rushstack
STL
rushstack | STL | |
---|---|---|
11 | 154 | |
5,607 | 9,763 | |
0.8% | 1.5% | |
10.0 | 9.7 | |
1 day ago | 2 days ago | |
TypeScript | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
rushstack
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How do you handle eslint/prettier configs across multiple repos?
If you're looking to recreate the ease of a monorepo with eslint/prettier, I've used the rushstack eslint patch to ship an eslint package which is almost fully self-contained, not just config, but dependencies as well: https://github.com/microsoft/rushstack/tree/main/eslint/eslint-patch
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Handling TypeScript in a monorepo
I highly recommend rushstack. It’s a suite of tools for managing TypeScript monorepos. I use it at work and never want to go back to working without it.
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Are there build systems for the JS/TS world?
https://rushjs.io/ and https://rushstack.io/
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Lerna has gone. Which Monorepo is right for a Node.js BACKEND now?
Rush Stack. It’s an opinionated, batteries-included toolset for working with large monorepos. It’s highly extensible and pluggable, and has built-in support for a lot of common tasks. My team uses it at work to support a couple dozen projects and at this point I can’t imagine managing a monorepo without it. It has significant adoption within and support from Microsoft, and monthly public dev meetings with contributors from a number of other companies, so I really don’t think it’s going to disappear any time soon. From what I’ve seen, it’s a very healthy project that’s continuing to grow in support and adoption.
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Micro-frontends building blocks: Monorepos
Tools like Lerna, Bazel, Nx, Rush, Turborepo, to name a few. Lerna is probably the grand daddy of all monorepo tools. CRA, Babel, Jest are a few projects that use it. Bazel has been refined and tested for years at Google to build heavy-duty, mission-critical infrastructure, services, and applications. Turborepo is the monorepo for Vercel, the leading platform for frontend frameworks. These tools can help keep your monorepo workspaces fast, understandable and manageable.
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Typescript book with web and/or node.js fundamentals?
We don’t use backend node, I work in a big typescript monorepo and use Typescript to build plugins for compiling, packing, and testing, leveraging Rush and Heft on the client side (https://github.com/microsoft/rushstack) run via node
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Rush and changelog generation - Part 2
I guess I'm not alone wishing that rush uses commit messages for change log generation. It's actually not so difficult (once it's done 😎).
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"We made an open source app that tells you the time so we are the leaders in open source"
See: ONNX/ONNX Runtime, VSCode, Rush, & countless others
- Dev corrupts NPM libs 'colors' and 'faker' breaking thousands of apps
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Tell HN: Microsoft forks MIT licensed repo, and changes the copyright to them
To late to edit or delete my comment above but just to set it straight I just learned that the whole lerna debacle linked above was a nothing-burger aka “fake news”.
https://github.com/microsoft/rushstack/issues/673#issuecomme...
STL
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Show HN: Logfmtxx – Header only C++23 structured logging library using logfmt
Again, they are barely functional.
MSVC chokes on many standard-defined constructs: https://github.com/microsoft/STL/issues/1694
clang does not claim to be "mostly usable" at all - most papers are not implemented: https://clang.llvm.org/cxx_status.html#cxx20
And gcc will only start ot be usable with CMake when version 14 is released - that has not happened yet.
And, as I mentioned before, IDE support is either buggy (Visual Studio) or non-existing (any other IDE/OS). So you're off to writing in a text editor and hoping your compiler works to a somewhat usable degree. Yes, at some point people should start using modules, I agree, but to advise library maintainers to ship modularized code... the tooling just isn't there yet.
I mean, the GitHub issue is Microsoft trying to ship their standard library modularized, they employ some of the most capable folks on the planet and pay them big money to get that done, while metaphorically sitting next to the Microsoft compiler devs, and they barely, barely get it done (with bugs, as they themselves mention). This is too much for most other library maintainers.
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Cpp2 and cppfront – An experimental 'C++ syntax 2' and its first compiler
Notice that there are in practice three distinct implementations of the C++ standard library. They're all awful to read though, here's Microsoft's std::vector https://github.com/microsoft/STL/blob/main/stl/inc/vector
However you're being slightly unfair because Rust's Vec is just defined (opaquely) as a RawVec plus a length value, so let's link RawVec, https://doc.rust-lang.org/src/alloc/raw_vec.rs.html -- RawVec is the part responsible for the messy problem of how to actually implement the growable array type.
Still, the existence of three C++ libraries with slightly different (or sometimes hugely different) quality of implementation means good C++ code can't depend on much beyond what the ISO document promises, and yet it must guard against the nonsense inflicted by all three and by lacks of the larger language. In particular everything must use the reserved prefix so that it's not smashed inadvertently by a macro, and lots of weird C++ idioms that preserve performance by sacrificing clarity of implementation are needed, even where you'd ordinarily sacrifice to get the development throughput win of everybody know what's going on. For example you'll see a lot of "pair" types bought into existence which are there to squirrel away a ZST that in C++ can't exist, using the Empty Base Optimisation. In Rust the language has ZSTs so they can just write what they meant.
- C++ Specification vs Implementation
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C++23: Removing garbage collection support
Here is Microsoft's implementation of map in the standard library. I think of myself as a competent programmer / computer scientist. I couldn't write this: https://github.com/microsoft/STL/blob/f392449fb72d1a387ac502...
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std::condition_variable wait for (very) long time
Be careful on Windows, the MSVC STL implementation uses the system time, so it can be badly impacted by clock adjustments: https://github.com/microsoft/STL/issues/718
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Compiler explorer: can you use C++23 std lib modules with MSVC already?
Can you provide a link? If it affects import std;, I'd like to add it to my tracking issue.
- Learn to write production quality STL like classes
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MSVC C++23 Update
Do you have a list of the bugs you've filed and their current status, like the one I have for the STL? I saw you mentioned 3 bugs 7 months ago, 2 of which were fixed in 17.6 and the third of which was a duplicate of an active bug ("deducing this" is known to not yet work with modules, which is why we don't define the feature-test macro to claim full support).
- C++/CLI wrap of a C++ class that includes <future> in public header
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Has Boost lost its charm?
Yep. And look at our implementation's name: https://github.com/microsoft/STL
What are some alternatives?
turborepo - Incremental bundler and build system optimized for JavaScript and TypeScript, written in Rust – including Turborepo and Turbopack. [Moved to: https://github.com/vercel/turbo]
EA Standard Template Library - EASTL stands for Electronic Arts Standard Template Library. It is an extensive and robust implementation that has an emphasis on high performance.
lerna - :dragon: Lerna is a fast, modern build system for managing and publishing multiple JavaScript/TypeScript packages from the same repository.
asio - Boost.org asio module
husky - Git hooks made easy 🐶 woof!
robin-hood-hashing - Fast & memory efficient hashtable based on robin hood hashing for C++11/14/17/20
angular-eslint - :sparkles: Monorepo for all the tooling related to using ESLint with Angular
tracy - Frame profiler
typescript-monorepo-example - An example of setting up a Lerna monorepo with Visual Studio Code and TypeScript
gcc
nodejs-api-starter - 💥 Yarn v2 based monorepo template (seed project) pre-configured with GraphQL API, PostgreSQL, React, Relay, and Material UI. [Moved to: https://github.com/kriasoft/relay-starter-kit]
llvm-project - The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and toolchain technologies.