purerl
elixir-ls
purerl | elixir-ls | |
---|---|---|
6 | 13 | |
315 | 1,386 | |
1.6% | 1.2% | |
5.9 | 9.6 | |
4 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Haskell | Elixir | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache 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.
purerl
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Erlang: The coding language that finance forgot
I will put in a good word for PureScript for the beam with `purerl`. It's my go-to for writing BEAM code nowadays. Notably PureScript tooling including LSP, package management, etc., just works, so you are able to just get to work in internalizing the way OTP and other Erlangy things are expressed in a statically typed, pure language.
https://github.com/purerl/purerl & https://purerl-cookbook.readthedocs.io/ for more information. Join the PureScript discord and the #purerl channel if you want help.
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purerl - Integrating PureScript into Elixir projects
purerl is a compiler for turning PureScript code into Erlang code, so that you're able to write BEAM (the Erlang virtual machine) applications using it.
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Phoenix 1.7 is View-less
You've been able to write PureScript that compiles to Erlang and has perfect interop for years, via `purerl`[0]. Using it with Elixir is as simple as adding `purerlex` as a compiler and having your PureScript code automatically compile when `mix` compiles things, and off you go.
In terms of the typing itself, it's exactly what you get in all of PureScript, strict static typing with no `any` or the like. Using `Pinto`, the de facto OTP layer in PureScript your processes are typed, i.e. their `info` messages & state are typed, which means that they are all much more like strongly typed state machines than anything else.
You can see an example of a basic `gen_server` here:
https://pastebin.com/UTEfz7Wg
The differences aren't very big in terms of what you'd expect to be doing. One small thing to note is that the `GenServer.call` expects a closure to be passed instead of having the split between `gen_server:call` & `handle_call`, removing the need for synchronizing two places for your messages being sent and handled.
0 - https://github.com/purerl/purerl
- Angular without SSR is faster than Next.js with SSR. I have the data
- Beam VM Wisdoms
- V0.14 of Gleam, a type safe language for the Erlang VM, has been released
elixir-ls
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Vue 3.3.6 Faster Thanks to WeakMaps
No. Not even close. But it's getting better.
There are currently two worth mentioning:
ElixirLSP: https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls
Elixir tools: https://www.elixir-tools.dev/
ElixirLSP is the older project, and has been around for a while. It does a lot, but has had sporadic issues over the years. Things like the debugger are a dog to get working, and the server itself will occasionally run into issues where it just doesn't want to work. It's always sort of focused on a subset of language server features, so don't expect much in the way of inline corrections. But it's got the essentials, formatting, basic linting, type hinting, on demand documentation, and primitive reference navigation
Elixir tools is a new up and comer, written by Mitchell Hanberg. It's aiming to be a more complete lsp, and has plugins in its "ecosystem" for most editors. Features have been arriving rapidly, starting with things like inline corrections and far more reliable linting, and recently growing autocomplete. One of the main selling points is the elixir-tools backend is a self contained binary, so it can mostly work independent of system Elixir/Erlang version, which was a frequent tripping point for ElixirLSP
Personally I use both at the same time, but plan to move to tools only when it's got all the features I need
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Lightweight dev tools.
I decided I can live without elixir-ls when couching in return for having a usable editor. When the plugin ecosystem and documentation matures I can see myself switching to using Lapce for my primary editor.
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GNU Debugger "GDB" Adds Support For Microsoft's Debug Adapter Protocol
Hi! I've compiled gdb from master and installed it. When I run gdb -i dap, I get JSON-RPC, so it looks like it's working, but I'm lost as to where to go from here. Does your change enable me to use a tool like https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls with GDB now, right? How might I use them together? What would be required to then have GDB debugging over DAP from inside Emacs?
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Phoenix 1.7 is View-less
Elixir-ls provides Language Server Protocol support as well as VS Code Debug Protocol support which gives extra powers to VS Code, NeoVim, Emacs, and the like
https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls
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[Elixir] Apprentice, a new alchemist.el fork
BUT, with the news that in the next Emacs version eglot (lsp client) is going to be in the core, I decide to modify alchemist in a different way, enhancing other capabilities and letting eglot do what he best does (which is the functionality of elixir-ls).
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Is ElixirLS still in the VSCode market place?
I think it's here: https://github.com/elixir-lsp/elixir-ls
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Using a Custom Language Server in Fleet?
elixir-ls powers the VSCode experience, and while it works decently, I've never really clicked with VSCode. In general, for other languages, I tend to use Jetbrain's Products. I would love to give fleet a whirl, and I know in the background it can use the Language Server Protocol to support many of the languages it currently ships with.
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Getting Started Using Nix Flakes As An Elixir Development Environment
Now it doesn't mean that immediately reading this starter guide, you will have everything under the sun set up with Nix Flakes for your development need. But at least, you won't have to worry about setting up asdf, your weird hacks you need for your machine and the other tiny little things to get elixir started with elixir-ls.
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Extreme lag on INSERT_MODE when coding in Elixir with lspconfig
I have a minimal lspconfig with coq_nvim with elixirls and tsserver. The problem is that whenever i code on elixir everything becomes slow.
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This new VS Code Update
Well I know one extension that runs your code, elixir-ls. I believe it scans your code and runs dialyzer, a static analysis tool, which runs your code and generates types based on it.
What are some alternatives?
hamler - Haskell-style functional programming language running on Erlang VM.
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
Gradualizer - A Gradual type system for Erlang
changelog.com - Changelog is news and podcast for developers. This is our open source platform.
lumen - An alternative BEAM implementation, designed for WebAssembly
flake-utils - Pure Nix flake utility functions [maintainer=@zimbatm]
gleam - ⭐️ A friendly language for building type-safe, scalable systems!
ecto - A toolkit for data mapping and language integrated query.
erllambda - AWS Lambda in Erlang
ardour - Mirror of Ardour Source Code
js-framework-benchmark - A comparison of the performance of a few popular javascript frameworks
alchemist.el - Elixir Tooling Integration Into Emacs