pkgx
malli
pkgx | malli | |
---|---|---|
47 | 33 | |
8,716 | 1,417 | |
0.7% | 0.7% | |
9.0 | 9.3 | |
7 days ago | 6 days ago | |
TypeScript | Clojure | |
Apache License 2.0 | Eclipse Public License 2.0 |
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.
pkgx
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Install Asdf: One Runtime Manager to Rule All Dev Environments
I’m liking pkgx over asdf as it can activate project tooling upon cd’ing into a project folder.
https://pkgx.sh
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Show HN: Flox 1.0 – Open-source dev env as code with Nix
I saw some alternatives being suggested and wanted to do the same (Also, so that I can look back at this item, through my comments :) ). Started using https://pkgx.sh/ lately. I know it has some baggage with tea.xyz and crypto, but it is also easy to get started with.
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Beginners Intro to Trunk Based Development
Secondly, our development environments must not drift, because then code may behave differently and a change could pass on our machine but fail in production. There are many tools for locking down environments, e.g nix, pkgx, asdf, containers, etc., and they all share the common goal of being able to lock down dependencies for an environment accurately and deterministically. And that needs to be enforced in our local workflow so we don't have to rely on CI environments for correctness. All developers must have environments that are effectively identical to what runs in CI (which itself should be representative of the production environment).
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Practical Guide to Trunk Based Development
There are many ways this can be done (e.g nix, pkgx, asdf, containers, etc.), and we won’t get into which specific tools to use, because we'll instead cover the essential essence of preventing environment drift:
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5 Developer CLI Essentials
1. pkgx
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 14 Aug 2023
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How to send a warm welcome email with Resend, Next-Auth and React-Email
Before diving in, it's a good idea to have a package manager handy, like tea. It'll handle your development environment and simplify your life!
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Announcing tea/gui - The Open Store for Open-Source
Direct fast-track link to repo
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Looking to help out on some open source projects
checkout https://github.com/teaxyz/cli and https://github.com/teaxyz/pantry
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Run llama.cpp with tea – without the installation pain!
Install is tea: sh <(curl https://tea.xyz) and
malli
- A History of Clojure (2020) [pdf]
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Critique of Lazy Sequences in Clojure
Clojure's lazy sequences by default are wonderful ergonomically, but it provides many ways to use strict evaluation if you want to. They aren't really a hassle either. I've been doing Clojure for the last few years and have a few grievances, but overall it's the most coherent, well thought out language I've used and I can't recommend it enough.
There is the issue of startup time with the JVM, but you can also do AOT compilation now so that really isn't a problem. Here are some other cool projects to look at if you're interested:
Malli: https://github.com/metosin/malli
Babashka: https://github.com/babashka/babashka
Clerk: https://github.com/nextjournal/clerk
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[ANN] Malli 0.11.0 is out - a data-driven data specification library for Clojure/Script
BREAKING: walking a :schema passes children instead of [id] to the walker function #884
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Generic functions, a newbie question
When you get to larger, more complex validations, I'd recommend checking out Malli or Spec.
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Any resources for "current best practices and learnings?"
for specs, you can try malli - feels pretty well supported and full featured: https://github.com/metosin/malli (i'm not 100% sure how popular it is for others, but I use it on my personal projects)
- Single-file scripts that download their dependencies
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Clojure Turns 15 round table video
Have you tried malli: Data-driven Schemas for Clojure/Script?
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Clojure from a Schemer's perspective
All that being said, I particularly use malli and I don't find anything to complain about. There is a very nice and sound ecosystem being built around it (malli-ts is one of my contributions to it, but still in early development stages). I highly recommend reading its README, very informative stuff.
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Clojure 15th Anniversary: A Retrospective
Any large codebase can be broken up into small isolated components that can be reasoned about independently. This is how you structure Clojure projects if you want them to be maintainable. Clojure inherently encourages doing this by defaulting to immutability. The contract between components is the data being passed to the component and returned by it. Using Malli schemas at the edges of the components is a typical approach to documenting their APIs https://github.com/metosin/malli
I see the fact that people often end up creating large and tightly coupled monolithic codebases in static languages as a negative aspect of static typing. Such codebases are difficult to reason about even if you have guarantees that the types align. Ultimately, you need to understand the relationships in code, and how they relate to business logic. The more coupling an application has the harder it becomes to reason about it as a whole.
Ideally, I think applications should be structured as a bunch of Lego blocks that can be composed together. Each component should encapsulate some functionality, and then the flow of the business logic should bubble up to the top and expressed in how these components are chained together.
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Worrying comment from HN on Building a Startup on Clojure
Uhhh spec has existed for a long time and before that, schema Nowadays we also have the excellent malli. If his codebase is full of functions where the shape of the data isn’t obvious, isn’t documented and isn’t specified in a specific/schema, that’s on him and his bad coding practices and really no different from passing data in other dynamic languages. A class by itself (without additional effort) only gives you field names.
What are some alternatives?
nix - Nix, the purely functional package manager
clojure - The Clojure programming language
litellm - Call all LLM APIs using the OpenAI format. Use Bedrock, Azure, OpenAI, Cohere, Anthropic, Ollama, Sagemaker, HuggingFace, Replicate (100+ LLMs)
schema - Clojure(Script) library for declarative data description and validation
Llama-2-Onnx
babashka - Native, fast starting Clojure interpreter for scripting
macports-base - The MacPorts command-line client
reitit - A fast data-driven routing library for Clojure/Script
symmetric-ds - SymmetricDS is database replication and file synchronization software that is platform independent, web enabled, and database agnostic. It is designed to make bi-directional data replication fast, easy, and resilient. It scales to a large number of nodes and works in near real-time across WAN and LAN networks.
honeysql - Turn Clojure data structures into SQL
white-paper - how will the protocol work?
fulcro - A library for development of single-page full-stack web applications in clj/cljs