Solidus
nopCommerce
Solidus | nopCommerce | |
---|---|---|
14 | 17 | |
4,904 | 8,935 | |
0.4% | 1.0% | |
9.9 | 9.6 | |
15 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Ruby | C# | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
Solidus
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OOP vs. services for organizing business logic: is there a third way?
github.com/solidusio/solidus (72k lines): E-commerce platform.
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Are there any open source Rails templates for online stores .
Not really basic, but Solidus.
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Floyd's E-Commerce: from Squarespace to Solidus
In 2014, Floyd was lesser known as The Floyd Leg. Our website was on Squarespace for both its e-commerce solution and web hosting. A large part of our current success was realized by choosing to invest in a custom web application that’s built with Solidus. With our website no longer abstracted by a WYSIWYG ("What You See Is What You Get") editor, we partnered with Nebulab to handle full-stack web development. Solidus (Spree, at the time, before it was acquired, forked, and renamed) was recommended to power the e-commerce part of our application. The decision to go custom came after a successful Kickstarter campaign back in 2015 for the Floyd Legs—a set of four steel table legs that fastened onto any flat surface to quickly put a table together. We proved a market need for adaptable and sustainable furniture design. The co-founders, Kyle Hoff and Alex O’Dell, knew there were more product offerings on the roadmap as they championed Floyd to be the furniture solution for all apartment essentials. Fast forward to 2019, Floyd is seeking to be the furniture solution for the entire home worldwide.
- Racket for E-Commerce
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ROR ecommerce tutorial?
I'd say Solidus and Spree are you best options rather than trying to roll out you own ecommerce solution.
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E-commerce
Completely agree. Alternatively, I would look for an open source project like solidus https://github.com/solidusio/solidus
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Which has the larger dev community in 2021, Spree or Solidus?
Solidus: https://github.com/solidusio/solidus/releases/tag/v3.1.1
- Potenciando tu carrera profesional a través del Open Source
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Are there any open source Rails templates for online stores?
Check out https://solidus.io/
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Ask HN: Options to build a little online store
Hey there! I'm about to set up a small eshop (expected around 50 orders/month) for a relative (an artist). I've contemplated what's available, and I'm not very happy with what I found.
- There's Woocommerce, which I've installed and tried doing basic setup, and it's too deeply bloated in the Wordpress ecosystem. My first impression from Prestashop was that it's going to be quite a similar PHP mess
- I don't want to get vendor locked-in with things like Shopify. They also don't seem to offer much design customizability (I'm a web dev and there's quite a unique design concept for the site from the artist)
- Searching GitHub for ecommerce, Solidus[1] looked quite promising, however, it also slightly overshoots the border of 'too complex' for me, and their docs on integrating a custom payments provider (a strict requirement - not US based) aren't really great
[1]: https://github.com/solidusio/solidus
So my question is: are there any borderline-pet projects I've missed?
I've been doing web dev for over 2 years now, so I'm also thinking about building my own almost-serverless solution. Is that plausible in reasonable time (wouldn't want to give this more than 2 weeks), or are there too many holes to fall into even though the sensitive part of payments is handled by a simple integration?
One more bit of info, together with building this, their whole web is going to be transferred to a new CMS, likely the Netlify headless CMS (IMO a very cool concept - no backend, frontend uses GitHub http API to directly commit any saved changes). Therefore ideally I'd love to integrate the products inventory into this CMS, which saves data into markdown + front matter, and then can be built into HTML or any JSON to be fetched by frontend - that's why I said almost-serverless.
nopCommerce
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Dotnet.World.News(Monday, September, 11, 2023)
🔴 nopCommerce: ASP.NET Core eCommerce software. nopCommerce is a free and open-source shopping cart.
- Java guy maybe moving to .NET -- what to learn?
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Top 4 ASP.NET and .NET Open-Source Projects
nopCommerce’s GitHub statistics:
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Beginner wanting to build e-commerce website
An eCommerce website is a very complicated endeavor. Take a look at this open source eCommerce solution to see just how complicated it is.
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My experience of installing nopCommerce on Azure
There are two ways to deploy the app on Azure. I don't find nopCommerce in the Azure app gallery as of now though. So I have tried FTP deployment and app publishing from Visual Studio. The best way is to publish it from Visual Studio. FTP deployment takes too long to transfer files to Azure. That may be due to the app service plan, which has basic hardware performance. But the file transfer is quicker with the Visual Studio deployment. I can either clone the app from nopCommerce's GitHub site or download it from releases to do FTP deployment. To publish from Visual Studio, I need to download publish profile from Azure App Service. In Visual Studio, when you publish the app, you can just import the publish profile that you downloaded from Azure app service.
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Examples of good back-end
Website: https://www.nopcommerce.com/
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A Philosophy of Software Design – Book Summary and Notes
> Can you point me to a codebase that does not use comments, as a model of how that looks in practice?
Once we actively encourage comments, this is what we get. It was totally unnecessary -
https://github.com/nopSolutions/nopCommerce/blob/develop/src...
I welcome this type of comments which state the obvious and goes beyond what the code in front of you can state -
"// If every heap's gen2 or gen3 size is less than this threshold we will do a blocking GC."
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/dotnet/runtime/main/src/co...
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what should i use to make my site
If you want to use with the latest .NetCore c# code you could look at https://www.nopcommerce.com which is a great open source developers platform
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Migration from .NET5 to .NET 6: Performance benchmarks
Learn more on the .net open-source platform's website or visit our GitHub repository
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64-bit Visual Studio 2022 now available!
As a test I just cloned https://github.com/nopSolutions/nopCommerce
What are some alternatives?
Spree Commerce - A headless open source e-commerce platform for global brands
GrandNode - Open source, headless, multi-tenant eCommerce platform built with .NET Core, MongoDB, AWS DocumentDB, Azure CosmosDB, Vue.js.
Open Classifieds - Yclas Self Hosted is a powerful script that can transform any domain into a fully customizable classifieds site within a few seconds.
SimplCommerce - A simple, cross platform, modulith ecommerce system built on .NET
Active Merchant - Active Merchant is a simple payment abstraction library extracted from Shopify. The aim of the project is to feel natural to Ruby users and to abstract as many parts as possible away from the user to offer a consistent interface across all supported gateways.
SmartStoreNET - Open Source ASP.NET MVC Enterprise eCommerce Shopping Cart Solution
stripe-ruby - Ruby library for the Stripe API.
Virto Commerce - Virto Commerce B2B Innovation Platform
ROR Ecommerce - Ruby on Rails Ecommerce platform, perfect for your small business solution.
Stripe.Net - Stripe.net is a sync/async .NET 4.6.1+ client, and a portable class library for stripe.com.
Shoppe - The tryshoppe.com website repository
BeYourMarket - OpenSource ASP.NET to build your own marketplace