orange
yazz
orange | yazz | |
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27 | 12 | |
4,619 | 531 | |
0.9% | - | |
9.6 | 9.9 | |
4 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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orange
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Hierarchical Clustering
I know I've tooted its horn before, but Orange3 is a pretty neat Python-based GUI platform that makes this and a metric buttload of other statistical/ML techniques available to non-programmer types.
Just watch out for null character `x00` in the corpus. That always seems to kill it stone dead.
https://orangedatamining.com/
https://orange3.readthedocs.io/projects/orange-visual-progra...
- Orange Data Mining
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The Graph of Wikipedia [video]
For all you folks who aren't ace programmer types, the Orange3[1] platform gives you a very miniaturized[2] ability to turn out these sorts of visualizations very rapidly. It's not the most stable thing in the world, but the node-based ML workflow designer is worth the price of admission all by itself.
[1] https://orangedatamining.com/
[2] The Wikipedia extension in Text limits each search result to 25 articles, so sucking all of Wikipedia is . . well, Orange text analytics crashes when I look at it sideways with a null character, so let's not think about what would happen.
- Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
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Taxonomy Management?
First is identifying the "similar" things in a corpus. Best way I know to do that, for non-programmer audiences, is the Orange Data Mining tool, which gives you a node-based text mining interface to perform statistical analysis on text. Hierarchical Clustering shows - very rapidly - how similar your "modules" are, which ones are most similar. There's many other techniques (semantic viewer, similarity hash, etc) as well - the right one will depend on how your content is laying about.
- Orange: Open-source machine learning and data visualization
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What exactly is AutoGPT?
Both tools are ripoffs of a data mining framework named Orange 3
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Why don't more people use Altair for python Visualizations instead of Plotly?
You should also check out Orange Data Mining, it allows to create a lot of charts, filter data from a chart to another, build ML models, predictions and a lot more. And you can do it with zero code.
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Advice on Transitioning to Data Science/ML/AI without Coding Experience
You can start with a free GUI based tool Orange. It is a component based data science workflow tool, which you can use to handle 60-75% of the traditional data science tasks from classification, regression, to basic neural networks.
- Has anybody used Orange?
yazz
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Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
Shameless plug. My own one of course :)
https://github.com/yazz/yazz
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In-Browser Code Playgrounds
You can also try one I am building, a cross between Visual Basic and Microsoft Access here:
https://yazz.com/
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The IDEs we had 30 years ago and we lost
i am working on such a thing myself at https://github.com/yazz/yazz. Also there are many other people trying to build something similar
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2023: Focusing on a single product pays off
I keep hacking away on Yazz for over 10 years now.... even if there is zero payoff I keep hacking... and that is what hackers do... we are not doing for the money... https://github.com/yazz/yazz
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“The Economics of Programming Languages” by Evan Czaplicki [video]
I really loved this talk and feel for Evan. As someone who was a VC/Angel investor in the space (I was the initial angel investor for something called LightTable/Eve) back in the day, worked for a couple of years at Red Hat, and am working on my own Open Source Language here: https://github.com/yazz/yazz (so yes, you could say I am a VC trying to build a low code product with my own hands), so I feel I have a valid opinions on this. I think that it is possible to make money in opensource as a little guy, but you need to have a combination of consulting, hosting, and support services. If your product is not able to encapsulate being sold and packaged as something that is possible to demo and sell to customers then you will most likely struggle to make a living from it
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Ask HN: Why did Visual Basic die?
I am actually trying to make an open source successor, but using Javascript instead of Basic, at https://github.com/yazz/yazz and a demo at yazz.com
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Ask HN: Tell us about your project that's not done yet but you want feedback on
I'm still building a low code system with an easy to use component marketplace where you can edit components within the low code tool. Still a work in progress: https://github.com/yazz/yazz
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Show HN: Scrapscript – The Sharable Programming Language
Author of a framework that also stores it's code in IPFS for easy sharing (https://github.com/yazz/yazz). ScrapScript is a really nice concept with how it stores code. I originally got the idea for storing the code as a hash of the contents from Unison, and it looks like the idea is really starting to catch on with more and more languages now. Well done!
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A look at Unison: a revolutionary programming language
I’m working on a low core project that is already using content addressable source code that is stored in IPFS at https://github.com/yazz/yazz so it can be done
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DBOS: A Database-Oriented Operating System
There are already some Dbos type systems out there. I built one which stores program state in SQLite databases and process state and programs are also stored in SQLite. In the oat I believe things like silver stream did the same too. The project I made is open source too: https://github.com/yazz/yazz
What are some alternatives?
glue - Linked Data Visualizations Across Multiple Files
shelby_as_a_service - Production-ready LLM Agents. Just add API keys
Pandas - Flexible and powerful data analysis / manipulation library for Python, providing labeled data structures similar to R data.frame objects, statistical functions, and much more
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
RDKit - The official sources for the RDKit library
datasette - An open source multi-tool for exploring and publishing data
Airflow - Apache Airflow - A platform to programmatically author, schedule, and monitor workflows
Sapper - The next small thing in web development, powered by Svelte
Interactive Parallel Computing with IPython - IPython Parallel: Interactive Parallel Computing in Python
aws-lambda-java-libs - Official mirror for interface definitions and helper classes for Java code running on the AWS Lambda platform.
NumPy - The fundamental package for scientific computing with Python.
headlessui - Completely unstyled, fully accessible UI components, designed to integrate beautifully with Tailwind CSS.