solargraph
DefinitelyTyped
solargraph | DefinitelyTyped | |
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16 | 158 | |
1,847 | 47,143 | |
- | 0.5% | |
7.4 | 10.0 | |
2 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Ruby | TypeScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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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.
solargraph
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A few words on Ruby's type annotations state
My favorite typing solution so far in ruby is Solargraph https://solargraph.org/.
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Nice Ruby IDEs
Solagraph: https://solargraph.org
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Using SyntaxSuggest with Solargraph LSP!
Yay! For those who don’t know solargraph provides a language server protocol (LSP) for Ruby so that your IDE (like vscode) can know more about the code you’re writing https://solargraph.org/.
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Ruby Delights Built into the Language: No Gems Required
If you're looking for IDE-level language assistance, I can't help you, but since you mentioned nvim: I use regular vim with CoC / Conquer of Completion (vim plugin; LSP server, may not strictly be necessary for nvim), Solargraph (Ruby Gem; language server), and Rubocop (also a Gem) for linting. I previously/still use ALE (vim plugin; Asynchronous Lint Engine) because I haven't gotten CoC+Solargraph to play nice with Rubocop, probably due to something silly.
https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim
https://solargraph.org/
https://rubocop.org/
https://github.com/dense-analysis/ale
My impression with all of this running under MacVim... it's plenty responsive. It can take a while for Solargraph to index everything on startup if you're working in a big project; once it loads, it's snappy. (There's probably a way to cache that startup scan.)
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I need help with lsp-mode setup
I am trying to use lsp-mode for ruby via solargraph and for Rails era templates using web-mode via lsp-tailwindcss and both seems to kinda sorta work but neither one is really giving me all the features that I see that others have.
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State of the Ruby language server (LSP) ecosystem / looking for suggestions
https://github.com/castwide/solargraph Seems to be the most mature/developed one. Slow on my system, bad documentation. Language docs are shipped as "cores" you imperatively download that float around in your home directory; this is messy and prone to failure. Doesn't have any docs for versions of ruby past 2.7.
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Trouble With Solargraph Completions
I have recently installed Solargraph and can see that when I open a Ruby file that the LSP is attached to my buffer via `LspInfo`. However whenever I am trying to do some very basic completions or see what kind of methods are available for an object, literally nothing happens. What I am aiming for is something like on the official Solargraph website: https://solargraph.org/
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Linting and Auto-formatting Ruby Code With RuboCop
If you use Vim or Neovim, you can display RuboCop's diagnostics through coc.nvim. You need to install the Solargraph language server (gem install solargraph), followed by the coc-solargraph extension (:CocInstall coc-solargraph). Afterwards, configure your coc-settings.json file as shown below:
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anyone here using neovim for ruby on rails projects?
The builtin LSP works well with solargraph to provide autocompletion.
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Sorbet: Stripe's Type Checker for Ruby
Sorbet and/or RBS seems like they may be the future given how popular typescript is with JS programmers these days. There are some other projects that assist programmers without relying on formal type definitions in the source or shadow typing files:
Solargraph combines inference and insight from YARD docs (standard for many gems, plus Castwide has written more YARD for the standard library) to make some pretty good guesses. Crucially it has plugins that add the insights from popular gems with static analysis (e.g. reek, rubocop). I maintain solargraph-rails, which parses your Ruby to make guesses about (surprise) Rails.
The typeprof gem can help IDE plugins make typing guesses based on your tests. This project is interesting to me because it's going into Ruby 3.1 so I think it reflects awareness from the core ruby team that many programmers are not ready to add types to their code.
solargraph: https://github.com/castwide/solargraph
DefinitelyTyped
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⚛️ Explaining React's Types
Prior to React 18, it used to include an implicit children prop, making it suitable for components expected to have children. For a long time, though, the implicit children prop type has been removed according to React 18's type changes.
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Introduction to TypeScript — What is TypeScript?
Additionally, because TypeScript has a well established and widely used install-base, there are already many different definition files in the wild for supporting non-TypeScript supporting projects. One of the more extensive collections of these typings lives at the DefinitelyTyped repository, which publishes the package's community typings under the package names @types/your-package-name (where your-package-name is the name of the project you're looking for typings of) that you can look for on your package manager.
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5 Resources Each TypeScript Developer Should Know About
View on GitHub
- DefinitelyTyped
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Show HN: OpenAPI DevTools – Chrome ext. that generates an API spec as you browse
Firefox maintain a library for unified extension API https://github.com/mozilla/webextension-polyfill
Their type definition for HAR request isn't exported https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/blob/mast...
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Typescript - Union types e type guards
type NumberOrString = number | string; type Status = "idle" | "loading" | "success" | "failure" // React useState, can receive a value or a function as parameter to serve as initial value. // https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/blob/a03856975a17eba524739676affbf70ac4078176/types/react/v17/index.d.ts#L920 function useState(initialState: S | (() => S)): [S, Dispatch>];
- If you ever get called out for using long type names, remember this exists
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Declaring JSX types in TypeScript 5.1
The TypeScript pull request was merged, so Sebastian (who helps maintain the React type definitions) exercised new powers in this pull request to the DefinitelyTyped repository for the React type definitions. At the time of writing, this pull request is still open, but once merged and shipped the React community we will feel its benefits.
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DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED_EXPERIMENTAL_REACT_NODES[keyof DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED_EXPERIMENTAL_REACT_NODES]
there is an open issue: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/issues/61616
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Announcing TypeScript 5.1
Relatively infrequently. Normally, if an npm package is popular and doesn’t have its own types, there will be a community provided types declaration file available from https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped
What are some alternatives?
ruby-lsp - An opinionated language server for Ruby
vite-tsconfig-paths - Support for TypeScript's path mapping in Vite
sorbet - A fast, powerful type checker designed for Ruby
tsyringe - Lightweight dependency injection container for JavaScript/TypeScript
steep - Static type checker for Ruby
supabase-js - An isomorphic Javascript client for Supabase. Query your Supabase database, subscribe to realtime events, upload and download files, browse typescript examples, invoke postgres functions via rpc, invoke supabase edge functions, query pgvector.
vscode-ruby - Provides Ruby language and debugging support for Visual Studio Code
typegoose - Typegoose - Define Mongoose models using TypeScript classes.
Roda - Routing Tree Web Toolkit
TypeScript - TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.
TypeORM - ORM for TypeScript and JavaScript. Supports MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, MS SQL Server, Oracle, SAP Hana, WebSQL databases. Works in NodeJS, Browser, Ionic, Cordova and Electron platforms.
bpmn-visualization-js - A TypeScript library for visualizing process execution data on BPMN diagrams