sdk-java
racket-gui-easy
sdk-java | racket-gui-easy | |
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47 | 8 | |
197 | 129 | |
2.0% | - | |
8.7 | 7.8 | |
3 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Java | Racket | |
Apache License 2.0 | - |
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.
sdk-java
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Show HN: Hatchet β Open-source distributed task queue
How does this compare against Temporal/Cadence/Conductor? Does hatchet also support durable execution?
https://temporal.io/
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When "letting it crash" is not enough
Flawless sounds a lot like https://temporal.io/ .
I'm wondering if it has the same scalability concerns - sticking everything in Postgres is fine at small-ish scale, but what happens when you outgrow Postgres, either because you have higher availability requirements (can't handle primary DB restarts) or because of the sheer volume of the workload?
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How To Collect Temporal.io Logs Using Axiom And Pino
Temporal is a scalable and reliable runtime for durable Workflow Executions. It enables you to develop as if failures don't even exist. I started exploring it over the Christmas holiday and using it for a recently open-sourced project.
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Ask HN: How have you implemented human-in-the-loop workflows?
I have my eyes on https://temporal.io/ for similar purposes.
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Which queue System you prefer for ecommerce and PS
Check out temporal.io open source project for a much cleaner solution using Durable Execution abstraction.
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StackStorm β IFTTT for Ops
Interesting to see Netflix featured both on StackStorm & https://temporal.io/ frontpages.
- Open source durable execution platform
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Leveraging Temporal for resilient remote procedure calls (RPC)
Our stack at Escape is written in multiple languages because each team has specific needs. We use TypeScript for its vibrant ecosystem, Python for cybersecurity research and Go for performance-sensitive tasks. To orchestrate cross-language task orchestration, we first developed a simple request-response protocol over HTTP, but it wasn't sustainable as the Escape codebase grew rapidly. We evaluated several technologies to replace our homegrown protocol, and two emerged as the most promising options: Connect and Temporal. The title gives it away, but the reason is far from obvious
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Ask HN: In which areas have you compared 3+ tools and formed strong preferences?
I've put a lot of time into Airflow and feel similarly that it's a huge pain and a risk to rely on it. I've replaced it with Temporal (https://temporal.io/) and while I don't have the breadth of experience with the frameworks you listed, I do think Temporal is a great replacement for Airflow.
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Inngest raises $3M seed to build the reliable workflow platform for every dev
Just to confirm my understanding; would you consider at least part of your product offering to be similar to temporal.io [1]? Your examples are reminiscent of theirs.
[1] https://temporal.io/
racket-gui-easy
- Racket Language
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Racket: The Lisp for the Modern Day
Looks like you're already in Emacs. I strongly recommend racket-mode as mentioned in another thread.
With regard to prototyping GUI's I'd suggest taking a look at https://github.com/mfelleisen/7GUI. https://github.com/Bogdanp/racket-gui-easy could also be a good place to start.
With regard to Racket more generally, I'm probably not the best person to ask since I had a very high friction start where I just banged my head against the wall until things made sense.
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Humble Chronicles: Managing State with Signals
I took a similar approach in my Racket library, gui-easy[1,2]. Though I opted to not defer any computations, any observable (similar to a signal from the post) update propagates to observers immediately, and there's no incrementality -- observables are just boxes whose changes you can subscribe to. Regarding the disposal problem, I used weak references and regarding the where to take observables and where to take concrete values as input question, I decided that any place an observable can go in, a concrete value can as well and it's been a convenient choice so far. For fun, here's an example[3] that builds the todo UI from the post.
[1]: https://docs.racket-lang.org/gui-easy/index.html
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If you were hired to create a new distribution of Lisp, what would you include?
For native apps, I would devote coding resources to the Guile-GI project which generates Guile bindings to the cross-platform Gtk C library by way of the Gnome Object Introspection and Reflection library. I would also port the Racket gui-easy library over to Guile-GI so declarative GUIs could be written.
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What programming language is good to make GUI's
There is also gui-easy a declarative gui framework: https://docs.racket-lang.org/gui-easy/index.html
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7GUIs
Itβs not the only version either
See https://github.com/Bogdanp/racket-gui-easy/tree/master/examp...
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What are some alternatives?
sdk-python - Temporal Python SDK
7guis - 7GUIs is a GUI programming usability benchmark.
sdk-python - Python library for Modzy Machine Learning Operations (MLOps) Platform
7GUI - the 7 gui project
trigger.dev - Trigger.dev is the open source background jobs platform for TypeScript.
CIEL - CIEL Is an Extended Lisp. Scripting with batteries included.
inngestgo - Golang SDK for Inngest
fidgetty - Widget library built on Fidget written in pure Nim and OpenGL rendered
windmill - Open-source developer platform to turn scripts into workflows and UIs. Fastest workflow engine (5x vs Airflow). Open-source alternative to Airplane and Retool.
bgjs
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
bang.html - π Good.HTML. A nice framework without the bad stuff. Lots of custom elements, and nice templates. Good. HTML [Moved to: https://github.com/crisdosyago/good.html]