saasform
sci
saasform | sci | |
---|---|---|
16 | 20 | |
271 | 1,167 | |
- | 0.8% | |
0.0 | 7.2 | |
over 1 year ago | 14 days ago | |
JavaScript | Clojure | |
Apache License 2.0 | Eclipse Public License 1.0 |
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.
saasform
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Ask HN: What are your successful open source projects you lost interest in?
Saasform: https://github.com/saasform/saasform
I had to prioritize another project (solokeys).
I still really believe both: 1) in an open source alternative to auth0, 2) in combining auth+payments for saas.
However, because they’re two problems, it’s probably best to focus on just one. For me trying to launch Saasform the issue has been to find and onboard customers quickly and at scale.
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Ask HN: How to build a good looking SaaS landing page?
I also purchased Landkit, but eventually found it very heavy. I then essentially remade it on top of Fresh [1]. Code is here if anyone needs it [2].
[1] https://github.com/cssninjaStudio/fresh
[2] https://github.com/saasform/saasform/tree/main/data/themes/f...
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Ask HN: No / low-code tools to build an application in 2021?
If it's a web saas, we're building Saasform [1] with your use case in mind.
One relevant example is launching your MVP as a serverless API (e.g. on Firebase) + react/vue front end. Just iterate on your core product and features, we handle home page, registration and payments.
For mobile apps I'd recommend Expo [2] and, if you can, stay with their managed flow. If you want to iterate fast, you need to take into account the time to release to the stores and Expo can help with that. Similarly as for the web, I'd look into a serverless API model to start.
For email notifications I'd go with Sendgrid.
I personally never used no-code solutions but different people recommended Bubbles [3].
[1] https://saasform.dev
[2] https://expo.io
[3] https://www.bubbles.io
- A more secure express-session package
- Show HN: Drop-in replacement of express-session to enhance security
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Ask HN: What is your current side-project?
Starter kit to "transform your project into a SaaS", with auth+payments.
https://github.com/saasform/saasform
- Show HN: We made a starter kit for SaaS (microservice instead of boilerplate)
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Authentication best practices and state of the art for a junior dev?
Saasform: shameless plug, this is my project, modern (at lease I hope), written in typescript
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I made an authentication server that handles user registration, authentication & authorization with JWT.
We are also doing something like that lol. It's a crowded field I see. Of course any cross contamination of PR is more than welcome :-)
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Show HN: Checklist/exercise to make a SaaS marketing page
I made this exercise to guide myself throught the process of starting from a list of features, summarizing benefits, prioritize them, sparkle some keywords and finally output a marketing page.
Working to make a marketing/public site for a micro-saas I was building, I realized there's plenty of articles about the structure of the landing page, sticky header, include quotes, etc. but there's little on how to actually write the content. I worked w/ different marketing professionals in the past and, though everyone has their own style/processes, the tldr is "talk about benefits, not features".
If you're making a marketing page, I hope you can find it useful too!
Please lmk if 1) the exercise makes sense to you, 2) the format is clear/unclear - what can be improved, 3) should I maybe write an accompanying blog post? other ideas?
For context, I expect to launch a number of micro-saas in the next months, so I wanted to build a repeatable process. I then plan to run all these sites out of config files like this [1].
[1] https://github.com/saasform/saasform/blob/main/data/config/w...
sci
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What's the value proposition of meta circular interpreters?
I've tried researching this myself and can't find too much. There's this project metaes which is an mci for JS, and there's the SCI module of the Clojure babashka project, but that's about it. I also saw Triska's video on mci but it was pretty theoretical.
- Sci: Configurable Clojure/Script interpreter suitable for scripting
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Windmill: Open-source developer platform to turn scripts into workflows and UIs
https://github.com/babashka/SCI if it's a requirement for proper sandboxing
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Embedding cherry in an existing CLJS app for runtime eval
Since cherry is a compiler, the code generally runs faster than with SCI which is an interpreter. For many cases SCI is fast enough, but numerical computations in a hot loop isn't one of its strenghts:
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Compiled and Interpreted Languages: Two Ways of Saying Tomato
Startup and sustained performance are absolutely implementation issues. For example, SBCL will take its sweet time to make machine code out of Common Lisp, but CLISP will interpret and generate bytecode. Both are useful, and both implement the same language. Clojure on the JVM takes also takes plenty of time to start up, so some use an interpreter instead. Furthermore neither of these languages has a cost model, so the cost of anything is an implementation issue.
- Show HN: Programming Google Flutter with Clojure
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Third party integrations with a monolithic Clojure app
So far we have relied on an increasing number of home-grown integration points to our platform, where relevant combined with the excellent SCI (so we can write some Clojure-code when adhoc data conversions / calculations / tweaking is required).
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Scala native equivalent to Clojure
Also take a look at SCI, https://github.com/babashka/sci/blob/master/doc/libsci.md
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Langdev in Clojure
You probably want to take a look at sci if you are creating a DSL or want to use Clojure itself as your DSL.
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ClojureRS – Clojure interpreter implemented in Rust
Built with the lovely SCI library (https://github.com/babashka/sci) + GraalVM, probably the most useful GraalVM project I've seen in the wild so far.
Also, Babashka will probably always support more features than ClojureRS could ever, particularly the interop with the various Java classes/functions, as that'd be very hard to achieve in ClojureRS.
What are some alternatives?
openmiko - Open source firmware for Ingenic T20 based devices such as WyzeCam V2, Xiaomi Xiaofang 1S, iSmartAlarm's Spot+ and others.
clojure-lsp - Clojure & ClojureScript Language Server (LSP) implementation
okta-aws-cli-assume-role - Okta AWS CLI Assume Role Tool
tailwindcss-typography - Beautiful typographic defaults for HTML you don't control.
SuperTokens Community - Open source alternative to Auth0 / Firebase Auth / AWS Cognito
hotwire-rails - Use Hotwire in your Ruby on Rails app
SvelteKit - web development, streamlined
mdx - Markdown for the component era
rich4clojure - Practice Clojure using Interactive Programming in your editor
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
babashka - Native, fast starting Clojure interpreter for scripting