Papercups
Quasar Framework
Our great sponsors
Papercups | Quasar Framework | |
---|---|---|
19 | 159 | |
5,602 | 25,168 | |
0.7% | 0.8% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Elixir | JavaScript | |
MIT License | 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.
Papercups
-
Linen.dev – Building a chat app with Elixir and NextJS
The best language for the task at hand, when presented with time constraints, is the one that you already know well. OP said in the article that they authored Papercups [1]. Adopting Elixir for a websocket-push service makes a lot of sense, then. However, why don't you learn Elixir, some OTP, and then reconsider that question? You could be missing out.
-
What Phoenix Elixir Tutorial do you want to see?
https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups - 5.2k stars, uses Phoenix 1.6
-
Complete, Production-Ready Phoenix Reference Applications
Papercups
- Looking for recommendation of OS phoenix app to look at
-
Ask HN: What novel tools are you using to write web sites/apps?
Phoneix - Elixir
We're a live message tool and it is basically what Elixir is built for https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups.
The Elixir community has been great and incredibly friendly. I originally was worried about the size of the community but that hasn't been an issue the community has been super helpful. I also think the annual stackoverflow usage surveys are very misleading because most of the community's questions get asked in ElixirForum and not on Stackoverflow.
Phoneix is the web framework of Elixir which is very similar to Rails but minus a lot of the magic has been very helpful for our productivity as well.
If I had to built another service that is websocket heavy I would definitely use Elixir. Even if it was a standard crud app I would still most likely choose Elixir.
-
Show HN: Papercups – open-source alternative to Intercom
Interestingly, the features page goes straight to github. With a list of features... followed by screenshots. So I found it!
Yeah I agree, we're planning on updating the landing page to include a lot more screenshots/videos/demos :)
In the meantime, here are some screenshots from our GitHub wiki: https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups/wiki/Features
And our demo page: https://app.papercups.io/demo
-
Looking for an Open Source project to join part time
I maintain the Papercups project, which is an open source customer messaging tool: https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups
-
Show HN: Rysolv – Fix open source issues, get paid
Thanks for building this! Love this version I think this would work great for making and fixing bugs. I think automated tests and chores as a category would actually be great to add to this.
For our open source project (https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups). We participated in hacktoberfest recently and one problem we ran into is people submitting low quality PRs. Which ends up taking up way more time to review than to merge.
I would love to be able to filter by users who have merged multiple issues or some sort of quality bar for our bounties. Obviously since you are just starting out your users won't have too many issues merged. You might be able to work around this by finding the number of Github issues an author have merged previously to any projects that is greater than x number of stars. This way you might be able to bootstrap some credibility of the authors. Then maybe a contributor can gate on only allowing some reputable contributors.
One inspiration I would recommend is taking a look at how 99designs has different tiers of designers you can have a bounty for your design. If you could build 99design for open project that would be amazing. Best of Luck!
-
Ask HN: What Are You Working On?
An open source live chat tool for customer support https://github.com/papercups-io/papercups
We launched on August and have been steadily getting some traction and building a little community in our Slack channel
Quasar Framework
-
Show HN: Quasar Prime: Vue.js Admin Template
What does this bring that the Quasar framework doesn’t already? This sure looks like an ad for a barely preconfigured quasar template—but it’s impossible to tell.
-
Ask HN: What framework/tools to use to build front end in 2023?
I'm for Vue/Nuxt. While reading React code is fine, I found it easy to shoot myself in the foot (causing circular effects or getting no reactivity) in a way Vue didn't. Vue feels more explicit. I like React's TSX for embedding HTML, but Vue's splitting of model and view appeals to me. I'm torn on that one.
Vue's ecosystem isn't as big, but it's an established framework. Both React and Vue feel easier to work with than Angular. RxJS is really cool, but also very comprehensive, making it difficult to keep the entire API in mind. At least for me, who only use it casually (used to use it more while at Google.) And on top of that, I have to know the Angular API. Angular used to be great for Material Design, but I nowadays there are MD packages for all systems.
Nuxt is for Vue what Next is for React: SSR and SSG. It adds auto-imports, which is nice. At this point, I see no reason to use Vue alone, since there's always something that can be pre-rendered. Perhaps the frontpage, or help pages. Since Vue itself provides entrypoints for SSR, Nuxt is more of a file-structure based router that just simplifies things. The documentation is a bit sparse on e.g. the difference between a plugin and a module, and I usually resort to navigating their source to understand things. That might not be everyone's cup of tea.
If what you're writing is a web app, there is also Quasar, built on top of Vue. Similar to Nuxt in that it ties in directory structure, build system and MVC framework. It is also a Material Design UI widget library. Their selling point is that you can build mobile apps, and web apps with the same library. I.e. like React Native. I felt it strays too far away from the core simplicity of Vue, unlike Nuxt, but it's no doubt a very capable framework.
Finally, I'm currently using PrimeVue as the UI widget/theming library on top of Vue. It's okay. :\ Switched to it when the Vue Bootstrap project decided to to support Vue 3 (or whatever the situation was.) I haven't come across anything that's actively broken or missing. The companion library PrimeFlex provides layout CSS. Annoyingly, they've decided to close GitHub FRs, and some (far from all) bugs, and just keep track of them internally. Makes it more dificult to communicate, but I don't know their reasoning behind it (they didn't respond when I asked.)
-
10 UI Libraries You Should Explore for Your Next Vue.js Project
3. Quasar Quasar is a versatile UI framework that allows you to build responsive websites, mobile apps, and desktop applications using a single codebase. It offers a wide range of components and utilities. Explore the Quasar website for more information.
-
An Overview of 25+ UI Component Libraries in 2023
Quasar: It does not consider itself a library, but more of a framework. That, in my eyes is a bit confusing as it is based on Vue, but the idea is that you can use it to create websites and apps, meaning it uses a CLI to generate different outputs for web, mobile, desktop, SPA (Single Page Apps), SSR (Server Side Rendering), and more.
- Nuxt UI is one of the best UI libraries out there
-
What framework/library/language has the best docs you've ever seen?
Quasar - https://quasar.dev/ - makes getting into an opinionated Vue setup painless
-
What tools do you use to convert Vue.js SPA to mobile apps?
Check out https://quasar.dev/ :)
-
[Python] NiceGUI: Lassen Sie jeden Browser das Frontend für Ihren Python-Code sein
NiceGUI runs on top of FastAPI which allows you to add authentication, routing, OpenAPI specs, and other backend functionality to your projects. The frontend is implemented using Vue, Quasar, and Tailwind, but you don’t need to be familiar with these technologies to create beautiful user interfaces. NiceGUI prioritizes simplicity and user-friendliness, while still offering the option for advanced customization through its extensibility.
- Welche Programmiersprache(n) für plattformübergreifende App?
-
Mobile App Development for both iOS and Andriod
Just use Quasar
What are some alternatives?
vuetify - 🐉 Vue Component Framework
primevue - Next Generation Vue UI Component Library
Nuxt.js - Nuxt is an intuitive and extendable way to create type-safe, performant and production-grade full-stack web apps and websites with Vue 3. [Moved to: https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt]
Flutter - Flutter makes it easy and fast to build beautiful apps for mobile and beyond
react-native - A framework for building native applications using React
Ionic Framework - A powerful cross-platform UI toolkit for building native-quality iOS, Android, and Progressive Web Apps with HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
element-plus - 🎉 A Vue.js 3 UI Library made by Element team
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
SvelteKit - web development, streamlined
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
naive-ui - A Vue 3 Component Library. Fairly Complete. Theme Customizable. Uses TypeScript. Fast.
jsoneditor - A web-based tool to view, edit, format, and validate JSON