restagraph
caveman
restagraph | caveman | |
---|---|---|
2 | 10 | |
16 | 769 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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.
restagraph
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I want to pursue this web app project - advice using CL?
I built Restagraph in CL, and it's an API-only server which supports whatever frontend will use its REST-ish API via HTTP, so... yes, I'd say it's possible to build the backend in CL.
- restagraph: App that dynamically generates REST APIs for a Neo4j database, using a schema defined within the database.
caveman
- How do you think about version number management?
- I want to pursue this web app project - advice using CL?
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Mito: An ORM for Common Lisp
We are going to walk through the examples by building an online Warehouse management system using Caveman
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Using SVGs in Common Lisp web apps with Djula
Djula is a port of Python's Django template engine to Common Lisp. It's the default templating engine used by the framework Caveman for building web applications
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Is Woo still "beta quality" or prod ready?
Appreciate it. Can I ask one last thing. Between Snooze and Caveman2, which is the more current project?
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Practical? Common Lisp on the JVM: A quick intro to ABCL for modern web apps
This is interesting from a "look what we can do!" perspective, but practically speaking, I'm not sure there's a good reason for doing it this way. For all practical purposes, it would be better to use one of the "native" Common Lisp libraries for doing this, such as Caveman: http://8arrow.org/caveman/
Even as a big Common Lisp fan, I would really question using it in a situation where the project has strict requirements to use a particular framework for another language.
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Building Common Lisp web apps with Tailwind CSS
In this post, I am going to walk you through to setup Tailwind CSS for a Common Lisp web application using Caveman. If you want to know more about creating web applications using Common Lisp and Caveman, please check my previous posts on the topic.
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Building a Rentals Listing web application in Common Lisp
We are going to use Caveman for scaffolding this project. Caveman is a lightweight web application framework created by Eitaro Fukamachi for Common lisp. Caveman is available on Quicklisp, so you can install it with:
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Lisp for the Web - 5
Hence I chose Caveman for this project. After having been played around with and without Caveman for building web applications in Common Lisp, I found that it is the best framework out there for developing web apps in Lisp. Caveman is a lightweight web application framework created by Eitaro Fukamachi for Common lisp. Fukamachi has got some serious tools for doing web development in Lisp. Please feel free to check out his Github profile for more useful tools.
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How to deploy Caveman applications to Heroku?
I have been trying to come up with a standard template using Caveman to deploy on Heroku. But I am struck with these issues, not quite getting it to work with the available buildpacks. Lot of the related articles are hopelessly outdated. Appreciate any help or pointers? https://github.com/fukamachi/caveman/issues/126 https://gitlab.com/duncan-bayne/heroku-buildpack-common-lisp/-/issues/6
What are some alternatives?
radiance - A Common Lisp web application environment
lisp-for-the-web - Code for lisp for the web post
htmx - </> htmx - high power tools for HTML
slime - The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs
screenshotbot-oss - A Screenshot Testing service to tie with your existing Android, iOS and Web screenshot tests
cl-super-rentals - Super rentals in Common Lisp
cl-beers - Brewing Beers in Common Lisp and htmx
heroku-buildpack-common-lisp
reblocks - A fork of Weblocks Common Lisp web framework
clack - Web server abstraction layer for Common Lisp
easy-routes - Yet another routes handling utility on top of Hunchentoot
quicklisp-projects - Metadata for projects tracked by Quicklisp.