sassc-ruby
JRuby
sassc-ruby | JRuby | |
---|---|---|
3 | 24 | |
366 | 3,746 | |
0.3% | 0.0% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
4 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | 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.
sassc-ruby
-
Any compelling reason not to use CDNs to incorporate bootstrap, jQuery etc. for a small student project?
And I don't know if this is the same issue (it seems to be) but the solution suggested there that got a lot of thumbs-ups didn't work for me.
-
JRuby 9.3.4.0 released
Generated make files now properly set the platform architecture when running on Linux/aarch64 and Apple's M1 family of CPUs. This allows sassc and other non-extension C-based gems to build and install properly. (sass/sassc-ruby#231, #7132, #7133)
-
How to Migrate a Rails 6 App From sass-rails to cssbundling-rails
This sprockets setup has always worked great, but lately some serious bit-rot has set in. Over the last few years, the Sass Team has deprecated both its original ruby-based version of sass, and more recently, the libsass/sassc library in favor of dart-sass. As of this writing, I could not find any sprockets compatible versions of dart-sass. Further, as time marches on, the sassc gem is beginning to accumulate some pretty nasty bugs and inefficiencies. With no fixes on the horizon, it's time to move on.
JRuby
-
Shoes makes building little graphical programs for Mac, Windows, Linux simple
As someone who has looked at Shoes several times but never dove in, it's confusing how Shoes 4 has been the "preview version" of Shoes for, like, a decade or more. It made me actively avoid getting invested in Shoes 3 (the release promoted on the linked website) because Shoes 4 requires JRuby and I am happy with CRuby (the Ruby interpreter most people think of when they hear "Ruby").
https://github.com/shoes/shoes4/
http://www.rubydoc.info/github/shoes/shoes4
No disrespect to the developers but to me it feels like taking over a GUI toolkit created "to teach programming to everyone" (to quote the Shoes 4 readme) and making it depend upon a super-complicated enterprise-focused Ruby was sort of Missing The Point™ in a huge way.
Heck I couldn't even switch to JRuby if I wanted to because I <3 Ractors and JRuby still lacks CRuby 3.0 feature parity: https://github.com/jruby/jruby/issues/7459
-
JRuby 9.4.2.0 released with many fixes and improvements
__callee__ now properly returns the name under which a method was called, which will be the new name in the case of aliased methods. #2305, #7702
-
JRuby 9.4.0.0 Released, now supporting Ruby 3.1 and Rails 7
Issue tracker: https://github.com/jruby/jruby/issues
-
JRuby 9.3.9.0 Released with stdlib CVE fixes
rdoc has been updated to 6.3.3 to fix all known CVEs. (#7396, #7404)
-
JRuby 9.3.8.0 Released - with support for lightweight fibers!
Altering the visibility of an included module method no longer changes what super method gets called. (#7240, #7343, #7344, #7356)
-
Golang in the JVM
It looks like the readme is copy pasta from jruby: https://github.com/jruby/jruby
-
JRuby 9.3.4.0 released
Homepage: https://www.jruby.org/
- JRuby 9.4 will support Ruby 3.0 and we need your help!
-
Communication Counts – Leading a New Generation of Developers with Chris Mar
Chris: Yeah, that's exactly right. So I was working at Sun at the time. I remember the JRuby guys. I saw them speak at one of the Java conferences, and they came to work for Sun. Just listening to them talk about JRuby...and then a lot of it was obviously about Ruby on Rails at the time. And I was like, wow, this was just mind-blowing the way they talked about it.
-
Befunge GUI by Glimmer (2 for 1: LibUI & SWT)
In fact, I built its GUI twice with two different approaches, one using the up and coming Glimmer DSL for LibUI on CRuby relying on a multi-canvas-grid (LibUI area) approach, and one using the very mature Glimmer DSL for SWT on JRuby by relying on a button-grid approach.
What are some alternatives?
cssbundling-rails - Bundle and process CSS in Rails with Tailwind, PostCSS, and Sass via Node.js.
truffleruby - A high performance implementation of the Ruby programming language, built on GraalVM.
jsbundling-rails - Bundle and transpile JavaScript in Rails with esbuild, rollup.js, or Webpack.
MRuby - Lightweight Ruby
sprockets-rails - Sprockets Rails integration
Rubinius - The Rubinius Language Platform
Sass - Sass makes CSS fun!
Opal - Ruby ♥︎ JavaScript
puma-dev - A tool to manage rack apps in development with puma
Reactrb
Bulma - Modern CSS framework based on Flexbox
docker-jruby