printable digital receipts. Generate receipt printer commands and images.
impermanence - Modules to help you handle persistent state on systems with ephemeral root storage [maintainer=@talyz]
starred - creating your own Awesome List by GitHub stars!
asdf-nodejs - Node.js plugin for asdf version manager
redux-undo - :recycle: higher order reducer to add undo/redo functionality to redux state containers
aconfmgr - A configuration manager for Arch Linux
timeonsite - Timeonsitetracker.js - Modern & accurate "Time on site" tracking for web and mobile browsers
nixpkgs-config - ~/.config/nixpkgs
robusta - Kubernetes observability and automation, with an awesome Prometheus integration
digga - A flake utility library to craft shell-, home-, and hosts- environments.
DoubleStar - A personalized/enhanced re-creation of the Darkhotel "Double Star" APT exploit chain with a focus on Windows 8.1 and mixed with some of my own techniques