rubo-format
delve
rubo-format | delve | |
---|---|---|
1 | 52 | |
3 | 22,043 | |
- | 0.6% | |
10.0 | 9.2 | |
almost 8 years ago | 7 days ago | |
CoffeeScript | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
rubo-format
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I look for a "Rosetta" documentation to found correspondence between languages tooling
Another example: code formatters. You mention gofmt (which you incorrectly put next to Ruby even though it's for Go)... There are lots of code formatters for Ruby, even if you only consider ones directly inspired/influenced by gofmt. A quick google turned up at least three of those: https://github.com/pariz/rubo-format, https://github.com/penelopezone/rubyfmt, and https://github.com/ruby-formatter/rufo. I'm pretty sure rubocop is used in Ruby more than any of those, but rubocop is less directly influenced by gofmt. So what do you choose? The project(s) that's more closely analogous? Or the more popular formatter?
delve
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The worst thing about Jenkins is that it works
At a recent job, we had slightly different containers for local dev; our backend containers (for a Go app) had Air [1] installed for live reloading, plus Delve [2] running inside the container for VS Code's debugger to connect to. We also had a frontend container for local dev, which didn't get deployed as a container, just as static files.
[1] https://github.com/cosmtrek/air
[2] https://github.com/go-delve/delve/
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Delve v1.21.2 is out now
https://github.com/go-delve/delve/releases/tag/v1.21.2 Thanks Derek and the rest of the team for helping us to debug in a normal way!
- I do not use a debugger
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Writing and debugging integration tests of multiple processes with Golang
My employer has a commercial solution for this but Delve does supports `rr` traces natively for this purpose, which gives a complete open-source solution (https://github.com/go-delve/delve/blob/master/Documentation/usage/dlv_replay.md).
- No support for debugging Go on OpenBSD
- Delve v1.20.2 is out now
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Tools besides Go for a newbie
delve and related IDE integrations
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What a good debugger can do
For time travel debugging in Go:
The Delve debugger for Go supports debugging rr traces: https://github.com/go-delve/delve/blob/master/Documentation/...
Undo (who I work for) maintain a fork that debugs our LiveRecorder recordings: https://docs.undo.io/GoDelve.html
Either rr (https://rr-project.org/) or our UDB debugger (https://undo.io/solutions/products/udb/) can do some time travel debugging of Go programs via GDB's built-in support for Go. I believe its weakness is in support for goroutines, since they don't map well onto its idea of how programs run.
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Is there a neovim config with preconfigured debugger?
So in my case I use https://github.com/leoluz/nvim-dap-go (which itself calls out to the CLI tool https://github.com/go-delve/delve).
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What's wrong with my GoLand debugger?
Clone https://github.com/go-delve/delve.git
What are some alternatives?
rufo - The Ruby Formatter
air - ☁️ Live reload for Go apps
rubyfmt - Ruby Autoformatter!
go-debug
awesome-ruby - 💎 A collection of awesome Ruby libraries, tools, frameworks and software
vim-go - Go development plugin for Vim
Pry Byebug - Step-by-step debugging and stack navigation in Pry
gorequest - GoRequest -- Simplified HTTP client ( inspired by nodejs SuperAgent )
go-sitemap-generator - go-sitemap-generator is the easiest way to generate Sitemaps in Go
gohper
godotenv - A Go port of Ruby's dotenv library (Loads environment variables from .env files)
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder