rubyfmt
go-formatter
rubyfmt | go-formatter | |
---|---|---|
5 | 108 | |
1,054 | 121,148 | |
- | - | |
6.5 | 9.1 | |
2 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Rust | 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.
rubyfmt
-
Are you using rubocop-airbnb?
We're using rubyfmt along with a rubocop config which does its best to strip out any styling decisions.
-
Ruby on Rails Auto Formatter
Looked at https://github.com/penelopezone/rubyfmt and other options but none seem to actually work.
-
Linting and Auto-formatting Ruby Code With RuboCop
RubyFmt is a brand-new code formatter that's written in Rust and currently under active development. Like Prettier, it is intended to be a formatter and not a code analysis tool. It hasn't seen a stable release just yet, so you should probably hold off on adopting it right now, but it's definitely one to keep an eye on.
-
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?
- Penelopezone/Rubyfmt: Ruby Autoformatter
go-formatter
-
Why Go is great choice for Software engineering.
A curated list of awesome Go frameworks, libraries and software - Awesome Go / Golang (awesome-go.com)
-
Golang Web: GET Method
Awesome Go projects and frmaeworks
-
How I do technology watch
Go: https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go
- Go
- Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
-
I created a search engine that helps you compare and determine quality, trends, and popularity in GO packages
✨ Includes all packages from Awesome Go ✨ (some entries did not exist anymore)
- A curated list of Go frameworks, libraries and software
- Awesome Go Frameworks, Libraries and Software
-
Golang: Channels
Awesome Go projects and frmaeworks
-
Goravel, Web framework inspired from Laravel in Golang
AFAIK, no. There are some helper frameworks [1], but none of them is dominant. Two possible reasons: it's quite easy to write a (web) service with the library functions (it even includes a gzip stream), and it's practically impossible to write an ORM framework like you have in Java and Python, so the Go frameworks I've seen are basically a bunch of helper functions.
[1] https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go#web-frameworks
What are some alternatives?
rufo - The Ruby Formatter
gobeam/Stringy - Convert string to camel case, snake case, kebab case / slugify, custom delimiter, pad string, tease string and many other functionalities with help of by Stringy package.
coc-solargraph - Solargraph extension for coc.nvim
go-shortid - Super short, fully unique, non-sequential and URL friendly Ids
rubo-format - gofmt like ruby code formatting in atom
numa - NUMA is a utility library, which is written in go. It help us to write some NUMA-AWARED code.
plugin-ruby - Prettier Ruby Plugin
stateless - Go library for creating finite state machines
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
morse - Morse Code Library in Go
starter-workflows - Accelerating new GitHub Actions workflows
bexp - Go implementation of Brace Expansion mechanism to generate arbitrary strings.