Pry
SailsJS
Pry | SailsJS | |
---|---|---|
36 | 41 | |
6,722 | 22,778 | |
0.3% | 0.0% | |
7.2 | 6.7 | |
11 days ago | 13 days ago | |
Ruby | 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.
Pry
- The File Filesystem
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Ruby 3.3
that's surprising considering `pry`[1] is such an amazing debugger IMO.
[1] https://github.com/pry/pry
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Enhancing development with REPLs - A practical guide
All of my recent tutorials and projects were primarily managed using the default Ruby REPL, irb, and I must say it's been nothing short of amazing. However, what ultimately prompted me to switch to Pry was its offering of better defaults. But what exactly does that mean? Let me demonstrate:
- Free/low cost IDE recommendations please. :)
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Debugging Help
For older versions: Pry Gem
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Anyone else working through Michael Hartl's Learn Enough RoR Series that might be able to help me with a failing unit test?
To do that, I would install `pry` into your rails project and then use it look around right before your test fails.https://github.com/pry/pry
- I made a tool to help cleanly copy & paste code from irb/pry sessions
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shell-maker: Make your own shell in 15 lines of elisp (batteries included)
This means I can be editing a shell script and easily inject arbitrary regions into a shell buffer for immediate testing (point never leaves the window where I am editing, and I can view the shell output in an adjacent window). This is similar to what Robe does with Pry within an inferior Ruby process using comint.
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Building GitHub with Ruby on Rails
https://pry.github.io/ - also a lot of features from Pry have made it into the default IRB these days, but I still use pry. I don't know the equivalent commands in IRB.
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Is parallel threading never going to be a thing?
For debugging, while not multi-threaded, to my knowledge, is the pry gem for debugging. There are a few different flavors, for instance, my favorite is pry-byebug.
SailsJS
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Choosing the best JavaScript framework for your next project
Sails is a realtime JavaScript framework built on top of Express. Sails offers built-in realtime communication support and a flexible routing system.
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Best NodeJS frameworks for seamless backend development
Community stats: Sails GitHub repository has an active community with 22.78k stars and 2k forks. They also have a YouTube channel with a library of useful tutorial videos.
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The Ascent of Node.js: How a runtime changed the Web
Sails.js: Sails.js pitched itself as the MVC framework for Node.js, bringing a Rails-like experience while being database agnostic.
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WebSockets 101
Disclaimer: I didn't know much about Websockets 1 week ago, all the experience I had with Websockets was when I developed a chat application back in 2016 using a JS framework that tried to be a Ruby on Rails implementation called SailsJS, so I decided to research about this technology and consumed multiple resources which I will link in this blog post and each section.
- Learning NodeJS - So far, I don't quite like it so much
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Advice on promoting and pitching Rails
Perhaps Sails.js. They mention RoR. An Angular teacher used it to create a fast API.
- Does node have a Rails-like framework? (that has isn't dead)
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Building GitHub with Ruby on Rails
I was just talking about this topic of whether we really has any Rails-influenced JS frameworks out there in the wild. And I struggled to come up with anything off the top of my head other than Sails.js [1]. RedwoodJS looks interesting, what about it in particular do you find exciting?
[1] https://github.com/balderdashy/sails
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Node JS Microservice Frameworks for Developing Scalable Web Apps.
Sails JS – The MVC framework for Node.js
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College Student -- First steps, help?
First hurdle. ExpressJS isn't a great framework on it's own for building web sites. You need to cobble together some combination of a view engine, templating etc otherwise out of the box you'll end up handcrafting HTML which I don't think is what you want right now. I'm not up on the latest server-side web frameworks and don't think now is the time to get into react + nodejs. So I'll just suggest Sails: https://sailsjs.com/. Follow their intro guides to get yourself a basic website with text entry.
What are some alternatives?
Byebug - Debugging in Ruby 2
Nest - A progressive Node.js framework for building efficient, scalable, and enterprise-grade server-side applications with TypeScript/JavaScript 🚀
Hirb - A mini view framework for console/irb that's easy to use, even while under its influence. Console goodies include a no-wrap table, auto-pager, tree and menu.
Next.js - The React Framework
irbtools - Improvements for Ruby's IRB console 💎︎
AdonisJs Framework - AdonisJS is a TypeScript-first web framework for building web apps and API servers. It comes with support for testing, modern tooling, an ecosystem of official packages, and more.
debug - Debugging functionality for Ruby
feathers - The API and real-time application framework
pry-remote - Connect to Pry remotely
loopback-next - LoopBack makes it easy to build modern API applications that require complex integrations.
Amazing Print - Pretty print your Ruby objects with style -- in full color and with proper indentation
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]