novel
payload
novel | payload | |
---|---|---|
14 | 160 | |
11,115 | 19,904 | |
- | 6.5% | |
9.5 | 9.9 | |
13 days ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | 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.
novel
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Brand new `Rlim` online markdown writing service
novel editor based on TipTap
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🖊 I am building a pastebin alternative!
The difference is I am gonna let users write notion like documents and then share it, unlike pastebin which only lets us share text. For writing documents, I'm gonna use Novel.sh. It is a WYSIWYG editor which provides interface and features similar to Notion. It also lets us use OpenAI API to integrate AI into it.
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Ask HN: Which open-source editor would you choose to build something like Notion
Probably tiptap.dev, here's a notion-like editor built with it: https://github.com/steven-tey/novel
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Show HN: npm i novel – open-source Notion-style editor
I love the simplicity of it tbh, the homepage with it's builtin demo is just superb.
https://novel.sh/
Write ++ after the npm install or whatever, the homepage is an editable demo of the editor.
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Launch HN: Tiptap (YC S23) – Toolkit for developing collaborative editors
Tiptap is incredible! Built https://novel.sh/ with it and the extensiveness & API is chefs kiss! So proud of you guys and the YC funding is truly well-deserved! Congrats again!
- Novel: Notion-style WYSIWYG editor with AI-powered autocompletion
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How to Write a Great Readme
Great guide. One thing that seems to be missing is something I see in a lot of README's: a list of the core tech stack being used in the repo. Good examples here https://github.com/undb-xyz/undb#-tech-stack and here https://github.com/steven-tey/novel#tech-stack. Did you already consider adding this as part of the guide and decide against it, or was it just not something you thought to add?
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How to make custom chatBot outputs rendered in markdown?
I'm trying to customize https://github.com/steven-tey/novel 's amazing template. but currently output stream comes in plain text. and even it gives markdown or HTML code the text editor doesn't render them accordingly.
- Show HN: I made an open-source Notion-style WYSYWIG editor
payload
- Best way to build a modern back end and admin UI. No black magic
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Headless CMS: Directus vs Payload vs Strapi in 2024
Despite being a relatively newer player, Payload's GitHub repository has accumulated 18.8k stars and 1.1K forks as of April 2024, reflecting its growing community. The project has also secured $5.6 million in funding, positioning it for continued growth and innovation.
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Ask HN: Freelance website builders/maintainers, what's in your 2024 toolkit?
My most recent project launched in January. NextJS 14 client integrated with PayloadCMS (http://payloadcms.com) for the back-end. I love both technologies in theory, but they're both going through a renaissance period and "bleeding edge" doesn't even begin to describe it.
If I'm just building a client app, create-react-app is still my go to.
Before now, I'd been building on WordPress for 10+ years for anything client-administered. Planning on using Payload from here on out.
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Open-Source Headless CMS in 2024
Payload CMS: The Customization Insurgent
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Prismic.io is increasing our price by *1900%* over Christmas
Payload is free, you can self host it without paying a one time fee or a SaaS fee for its use, it even says so at the bottom of the homepage
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Next.js 14: No New APIs & Breaking Changes
James, the co-founder of Payload, a headless CMS with MongoDB support, shared his insights on the drawbacks and limitations of using a headless CMS in the context of web development. He challenged the promises often made about headless CMS, such as separation of concerns and ease of content migration, revealing that these claims often don't align with the reality faced by developers and clients. James is considering integrating Payload directly with Next.js to overcome these limitations and offer a better developer experience, including out-of-the-box features and simpler deployments. Should Payload move to Next.js?
- Ask HN: Why aren't Django Admin style dashboards popular in other frameworks?
- Payload (app framework + CMS in TypeScript) releases 2.0
- Payload 2.0: Postgres, Live Preview, Lexical RTE, and More
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Payload 2.0 released, TypeScript headless CMS and app framework
Hey HN, Dan here from Payload (YC S22), an open-source headless CMS that closes the gap between CMS and traditional app frameworks. We’re excited to announce Payload 2.0!
https://github.com/payloadcms/payload
If you’ve not heard of Payload you’re probably wondering why the world needs another CMS. Payload connects to your database and runs without the vendor lock-in and black box of SaaS based CMS solutions, and it’s far more extensible than off-the-shelf SaaS options. Enterprises in specific have been finding value in this control, and they’re using Payload to power content infrastructure that simply isn’t possible through integrating with SaaS webhooks alone.
Today’s announcement is all about features that strike at two neglected areas in the world of CMS. The first is application framework level control over your database that you’d expect with tools like Ruby on Rails or Laravel and the second area is making content editors effective by seeing their edits in realtime.
Here are the highlights on what we’ve been working on:
*Postgres Support*—in the same week we launched about two years ago,people asked for Postgres support. It brings me pure cathartic joy to finally give this to our community. To be fair, MongoDB has been a perfect solution for our architecture and it’s still recommended. But with a new adapter pattern for databases, you can stand your Payload project up on Postgres and run the same functionality as you can with MongoDB now. The crazy part is that we didn’t compromise on how nesting complex fields works. We could have taken the “easy” road and wrote things to JSON, but we leaned fully into the relational way and built the right tables and native column types for fields all the way throughout.
*Database Migrations*—maintaining a production app while deploying schema changes is something you come to expect from ORMs and backend frameworks, but rarely CMS. Payload 2.0 delivers full, first-party migration support all in TypeScript. We took a lot of care on the developer experience here so that when working with Postgres, thanks to our friends at Drizzle, we generate the migration files in TS that add the tables and fields for you. If you have to manipulate data before or after, you have a clear way forward now.
*Database Transactions*—when a request involves multiple inserts, updates or deletes to the database, you need control to rollback all changes when one part fails. The built-in Payload CRUD operations do this now for you and your custom hooks and other code can too.
*Live Preview*—the ability to quickly draft content and see it in context of a website is a literal game changer. We have taken the best dev experience of any headless CMS and given the editors a reason to demand Payload over the others.
*Lexical Richtext Editor*—our original Slate based editor has seen some great features added, like storing related documents directly in the JSON, uploads and any customizations. Unfortunately Slate leaves a lot to be desired on how to extend it, especially compared to Lexical. In a few short weeks we’ve built up a new editor experience inspired by Medium and Notion. Now type “/” and have embedded relationships, uploads, and custom blocks popping right up to be dropped in. Then drag and drop them to reorder your content. If you still want Slate, we continue to support that too.
We’re not compromising on editor experience. This is how we’re bringing the “head” to the headless CMS.
Building critical applications on top of a CMS may sound like blasphemy but it doesn’t have to be that way.
Thanks for reading! I look forward to hearing what you think.
What are some alternatives?
TipTap - A 3d-printed bipedal robot. A low-cost desktop option for semi-direct drive walking research.
Strapi - 🚀 Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS. It’s 100% JavaScript/TypeScript, fully customizable and developer-first.
BlockNote - A React Rich Text Editor that's block-based (Notion style) and extensible. Built on top of Prosemirror and Tiptap.
Directus - The Modern Data Stack 🐰 — Directus is an instant REST+GraphQL API and intuitive no-code data collaboration app for any SQL database.
ai - Build AI-powered applications with React, Svelte, Vue, and Solid
Nest - A progressive Node.js framework for building efficient, scalable, and enterprise-grade server-side applications with TypeScript/JavaScript 🚀
RVS_PersistentPrefs - A Simple Class For Basic Persistent Storage
bulletproof-react - 🛡️ ⚛️ A simple, scalable, and powerful architecture for building production ready React applications.
undb - 🚀 Private first, unified, self-hosted no code database.
webiny-js - Open-source serverless enterprise CMS. Includes a headless CMS, page builder, form builder, and file manager. Easy to customize and expand. Deploys to AWS.
y-crdt - Rust port of Yjs
Ghost - Independent technology for modern publishing, memberships, subscriptions and newsletters.