remake
Rake
remake | Rake | |
---|---|---|
4 | 17 | |
761 | 2,310 | |
- | 0.7% | |
5.1 | 8.2 | |
8 months ago | 4 days ago | |
C | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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remake
- Knit: Making a Better Make
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Why you should adopt Makefile in all of your projects
Anybody who works with Make should also check out remake, because while Make is useful, it is pretty bad at diagnostics.
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Do you consider ChromeOS and Android to be distributions of Linux?
While true that the absolute minimum install of alpine linux is gnu free I don't think it's fair to say alpine is gnu free...the build-base meta-package for a basic development environment pulls in gcc, binutils and patch, the default make tool of alpine is a gnu make fork, packages like gettext, octave, bison...are all available in the alpine repositories.
- Proposal to add build graph output to GNU Make
Rake
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What’s with DevOps engineers using `make` of all things?
Some competitors - Rake (ruby) - Bake - Earthly - SCons - doit
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An Introduction to Metaprogramming in Ruby
where every argument except the name can either be missing, single (value) or multiple (array). Sure, it has the "advantage" that it's syntactically valid Ruby code, but it then requires some 70 lines of awful code to actually parse that data into a usable construct ([1] up to L145).
[1] https://github.com/ruby/rake/blob/7b50e9dc37abc57fd365c16cb1...
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Taskfile: A Modern Alternative to Makefile
Rake[0] is still the best ‘make-like’ build tool I’ve used for general purpose stuff. The syntax is nice and it’s just Ruby which is a delight. I briefly used Mage (similar, but Go) and it was fine too.
[0]: https://github.com/ruby/rake
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Knit: Making a Better Make
Yup! Two well-established alternatives are "rake", in the Ruby community, and "just" in the Rust community.
Rake is fully programmable in Ruby. Just is a bit less flexible, but it doesn't require learning Ruby, and it's quite pleasant to use.
https://ruby.github.io/rake/
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Anyone have any good Ruby repos that showcase best practices?
Rake is a great way to homogenize and declare common behaviors of your script (called "tasks"); a guide.
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Write your own Domain Specific Language in Ruby
In Ruby there's a gem named Rake. This gem provides a DSL to create tasks to be run from the command line. A small example looks like this:
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Ruby
I think you're referring to Rake. https://ruby.github.io/rake/
- Fastlane: iOS 和 Android 的自动化构建工具
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What about a CMake transpiler?
We use [Rake](https://github.com/ruby/rake) instead - it's awesome.
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How to Access Rails ActiveRecord Models Inside a Rake Task
If you've been working with Ruby on Rails for a while, you've come across Rake. Written by the late Jim Weirich, Rake is to Ruby what Make is to C. It's very easy to create custom Rake tasks to simplify your development workflows. Rails even provides a generator (rails g task) to create them for you.
What are some alternatives?
uftrace - Function graph tracer for C/C++/Rust/Python
Thor - Thor is a toolkit for building powerful command-line interfaces.
makefile-visualizer - Visualize the dependency of makefile and related files.
Bazel - a fast, scalable, multi-language and extensible build system
makefile2graph - Creates a graph of dependencies from GNU-Make; Output is a graphiz-dot file or a Gexf-XML file.
TTY - Toolkit for developing sleek command line apps.
BUSY - BUSY is a lean, statically typed, cross-platform, easily bootstrappable build system for GCC, CLANG and MSVC inspired by Google GN
Cocaine
bgraph - BGraph is a tool designed to generate dependencies graphs from Android.bp soong files.
GLI - Make awesome command-line applications the easy way
rabs - General purpose imperative build system.
Trollop - Optimist is a commandline option parser for Ruby that just gets out of your way.