qt.go
trayscale
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qt.go | trayscale | |
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1 | 12 | |
545 | 333 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 6.6 | |
about 3 years ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
qt.go
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moving to GUI from TUI
WebUI is your best choice if you have HTML/CSS/JS skills, otherwise use Qt.Go or any other Qt-based library.
trayscale
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Does tailscale have a linux application with a GUI?
There's something like this. I try but my internet stop working when I use that. https://github.com/DeedleFake/trayscale
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As a Go programmer, what design pattern, programming techniques have you actually used, implemented regularly in your workplace which made your life much easier?
I've actually just recently used this with both pointer and value reveivers in one of my own projects.
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Suggestions for out-of-date dependencies in the GitHub Actions runners?
I've got a project that depends on Libadwaita 1.2. The ubuntu-latest runner is 22.04 which only has Libadwaita 1.1 available in its repos, causing all of my CI runs to fail. I don't use Ubuntu personally so maybe this is something I can fix via APT and I just don't know how, but what's the recommended procedure for handling a situation where the runner's version of a dependency of a project is out-of-date? I couldn't seem to find anything in the official documentation or anywhere else via Google.
- Tailscale Plugin for KDE?
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Go taking too much time building with imports
Source: I deal with this myself quite a bit with the Gtk4 bindings I use for one of my projects.
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How do I setup my Go environment?
Here's an actual module that I work on as an example.
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moving to GUI from TUI
I've tried a number of them over the years but my latest attempt at a GUI project uses Gtk4.
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Connect to home vpn
#1: Introducing Tailscale SSH | 13 comments #2: Tailscale devs sometimes contribute to Headscale #3: I got annoyed at the lack of a Linux GUI, so I built one myself. It's not finished by any means, but it can at least list peers and their IPs. | 1 comment
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What is the coolest Go open source projects you have seen?
Yep. I was using manual WireGuard tunnels for that, but everytime I added a machine I had to configurations from both sides with manual key swaps, plus the fact that it I wanted direct connections between each machine the configuration would literally have increased exponentially. Tailscale handles all of that for me. Literally. It's primarily an automatic WireGuard tunnel coordinator. I just have to install it and log in and voila, it just works. I like it so much that I've actually got a project that wraps a GUI around Tailscale for Linux.
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Go Developer Survey 2022 Q2 Results - The Go Programming Language
This is very likely. I've been writing a GUI wrapper for the Linux Tailscale client, and part of what I interact with from their libraries uses generics. In particular, they've got a views package that implements immutable containers.
What are some alternatives?
webui - Use any web browser as GUI, with your preferred language in the backend and HTML5 in the frontend, all in a lightweight portable lib.
tts-deckconverter - Generate card decks for Tabletop Simulator.
nuxui - NuxUI is Golang GUI SDK for IOS, Android, macOS, Windows, Linux
image-viewer - A simple image viewer with some editing functionality.
TBitTorrent - BitTorrent client with terminal UI written in Go
gotk4-adwaita - Autogenerated Adwaita bindings for Go
giu - Cross platform rapid GUI framework for golang based on Dear ImGui.
fyne-cross - Cross compiler tool for Fyne apps
headscale - An open source, self-hosted implementation of the Tailscale control server
Hugo - The world’s fastest framework for building websites.
Echo - High performance, minimalist Go web framework