stripity_stripe
Outline
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stripity_stripe | Outline | |
---|---|---|
3 | 194 | |
915 | 24,001 | |
1.4% | 4.8% | |
9.1 | 9.9 | |
4 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Elixir | TypeScript | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Business Source License 1.1 |
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.
stripity_stripe
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Don't be that open-source user, don't be me
I think this needs a big qualifier. I feel the same way, when it's a project I'm capable of doing the work for. For example, I recently needed a way to deal with Stripe early fraud warnings and the library I used didn't have those yet, so I added them (this was all on my own time I should add)[1].
However, there are tons of dependencies that we use for all sorts of things that are highly complex where very few people would be able to send a PR (openssl for example). Things in highly complex codebases, or deeply unfamiliar languages, etc. I maintain a forked linux driver for a wireless card for example, and I don't expect there's more than a handful of people that could hack on it without introducing tears and devastation.
For the projects I maintain, I would just say, "if you can, please consider a PR. If you're not sure it would be accepted I'm happy to be asked! If you can't send a PR, give as much info as you can and be polite. With that we're good.
[1]: https://github.com/beam-community/stripity_stripe/pull/728
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Complete integration with Stripe in a Phoenix application
I recently had to create a subscription payment solution for Tolc, a C++ to other languages bindings compiler. During the process I wish I had a simple to follow, unassuming tutorial that I could follow. Since I couldn't find one, I wrote one myself! Even though I could use the excellent stripity_stripe, I still had to overcome some pitfalls.
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Learning Ruby: Things I Like, Things I Miss from Python
I'm going to attempt to answer by way of links to active projects for you:
Stripe, including webhooks support, actively developed: https://github.com/code-corps/stripity_stripe
Global pay solution that supports everything: they are all a bit crap you're right, the best I've found is https://github.com/aviabird/gringotts and ex_money really is amazing that integrates with it (I would suggest it's better than the equivalent ruby gem). To be fair I'm not sure I'd want to use the pay gem with anything complex as you need to be able to use the specific quirks of each API properly.
You're also right about noticed, after looking into it more it would be worth building for elixir for sure. Ravenx represents a start but it's unmaintained and doesn't have a huge number of strategies. It depends on how much I needed to do notifications like this. For the apps that I've built we've just needed database and grouped emails sent once per day, no need for texts or slack etc. There's no reason these couldn't be added fairly simply but I agree noticed is very neat.
Outline
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My Open-Source toolkit for 2024
Outline is another open-source tool I’ve been using lately for note-taking and knowledgebase purposes. Previously, my app of choice for this was Bear.app. It worked out well for markdown notes, but I needed something more like a wiki to organize content. I discovered Outline in late 2022 and found it to be a snappy experience and just what I needed: nestable collections, markdown, and a decent search experience. Outline delivers that and more. It also offers real-time collaborative editing like Google Docs and public shares for either a single page or for all nested pages of a share.
- Ask HN: Do you use something like Jira to organize your personal life?
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Outline: Self hostable, realtime, Markdown compatible knowledge base
Just be careful that while it is self-hostable and the source is available, it is not open source [1,2]. If this is something important for your consideration before using it.
[1] https://github.com/outline/outline/blob/main/LICENSE
[2] https://fossa.com/blog/business-source-license-requirements-...
- Internes Wiki-Software
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Alternative to Joplin that is web-based based?
Try outline or trillium
- Outline: OSS self-hostable team knowledge base
- Outline – Business-Source licensed Notion clone
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Hosting Outline, a notion competitor in 15 minutes (on clever cloud)
Outline is a simple, fast and sweet Wiki software, I recommend, this is an open source projet, the community is reactive and even the SaaS platform pricing is really honest !
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Plane – open-source Jira alternative
Have a look at https://www.getoutline.com/
I'm really impressed by the product. Seems to be a good Confluence alternative.
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I created a versus list for note taking apps (last tab). What do you guys think? Did I miss anything?
- Outline
What are some alternatives?
Stripe - Stripe API client for Elixir
Wiki.js - Wiki.js | A modern and powerful wiki app built on Node.js
gringotts - A complete payment library for Elixir and Phoenix Framework
BookStack - A platform to create documentation/wiki content built with PHP & Laravel
cashier - Cashier is an Elixir library that aims to be an easy to use payment gateway, whilst offering the fault tolerance and scalability benefits of being built on top of Erlang/OTP
outline-wiki-docker-compose - Installation and docker compose to self host outline wiki: https://www.getoutline.com/
airbax - Exception tracking from Elixir to Airbrake
AppFlowy - AppFlowy is an open-source alternative to Notion. You are in charge of your data and customizations. Built with Flutter and Rust.
unsplash-elixir - Unsplash API client for Elixir
openvpn-install - Set up your own OpenVPN server on Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, CentOS or Arch Linux.
dnsimple - The DNSimple API client for Elixir.
focalboard - Focalboard is an open source, self-hosted alternative to Trello, Notion, and Asana.