pagoda
Wt
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pagoda | Wt | |
---|---|---|
21 | 41 | |
1,284 | 1,631 | |
- | 1.7% | |
5.9 | 8.9 | |
18 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Go | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
pagoda
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Is there a framework out for go that rivals Laravel as far as out of the box features and tools?
Recently, I have stumbled across this one: https://github.com/mikestefanello/pagoda
- Best Web Sever Framework?
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Htmx
I'd like to make a small plug for a really awesome Golang web development starter kit I found recently called pagoda (https://github.com/mikestefanello/pagoda). It wires up HTMX, together with Alpine.js and Bulma CSS, onto a really fantastic collection of Go libraries on the back end.
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Go Framework: No Framework?
Well said. The 'no big framework' thing works for Go because the Go standard library defines a common way for dealing with HTTP. The difficulty, then, is identifying 3rd party packages that play well with the rest of the ecosystem.
You can see the opposite in projects like Echo, Gin, Beego, etc., that eschew the standard library to various degrees and try to build the kitchen sink themselves. Sometimes this works! Echo is very popular, despite having nonstandard handlers and context. An absolute Go newbie is probably going to have an easier time using it than trying to pick out the best collection of libraries themselves.
I would love to see more 'blessed stack' collections that tie together good libraries such as this one: https://github.com/mikestefanello/pagoda
- Go for monolithic websites ?
- Pagoda: Full-stack web development starter kit in Go
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Ghostly is a simple, lightweight, and fast full-stack framework for Golang
The readme doesn't seem to mention or list what libraries this depends on, it has chi and jet at least based on the structs section.
Given this "framework" is predominantly a collection of other people's (usually apache/mit) work, where is the BOM/licence text including all of the dependencies?
And why has the author attempted to licence their likely sub 100 lines of glue code under the GPL?
I don't see the point in using something like this which is basically a prefilled go.mod with some other files with a pretty stock organization.
I've used Pagoda (https://github.com/mikestefanello/pagoda) in the past which makes a show of displaying its nature as a wrapper around a bunch of community libraries, and is documented as such. They also make effort to document the interfaces for each component so you could easily replace them with your own implementations to avoid getting stuck due to the "framework". This is my preferred approach for all of these "starters" now since using pagoda.
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Autostrada: A codebase generator for new Go projects
I recently came across https://github.com/mikestefanello/pagoda - which is also a very good starter kit. Unfortunately it comes with some tools I personally don't like a lot (yet) - like htmlx for templates. I suppose this is a problem of all starters - you can only build one which is ideal for you, but not for others. But anyway it's simpler to remove/replace unnecessary parts than create everything from scratch.
- how to learn Go web development in 2022?
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GO Boilerplate templates
Pagoda looks really nice
Wt
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What C++ library do you wish existed but hasn’t been created yet?
Take a look at Wt Webtoolkit. It can do exactly this (and a lot more) https://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt
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Nui C++ User Interface Library
How does this compare with WebToolkit?
- Has anyone embedded a web-UI into a C++ project?
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Cheerp 3.0: The most advanced C++ compiler for the Web now permissively licensed
How is this much different than wt [1] or compiling qt to emscripten? Sincere question.
- Launch HN: Pynecone (YC W23) – Web Apps in Pure Python
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The pool of talented C++ developers is running dry
Not posting to prove you wrong but simply because related.
> Wt is a web GUI library in modern C++. Quickly develop highly interactive web UIs with widgets, without having to write a single line of JavaScript. Wt handles all request handling and page rendering for you, so you can focus on functionality.
HN submission: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23812791
- Uses of Rust and C++ that only one has?
- Why are all web development frameworks are for high-end languages
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Who is using C++ for web development?
https://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt (has support for HTTP/S)
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Please advise me a c++ web framework.
Wt is a pretty cool framework: https://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt
What are some alternatives?
golang-templates/seed - Go application GitHub repository template.
Crow - Crow is very fast and easy to use C++ micro web framework (inspired by Python Flask)
cookiecutter-golang - A Go project template
TreeFrog Framework - TreeFrog Framework : High-speed C++ MVC Framework for Web Application
service - Starter-kit for writing services in Go using Kubernetes.
CppCMS - CppCMS Framework
golang-standards/project-layout - Standard Go Project Layout
drogon - Drogon: A C++14/17 based HTTP web application framework running on Linux/macOS/Unix/Windows [Moved to: https://github.com/drogonframework/drogon]
go-restful-api - An idiomatic Go REST API starter kit (boilerplate) following the SOLID principles and Clean Architecture
Oat++ - 🌱Light and powerful C++ web framework for highly scalable and resource-efficient web application. It's zero-dependency and easy-portable.
modern-go-application - Modern Go Application example
Cutelyst - A C++ Web Framework built on top of Qt, using the simple approach of Catalyst (Perl) framework.