sord
crystal
sord | crystal | |
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8 | 239 | |
285 | 19,110 | |
- | 0.3% | |
4.6 | 9.8 | |
9 months ago | about 12 hours ago | |
Ruby | Crystal | |
MIT License | 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.
sord
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How do you document your code?
I tend to follow along using the YardDoc comment style. It has many small things I love about it; an example is when yardoc is followed it can be used to generate RBS/Sorbet type files with the sord gem, you can also generate application documents similar to rdoc/sdoc.
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Ruby compiler is now 22–170% faster than Ruby's default implementation for Stripe's production API traffic
You may be interesting in checking out the Sord gem. If you do YARDOC based comments and documentation in your code not only does it make your code pretty easy to understand. But you can also generate Sorbet RBI and Ruby RBS files based off of your documentation. It's pretty much a require in any new project I start working with.
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Do people use type signatures for ruby actively?
I love using yard as well and if you use it you can use sord and based on you yard annotates it'll build sorbet types for your code. I've used it on my last few projects and it's helped building your types setup amazingly easy.
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Static Typing in Ruby 3 Gives Me a Headache (But I Could Grow to Like It)
Sord was originally developed to generate Sorbet type signature files from YARD comments. Sorbet is a type checking system developed by Stripe, and it does not use anything specific to Ruby 3 but is instead a custom DSL for defining types. However, Sord has recently been upgraded to support generation of RBS files (Ru*by **Signature*). This means that instead of having to write all your Ruby 3 type signature files by hand (which are standalone—Ruby 3 doesn't support inline typing in Ruby code itself), you can write YARD comments—just like with Solargraph—and autogenerate the signature files.
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Ruby: How Can Something So Beautiful Become So Ugly
Why isn't anyone talking about Sord?? I see that as being a great solution. https://github.com/AaronC81/sord#example
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Differences between Sorbet and RBS
Go for both until things evolve : https://github.com/AaronC81/sord
- the 'sord' gem can automatically generate .rbi and .rbs type signature files from YARD doc
crystal
- A Language for Humans and Computers
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Top Paying Programming Technologies 2024
27. Crystal - $77,104
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Crystal 1.11.0 Is Released
I like the first code example on https://crystal-lang.org
# A very basic HTTP server
- Is Fortran "A Dead Language"?
- Choosing Go at American Express
- Odin Programming Language
- I Love Ruby
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Ruby 3.3's YJIT: Faster While Using Less Memory
Obviously as an interpreted language, it's never going to be as fast as something like C, Rust, or Go. Traditionally the ruby maintainers have not designed or optimized for pure speed, but that is changing, and the language is definitely faster these days compared to a decade ago.
If you like the ruby syntax/language but want the speed of a compiled language, it's also worth checking out Crystal[^1]. It's mostly ruby-like in syntax, style, and developer ergonomics.[^2] Although it's an entirely different language. Also a tiny community.
[1]: https://crystal-lang.org/
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What languages are useful for contribution to the GNOME project.
Crystal is a nice language that's not only simple to read and write but performs very well too. And the documentation is amazing as well.
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Jets: The Ruby Serverless Framework
Ruby is a super fun scripting language. I much prefer it to python when I need something with a little more "ooomph" than bash. It's just...nice...to write in. Ruby performance has come a long way in the last decade as well. There's libraries for pretty much everything.
My modern programming toolkit is basically golang + ruby + bash and I am never left wanting.
I do find Crystal (https://crystal-lang.org/) really interesting and am hoping it has its own "ruby on rails" moment that helps the language reach a tipping point in popularity. All the beauty of ruby with all of the speed of Go (and then some, it often compares favorably to languages like rust in benchmarks).
What are some alternatives?
tapioca - The swiss army knife of RBI generation
zig - General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
YARD - YARD is a Ruby Documentation tool. The Y stands for "Yay!"
Nim - Nim is a statically typed compiled systems programming language. It combines successful concepts from mature languages like Python, Ada and Modula. Its design focuses on efficiency, expressiveness, and elegance (in that order of priority).
steep - Static type checker for Ruby
go - The Go programming language
rubydoc.info - Next generation rdoc.info site
Elixir - Elixir is a dynamic, functional language for building scalable and maintainable applications
yard-doctest - Doctests from YARD examples
mint-lang - :leaves: A refreshing programming language for the front-end web
yard-markdown - yard plugin to generate markdown documentation
Odin - Odin Programming Language