screenshot-workflow
lowdefy
screenshot-workflow | lowdefy | |
---|---|---|
1 | 52 | |
3 | 2,736 | |
- | 1.0% | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
about 3 years ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
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.
screenshot-workflow
-
Screenshot Web Elements Across Devices in Issue Comments.
Demo Repository: https://github.com/DryCreations/screenshot-workflow
lowdefy
-
CodeMic: A New Way to Talk About Code
Would love this for us to help us build interactive tutorials for Lowdefy, very cool. also think it is important that it exports well to youtube etc. and link back for when users want the interactivity.
Would be super if the player can be embed in docs.
https://lowdefy.com
-
Ask HN: Anybody used Retool for production, user-facing app?
We’ve built Lowdefy to address this use case and more, check it out https://lowdefy.com
Happy to answer some questions and show you what we’ve built with Lowdefy - It’s very powerful and easy to get started with and maintain. gvw at lowdefy.com
-
Top 11 Open Source Internal Tools with the Most GitHub Stars
GitHub https://github.com/lowdefy/lowdefy GitHub Star 2.6k GitHub Fork 160 GitHub Issue 30 GitHub Pull Request 3 GitHub Contributor 24 Most Recent Update on GitHub Two mounth ago Open Source License Apache-2.0 Official Website https://lowdefy.com/ Documentation https://docs.lowdefy.com/
-
Pkl, a Programming Language for Configuration
I'm really enjoying reading through the docs and the tutorial. We've created Lowdefy, a config web-stack which makes it really simple to build quite advanced web apps. We're writing everything in YAML, but it has it's limitations, specifically when doing config type checking and IDE extensions that go beyond just YAML.
I've been looking for a way to have typed objects in the config to do config suggestions and type checking.. PKL looks like it can do this for us. And with the JSON output we might even be able to get there with minimal effort.
Is there anyone here with some PKL experience that would be willing to answer some technical questions re the use of PKL for more advanced, nested config?
See Lowdefy:
https://lowdefy.com/
https://github.com/lowdefy/lowdefy
-
Show HN: Retool AI
Awsome! With Lowdefy we tried to build a low-code framework that works like code. We’ve developed a schema in which to define applications and we’ve built all kinds of apps for enterprise customers. Massive, advanced CRM systems, call centre solutions, ticketing systems, a light MRP, all kinds of survey apps and so many dashboards. Even our docs and our website are Lowdefy apps!
Give Lowdefy a try and reach out it you have any questions or want to see what is possible :) (We need to invest a lot more into content and examples, bootstapping is a grind!)
https://github.com/lowdefy/lowdefy
-
Launch HN: Refine (YC S23) – Open-Source Retool for Enterprise
Also add Lowdefy onto the list https://github.com/lowdefy/lowdefy
co-founder here :)
-
The Surprising Power of Documentation
100% this. And yes, good documentation takes a lot of investment but it pays off like compound interest. But with that done, it becomes even more important not to pull the carpet for no good reason, you are building a tower and documentation is at the foundation.
We’ve built Lowdefy [1] as an open source project and documented it with all effort, 200 pages of docs. I often forget why or how something works and then jump to the docs. This investment keeps on paying of as we use Lowdefy to build customer apps, new devs in the team typically take less than two week to get up to speed and start making contributions, the sharp ones, just a two or three days.
This year, we’re extended our documentation onto customer apps aswell, with flow diagrams, state machine definitions, detailed field level explication schema definitions, and end user test procedures. The key here for this documentation is detail. It should be easier to reach for the docs and the the answer, than to dive in the code and interpret it.
1 - https://github.com/lowdefy/lowdefy
-
how to choose a tech stack for a personal project
https://github.com/lowdefy/lowdefy Co-Founder here.
-
Ask HN: What have you built more than twice and wish someone had built for you?
Check out https://lowdefy.com/ they even have a sample survey app as one of their examples.
-
Looking for a workflow program, any suggestions?
You can build an app that would do this