oxide
cheat
oxide | cheat | |
---|---|---|
9 | 32 | |
276 | 11,963 | |
- | 1.0% | |
0.0 | 5.2 | |
over 1 year ago | 15 days ago | |
Rust | Go | |
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.
oxide
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SQLite Functions for Working with JSON
Sorry about that, it's just a shortcut for https://github.com/fcoury/oxide.
- Ask HN: What are your “scratch own itch” projects?
- Looking for paid advanced Rust tutoring
- OxideDB - Teach your PostgreSQL database how to speak MongoDB Wire Protocol.
- Show HN: OxideDB – Teach PostgreSQL Database How to Speak MongoDB Wire Protocol
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Ask HN: What Are You Working On? (August 2022)
Mostly on MongoDB to PostgreSQL translation server: http://oxidedb.com or https://demo.oxidedb.com.
I have been wanting to dive deep into a Rust project and the challenge of implementing the MongoDB protocol and then translating it into some sort of SQL counterpart was the first thing that really clicked and got me excited enough to get me working on it nonstop for 3 weeks now.
Some backstory:
I have created a product that relies on MongoDB for a document store but doesn’t really need any of the distributed features to really justify having a hosted MongoDB or DocumentDB instance. Now that we’re trying to turn this into a product, we’re seeing that some companies have a little bit of resistance around managing yet another database. Most of our clients already have and manage PostgreSQL in one form or another. I knew that PostgreSQL already offered first class JSON support, but I didn’t want to rewrite the application data layer from scratch if I could avoid it. That’s when I started researching if there was a “proxy” that would translate the MongoDB protocol - that I was completely ignorant about - into PostgreSQL. To my surprise there was nothing ready for production use but I found MangoDB that later on became FerretDB. I delved into the code and was in love with the idea. The team around is really nice, but I found that they had greater ambitions - they basically wanted to offer multiple backends, namely Tigris, on top of PostgreSQL.
On the other hand, I have been waiting to find an excuse to delve deeply into the rust ecosystem but never really found something I was passionate about until I had the idea of challenging myself to see if I could learn about the protocol that MongoDB uses by relying on their public documentation and the hints I found on FerretDB.
Another thing I added to my toolbelt while developing this was about creating parsers. In order to transform MongoDB JSON to SQL queries, I ported an existing library from the MongoDB team from PEG.js to pest.rs!
It’s in very early stages, and it’s work from someone that is not yet super comfortable with the stack so keep in mind this is the beginning of a journey for me that I embarked out of pure joy on getting a tiny bit better on rust and making things click internally.
- OxideDB – Teach PostgreSQL Database How to Speak MongoDB Wire Protocol
cheat
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Should you add screenshots to documentation?
Looks like bro pages is archived and they recommend https://github.com/tldr-pages/tldr or https://github.com/cheat/cheat
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Was looking at the GitHub page for eg and found this gem
I tried eg and tldr, but I preferred cheat. Why, and why not. Cheat not only have nice examples, but let you improve them or create yours. I use the cli, not the curl.
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This sub turned me onto Raycast, but... No syncing of settings / keyboard shortcuts between machines??
Hey, the app I recommend shows you all the commands you need per app not just for macOS! Support for programming languages? Download this. For git, docker and neovim download this one.
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Aid needed
cheat is also a useful one. Shows you a cheat sheet for the command you search.
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how to enable cheat autocompletion in zsh
are you sure autocompletion isn't enabled for cheat? You're maybe hitting this bug upstream.
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What is a good way to learn bash scripting
Find something to automate or make easier and write a script for it. If you get stuck on a detail, read the man pages of the command you're using (man pages confuse you? try tldr or cheat). Then google it, there's a shitton of SO Q&A on bash. If you can't find it, find a bash channel on irc or discord and ask (they'll expect you've read the FAQ though). Keep notes. I wrote a script to read and edit notes for bash, in bash, and it taught me new things!
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Do you ever use cheat sheets at work?
Definitely do. I created my own doc site using docusaurus where i stored a lot of info i use every once in a while. Things i use more often are available as aliases in the shell or zsh functions. There's also the handy dandy cli https://github.com/cheat/cheat that contains a lot of cheat sheets for common binaries.
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Why can't I hold all these syntaxes?
cheat and howdoi
- Ask HN: Terminal Cheatsheets
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My thoughts after a week of ChatGPT usage
As a dev - It's a good (very good, in fact) alternative for man, tldr, cheat and zeal (and probably tens of other projects - sorry for not mentioning you) with a very pleasant interface - which was the point I think ;)
What are some alternatives?
rmkit - | remarkable app framework | https://rmkit.dev
tldr - 📚 Collaborative cheatsheets for console commands
skeleton - A fully featured UI toolkit for Svelte + Tailwind. [Moved to: https://github.com/skeletonlabs/skeleton]
cheat.sh - the only cheat sheet you need
PicoPico - Pico-8 Player
tealdeer - A very fast implementation of tldr in Rust.
pyroscope-rs - Pyroscope Profiler for Rust. Profile your Rust applications.
tldr - Haskell tldr client
reframe - LeapTable 🦘- The fastest way to build, deploy, and manage LLM-powered agents on tabular data (dataframes, SQL tables and Spreadsheets). [Moved to: https://github.com/peterwnjenga/leaptable]
pywal - 🎨 Generate and change color-schemes on the fly.
txtai - 💡 All-in-one open-source embeddings database for semantic search, LLM orchestration and language model workflows
howdoi - instant coding answers via the command line