programming-phoenix-liveview
liveviews
programming-phoenix-liveview | liveviews | |
---|---|---|
6 | 19 | |
13 | 423 | |
- | 2.1% | |
10.0 | 6.2 | |
almost 3 years ago | 2 months ago | |
Elixir | ||
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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.
programming-phoenix-liveview
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Elixir as first programming language
Read and watch tutorials: Thinking Elixir - a podcast that explores different aspects of the Elixir programming language: https://thinkingelixir.com/ Learn Elixir - a free interactive tutorial that teaches Elixir from scratch: https://www.learnelixir.tv/ Programming Phoenix LiveView - a book that teaches how to build web applications in Elixir using the Phoenix framework https://pragprog.com/titles/liveview/programming-phoenix-liveview/
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Phoenix 1.7.0 Released: Built-In Tailwind, Verified Routes, LiveView Streams
A good project based book that goes pretty in depth is: https://pragprog.com/titles/liveview/programming-phoenix-liv...
- Projects with best practices
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Phoenix 1.7 is View-less
LiveView is evolving into a great piece of tech, but as others have noted elsewhere in the comments one of the challenging parts with LiveView right now (and to an extent Phoenix) is the outdated books & tutorials.
Bruce Tate and Sophie DeBenedetto have been authoring the book “Programming Phoenix LiveView” (https://pragprog.com/titles/liveview/programming-phoenix-liv...) which has the potential to be a great source for people that want to really dive into LiveView. The challenge though is they have not updated it to support the changes introduced in 0.18.0 which makes it really hard to start using the book when a new Phoenix application “mix phx.new dev_app” looks different than what’s in their book and some of their code breaks with the default installed versions of included plugs.
While I wish the book would receive an update sooner that brings it back to a compatible state (meaning there are no issues following along with the book), the good news is they have committed to having the book be updated when LiveView hits 1.0.
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How to get started with LiveView?
I suggest cloning down an actual LiveView project (maybe this one?) and making changes to it. That will help you get a grip on things more easily than trying to build something from scratch right away.
liveviews
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Why Elixir Is the Best Language for Building a Bootstrapped, B2B SaaS in 2024
If you want to try the liveview approach but not ready to work with Elixir / Erlang / Beam runtime, you can use liveview in 17 popular languages (Java / C# / Javascript / Typescript / PHP / Python, e.t.c.).
https://github.com/liveviews/liveviews
Below are introduction directly quoted from this list:
> This is a list of libraries for creating web applications that handle user interaction with the DOM on the server. These libraries take a different approach from older server-driven browser UIs that simulated a desktop GUI toolkit. They do not lock the developer into working with predefined components; most operate at the level of HTML (DOM) rather than GUI widgets.
> The list strives to be complete rather than awesome. You may see libraries that are not maintained or ready for production.
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Write code for the web - Apple doesn't care about you, Mr. Developer
This approach allows you to handle business logics on the server, and update the screen in browser from the server as well.
[1] https://github.com/liveviews/liveviews
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Htmx Webring
That's a conflation. I'm certain for at least some, the choice is more about using a single language than avoiding JS. I'm sure there are people using htmx who use a JS backend. There are at least 5 LiveView clones for JS for instance: https://github.com/liveviews/liveviews#javascripttypescript
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Is "full-stack web developer" a vanishing career path?
Nuxt, Next, SvelteKit, Phoenix(Elixr), Blazor, and various liveview-likes are popular full stack frameworks. So, although many devs are becoming specialized, there certainly still are full stack developers with demand enough to strongly support several frameworks.
- Phoenix LiveView workalikes for different languages and frameworks
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Dynamic Forms with LiveView Streams
The list is seeking a maintainer. https://github.com/liveviews/liveviews/issues/23
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Phoenix 1.7.0 Released: Built-In Tailwind, Verified Routes, LiveView Streams
> "different" platform with it's own unique patterns and quirks
Everything OP listed was a criticism directed at LiveView, the 'Live App' functionality, not Phoenix, the web framework. Live Apps are not exclusive to Phoenix either, as there are now imitators for every other web framework now, which at least speaks to its broader appeal amongst developers. So the criticism could be leveled towards the far less mature 'Live App' libraries on PHP/Python/JS/C# and so on and on:
https://github.com/liveviews/liveviews
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Grab flask form/wtform data without hitting submit
However there are two ways you can do this server side: 1. Use a tool similar to live view: https://github.com/dbohdan/liveviews
- Phoenix LiveView reimplementations for other languages
- Ask HN: What's is your go to toolset for simple front end development?
What are some alternatives?
unsplit - Resolves conflicts in Mnesia after network splits
python-live-gui
FunkyABX - Audio blind tests
viewi - Unique and efficient front-end framework for PHP
elixir-ls - A frontend-independent IDE "smartness" server for Elixir. Implements the "Language Server Protocol" standard and provides debugger support via the "Debug Adapter Protocol"
Typesense - Open Source alternative to Algolia + Pinecone and an Easier-to-Use alternative to ElasticSearch ⚡ 🔍 ✨ Fast, typo tolerant, in-memory fuzzy Search Engine for building delightful search experiences
elixir_koans - Elixir learning exercises
examples - Flet sample applications
livebook - Automate code & data workflows with interactive Elixir notebooks
pyimgui - Cython-based Python bindings for dear imgui
bandit - Bandit is a pure Elixir HTTP server for Plug & WebSock applications
Plausible Analytics - Simple, open source, lightweight (< 1 KB) and privacy-friendly web analytics alternative to Google Analytics.