review-any-pr-with-chatgpt
wasmedge-quickjs
review-any-pr-with-chatgpt | wasmedge-quickjs | |
---|---|---|
2 | 11 | |
7 | 454 | |
- | 2.4% | |
2.4 | 7.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 18 days ago | |
JavaScript | ||
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
review-any-pr-with-chatgpt
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ChatGPT-powered code review bot to boost your PR merge. Deploy in 5 mins
If you want this bot to try to review the PR you are interested in first, welcome to use our public playground. https://github.com/flows-network/review-any-pr-with-chatgpt
The functions code is open source - check it out and let us know your feedback. You can also write a function of your own in minutes.
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https://github.com/flows-network/review-any-pr-with-chatgpt
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wasmedge-quickjs
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Spin 2.0 – open-source tool for building and running WASM apps
I'm impressed you're already leveraging the component model. I thought it wasn't quite ready for primetime yet, but it seems you're proving that wrong... I'll have to dig in more here, as I'm working embedding WebAssembly in a high performance storage engine.
Thanks for the notes! I hear you on QuickJS - I've seen approaches of folks trying to build more node compatibility on top of quickjs (ala https://github.com/second-state/wasmedge-quickjs), but have recently heard about spidermonkey in wasmtime. Do you have intuition for nodejs vs browser in terms of what people want in terms of compatibility?
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Node on Web. Use Nodejs freely in your browser with Linux infrastructure.
"A high-performance, secure, extensible, and OCI-complaint JavaScript runtime for WasmEdge. Run JavaScript in WebAssembly" wasm-edge-quickjs
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ChatGPT-powered code review bot to boost your PR merge. Deploy in 5 mins
See potential problems #1 for its proposed changes https://github.com/second-state/wasmedge-quickjs/pull/82#iss...
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Flows.network: Add eyes, ears, memory& hands to LLMs with serverless functions
https://github.com/second-state/wasmedge-quickjs/pull/82#iss...
Try the bot on a PR you're interested in:
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How to compile serveTls for import into QuickJS?
I can conceptualize a way to convert JavaScript source code to WASM then convert WASM to C source code. I have considered just using WASM, however, that introduces yet another runtime to manage https://github.com/second-state/wasmedge-quickjs.
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How to import prompt()?
Technically you can create a C shared object and import that shared object into QuickJS, see https://github.com/rsenn/qjs-modules, also https://github.com/second-state/wasmedge-quickjs.
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Use SSH in browser
That was achieved with QuickJS here https://bellard.org/jslinux/vm.html?url=alpine-x86.cfg, and here https://github.com/second-state/wasmedge-quickjs.
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Easier examples for the WasmEdge Rust SDK to get started with this Wasm runtime quickly.
WasmEdge provides excellent support for JavaScript, including ES6 and NPM modules, async networking, the fetch API, React SSR, and even mixing Rust code with JS code. https://github.com/second-state/wasmedge-quickjs
- GitHub - second-state/wasmedge-quickjs: A high-performance, secure, extensible, and OCI-complaint JavaScript runtime for WasmEdge.
- High-performance secure extensible OCI-complaint JavaScript runtime for WasmEdge