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rbs | CocoaPods | |
---|---|---|
20 | 54 | |
1,875 | 14,422 | |
1.2% | 0.3% | |
9.7 | 8.3 | |
2 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
rbs
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A decent VS Code and Ruby on Rails setup
I saw no mention of RBS+Steep, the latter providing a LSP. I use it a lot and very much like it, although it's still young and needs love, but it's making good, steady progress! I've been very pleasantly surprised by some of the crazy things Steep can catch, completely statically!
You appear to be working on projects with Sorbet (which I tried to like but found it fell short in practice, notably outside of the app use case i.e it's mostly useless for gems) so it may be a tall order to try on those. Maybe you can give RBS+Steep a shot on some small project?
RBS: https://github.com/ruby/rbs
RBS collection (for those gems that don't ship RBS signatures in `sig`, integrates with bundler): https://github.com/ruby/gem_rbs_collection
Steep: https://github.com/soutaro/steep
VS Code: https://github.com/soutaro/steep-vscode
Sublime Text: https://github.com/sublimelsp/LSP
Vim (I'm working on it): https://github.com/dense-analysis/ale/pull/4671
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What it was like working for Gitlab
I don't know what you mean by "Static typing is not webscale".
> https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39159481
Bugs exist in all code written in all programming languages and you will find bugs in programs written in statically typed languages too as you know. Programming languages are rarely chosen for the absense of bugs alone though or we'd all be using SPARK Ada or something.
> spitting out code as fast as your keyboard works, or is is not having features do weirdo things
This is a straw man. No-one has suggested that "spitting out code as fast as your keyboard works" is what Rails allows you to do, or that Ruby code results in features that "do weirdo things".
In reality engineer productivity is important and Rails enables it in a web environment.
> I have more than once tried to contribute fixes to GitLab's codebase, and every time I open the thing in RubyMine it hurpdurps having no earthly idea where symbols come from or what completions are legal in any given context.
Yes, I prefer writing statically typed languages and I would /greatly/ prefer Ruby to be statically typed for a number of reasons, but it will likely never be so in a way I consider to be usable (see https://github.com/ruby/rbs). Not being able to definitively tell what a method returns or where one is defined is a total PITA, but it's one of the array of up and downsides to Ruby, with each language having a different set.
> I trust JetBrains analysis deeply, so if they can't deduce what's going on, then it must take an impressive amount of glucose to memorize every single surface area one needs to implement a feature.
You don't need to know how all of Rails works to write a Rails app, as I'm sure you know, so this seems like another mis-representation of the truth, just as you don't need to know how the compiler or CPUs work to do a lot of (most?) programming.
> That or, hear me out, maybe "it works on my machine" is a close to correct as the language is going to get without explicit type hints as a pseudo static typing
You seem to be suggesting that Ruby on Rails applications behave unpredictably on a machine to machine basis but that's not really how Ruby works in practice, or matching on my experience.
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InfoQ Interview: Rich Kilmer on the Power of Ruby
Are you familiar with rbs (https://github.com/ruby/rbs)? If so, what issues do you see with using that over TypeScript?
- Building GitHub with Ruby on Rails
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Ruby 3.2’s YJIT is Production-Ready
Ruby does have optional type annotations, if you want them:
https://github.com/ruby/rbs
- Crystal for Rubyists
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Is anyone using RBS?
Is anyone using RBS? Or, is it still half-baked? I haven't seen any recent posts about it this year. Though, I see the repo has some recent activity.
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RBS introduced manifest.yaml
Currently rbs collection resolves stdlib dependencies, but rbs -r LIB option doesn't resolve them unfortunately. For instance, logger depends on monitor, but rbs -r logger doesn't load monitor.
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Catching up on things
Here is link number 1 - Previous text "RBS"
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The future of rbs collection
Partial clone reduces the impact, but it just procrastinates the problems.
CocoaPods
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Show HN: Privacy Manifest CLI tool for iOS apps
Very nice! love that it is all in swift, will give a closer look later but looks beautiful.
Recently went through this with a react native app with a ton of old dependencies and it was fairly painful. Wrote a couple not quite as beautiful scripts to help so I wish I had this before.
Tangential rant: I am all for privacy but find it really obnoxious that the most profitable company in the world is giving open source contributors to their ecosystem work on a deadline. Case in point: https://github.com/CocoaPods/CocoaPods/issues/10325
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How To Handle VoIP Push Notifications using iOS Callkit
Cocoapods to install the Vonage Client SDK for iOS.
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Unable to find a specification for `GoogleUtilities-Environment-Logger-NSData+zlib`
You will have better luck finding / getting help here https://github.com/CocoaPods/CocoaPods/issues create a new issue and hopefully, someone there will be able to assist you.
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Hey guys, just landed a gig as a DevOps release engineer! I'm super stoked but also pretty nervous. Any seasoned vets out there have any tips or advice for a newbie like me? Would love to hear your thoughts!
Knowing you way through CocoaPods was also a useful skill couple of years ago - https://cocoapods.org/
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Just got a new M2 Pro after my 2016 became outdated. What are your first steps to setting up a new computer?
- Struggle to install Cocoapods
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Xcode 14.3 is completely unacceptable
I have no love for Xcode, but Cocoapods has a pretty serious issue with Xcode 14.3 causing archives to fail: https://github.com/CocoaPods/CocoaPods/issues/11861
- flutter 3.7.10, MacOS 13.3.1, IOS 16.4.1
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Xcode Update Error Chaos: Tips for a Newbie
For anyone else using cocoapods, this temporary fix worked for me. https://github.com/CocoaPods/CocoaPods/issues/11808
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Ad Income Enhancement: AdMost and HMS Unity Kit for Huawei Ad Display
Cocoapods for iOS.
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How to conduct an A/B test in iOS using feature flags and Amplitude
The latest version of Cocoapods
What are some alternatives?
dry-validation - Validation library with type-safe schemas and rules
Homebrew
sorbet - A fast, powerful type checker designed for Ruby
ruby - The Ruby Programming Language
steep - Static type checker for Ruby
Homebrew-cask - 🍻 A CLI workflow for the administration of macOS applications distributed as binaries
typeprof - An experimental type-level Ruby interpreter for testing and understanding Ruby code
cocoapods-binary - integrate pods in form of prebuilt frameworks conveniently, reducing compile time
rubygems - Library packaging and distribution for Ruby.
fastlane - 🚀 The easiest way to automate building and releasing your iOS and Android apps
Ruby on Rails - Ruby on Rails
fpm - Effing package management! Build packages for multiple platforms (deb, rpm, etc) with great ease and sanity.