september
null
september | null | |
---|---|---|
1 | 1 | |
29 | 32 | |
- | - | |
2.6 | 0.0 | |
almost 3 years ago | over 2 years ago | |
JavaScript | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
september
-
Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
At this point I've made a habit out of building homebrew tools and languages. Very few of these are purely because I was dissatisfied with off-the-shelf solutions; many of these just exist because I thought it would be fun/educational/challenging to build an X for myself from scratch.
I've made
- A dynamic programming language, Ink (https://dotink.co), which runs in "production" (for whatever that means for side projects) for around a dozen projects written in it.
- A compiler to compile that to JavaScript (https://github.com/thesephist/september)
- A bunch of language tooling around that language, like syntax highlighters, editor plugins, code formatters (for example, the code formatter https://github.com/thesephist/inkfmt)
- A small UI library (https://github.com/thesephist/torus)
- A suite of productivity tools (https://thesephist.com/posts/tools/) like notes, todos, shared whiteboard, contacts/CRM
- Twitter client (https://github.com/thesephist/lucerne/)
- Theres a few dozen more at (https://thesephist.com/projects/) :)
Many of these end up building on top of each other, so across the few dozen projects built on top of these tools they form a nice dependency graph -> https://twitter.com/thesephist/status/1367675987354251265
null
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
I build a logging library for Go, because I couldn't find one that logs to stdout AND stderr. If you used a logging lib on GCP for example, all log output went into the same pile of junk and it was hard to find "real" errors: https://github.com/emvi/logbuch
Then there is "null", also because I couldn't find one that got both, marshalling to JSON and be able to store null values in db: https://github.com/emvi/null
And finally, our "flagship" open-source project Pirsch, an embedded library for web analytics: https://github.com/pirsch-analytics/pirsch
What are some alternatives?
fselect - Find files with SQL-like queries
go-edlib - 📚 String comparison and edit distance algorithms library, featuring : Levenshtein, LCS, Hamming, Damerau levenshtein (OSA and Adjacent transpositions algorithms), Jaro-Winkler, Cosine, etc...
GoJS, a JavaScript Library for HTML Diagrams - JavaScript diagramming library for interactive flowcharts, org charts, design tools, planning tools, visual languages.
nan - Zero allocation Nullable structures in one library with handy conversion functions, marshallers and unmarshallers
RapydScript - Python-inspired, decluttered JavaScript
gocache - ☔️ A complete Go cache library that brings you multiple ways of managing your caches
sqldb-logger - A logger for Go SQL database driver without modifying existing *sql.DB stdlib usage.
algorithms - CLRS study. Codes are written with golang.
gutenberg - A fast static site generator in a single binary with everything built-in. https://www.getzola.org
gota - Gota: DataFrames and data wrangling in Go (Golang)
gazpacho - 🥫 The simple, fast, and modern web scraping library
bitmap - Simple dense bitmap index in Go with binary operators