Polyglot for Maven
Lanterna
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Polyglot for Maven | Lanterna | |
---|---|---|
12 | 19 | |
865 | 2,192 | |
0.6% | - | |
6.7 | 7.2 | |
about 1 month ago | about 1 month ago | |
Java | Java | |
Eclipse Public License 1.0 | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
Polyglot for Maven
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Was Rust Worth It?
And you don't even need to use XML with Polyglot Maven
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Why did Spring Initializr Change the Default to Gradle?
If you prefer the shorter alternative, you might want to use the Polyglot XML extension https://github.com/takari/polyglot-maven/tree/master/polyglot-xml
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Gradle 8.0
Here you go: https://github.com/takari/polyglot-maven
- Does something like Javas Jhipster exist for Python?
- Maven Polyglot
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Maven is turning 20 today 🥳 To many more years of stable Java builds 🍻
Fun fact, POM files can be in formats other than XML (although I have no idea if IJ would tolerate such shenanigans): https://github.com/takari/polyglot-maven/blob/polyglot-0.4.8/polyglot-yaml/src/test/resources/snakeyaml/pom.yaml
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From Maven 3 to Maven 5
There is a certain argument to be made for user ergonomy. Many developers are drawn to Gradle and friends, or to work with polyglot Maven, because they support a more concise syntax. This is not necessarily a contradiction with Maven's Goals!
- Why doesn't everyone use gradle?
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The Maven Wrapper has now been officially released from the Apache Maven Project
I wished they‘d finally embrace polyglot maven https://github.com/takari/polyglot-maven. pom.yaml rule the world.
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Gradle 7.0 Released
It seems merely adding a file to the .mvn directory will do as you wish: https://github.com/takari/polyglot-maven#usage
I have avoided that road because it's one more thing that is a snowflake in the very area where I don't want to blazing trails. But I have personally tried their approach before and can confirm it does work as advertised. I can't recall if IJ lost its mind over pulling a stunt like that, but arguably if it did, then filing a YouTrack is an appropriate next step
Lanterna
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Textual Web: TUIs for the Web
I wrote a TUI before for work, entirely of my own volition and for my own near-exclusive consumption (it was theoretically for anyone, but I'm the only person who would've had a reason to look at it - we were a fairly silo'd dev shop).
This is what made me pick TUI over a web UI:
* no web stack, period. no client/server. no js or html. this simplified the problem dramatically. also, no additional services to babysit.
* no browser - no certificates, security, auth, etc. It's just unix permissions and ssh.
* there's something comforting about the constraints of just ASCII/ANSI and curses. No bikeshedding over border widths or radii when it's just you picking among a few characters for the shape. just having less decisions to make speeds things up and helps you focus on what you actually want the UI to be able to do.
Obviously if your app is just calling APIs anyway, that might be negate some of these bullets about no additional services to babysit etc. In this case, it was running an internal infra app that directly connected to a pg db.
And what made me pick it over just having a CLI:
* discoverability - it was a complicated app and while it was all technically exposed via cli flags, having a GUI made it a lot easier to figure out what the right incantation is.
* richer communication medium that's back-and-forth instead of unidirectional. The TUI is able to fetch a list of e.g. valid IDs and let you pick them with a check-list, instead of you having to go query the db yourself and type them in.
I consider it one of my greatest victories that my boss was able to use the TUI to recover from an incident without needing to page me while I was on holiday, and he said he barely had to read the docs and felt confident he was getting it right the first time. "I did it while sipping my coffee."
I used https://github.com/mabe02/lanterna - would recommend. They even have a Swing-based emulation mode for easy development iteration running it from intelliJ.
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Textual: Rapid Application Development Framework for Python
This looks really cool.
In the past I used lanterna (https://github.com/mabe02/lanterna/tree/master) to develop a text UI for a critical process at the trading firm I worked at. It was essentially a process that would take updated market data and handle things that changed between the last trading session and today - like symbol renames (PCLN to BKNG), changes to market cap that make it change what "category" it fell into (they were based on market cap and volatility measures etc). Things of that nature, that the realtime system didn't handle but happened too often or were too hairy for us to just handle manually.
The system had a desktop UI component that was oriented towards use by our trading staff. We didn't really have notion of a "server UI" and the server was headless.
Nobody at our firm was a frontend developer, just backend, systems and data programmers who occasionally dabbled in frontend. So web UIs were very simplistic or highly specific to their use-case, we had no shared tooling.
In 2023 with things like create-react-app and whatever next.js does, I probably would've opted for one of those. I could've made another desktop app but I wanted to be able to easily get to this from a shitty ssh connection over tethered 4g when I was on-call. So X11 forwarding and RDP were out. So i looked around for a TUI-builder in the project's language, Java.
What i really liked about Lanterna was that it had a Swing-based implementation which meant I could easily run it from IntelliJ, and that would let me iterate rapidly, and then in production I could run it in a terminal via SSH directly on the machine the server was on (which had certain advantages).
I'll keep an eye on this to see if I can think of anything neat to build on it. I still generally don't like web apps because they feel like they take a lot of effort to get something compared to a functionally-equivalent product built in something non-browser-based like a TUI or desktop GUI.
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What options are there for making GUIs and other visual programs using java?
Just to differ what others already mentioned: Lanterna. Pretty retro GUIs just for fun.
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Library like Python Rich
Lanterna https://github.com/mabe02/lanterna Has examples for most of the things you're looking for (see links in https://github.com/mabe02/lanterna/blob/master/docs/contents.md)
- Terminal Design Through Java.
- Nimwave – build TUIs for the terminal, web, and desktop
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How to modify lines in console (Java 8)
You can use a library such as https://github.com/mabe02/lanterna to do fancy console printing. You could even do full console UIs, but just printing lines and moving the cursor and so on is also possible I think.
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Aquifer: GUI generator for command line apps
There is lanterna for that.
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Textual in Clojure?
You can use https://github.com/mabe02/lanterna
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What are some features necessary in an ASCII-graphics library?
Is this just a personal excercise? Because https://github.com/mabe02/lanterna is pretty much what you're talking about and pretty good.
What are some alternatives?
Joda-Money - Java library to represent monetary amounts.
CQEngine - Ultra-fast SQL-like queries on Java collections
Maven Wrapper - The easiest way to integrate Maven into your project!
Modern Java - A Guide to Java 8 - Modern Java - A Guide to Java 8
Membrane Service Proxy - API gateway for REST, OpenAPI, GraphQL and SOAP written in Java.
jcurses - Java Curses implementation
J2ObjC - A Java to iOS Objective-C translation tool and runtime.
LightAdmin - [PoC] Pluggable CRUD UI library for Java web applications
Codename One - Cross-platform framework for building truly native mobile apps with Java or Kotlin. Write Once Run Anywhere support for iOS, Android, Desktop & Web.
Jimfs - An in-memory file system for Java 7+
sitemapgen4j - SitemapGen4j is a library to generate XML sitemaps in Java.
JBake - Java based open source static site/blog generator for developers & designers.