swagger-petstore
gqlgen
Our great sponsors
swagger-petstore | gqlgen | |
---|---|---|
28 | 43 | |
16,502 | 9,598 | |
0.8% | 1.2% | |
8.5 | 9.3 | |
7 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Mustache | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
swagger-petstore
-
Simplifying Angular Development with Swagger: A Step-by-Step Guide
Swagger offers more than just a user-friendly interface for exploring APIs. It also provides multiple generators that can produce code typically written by hand. As an Angular developer, this blog post will focus on the typescript-angular generator.
-
Generate Kotlin client for a complex web API
Failed to create a client for Java. The generator imports Java's types instead of TeamCity's. There are bugs described for the Java client in both the Swagger generator and the OpenAPI generator. Let's see how the generator behaves when building a Kotlin client.
- Alguma alma caridosa UI/UX dev, para um serviço púbico gratuito, livre e de código aberto?
-
Recommendations for Rust Open-API client generators? (Looking to experiment with api.congress.gov)
[swagger-codegen](https://github.com/swagger-api/swagger-codegen) generates code from an OpenAPI definition, and it supports Rust code output (client and/or server).
-
Document your API with OpenAPI standard
Swagger contains three greats tools to work with the specification: Swagger UI, Swagger Editor and Swagger Codegen. The Swagger UI renders OpenAPI specs as interactive API documentation, Swagger Editor is a browser-based editor where you can write OpenAPI specs and Swagger Codegen generates server stubs and client libraries from an OpenAPI spec like the OpenAPI generator.
-
Using Swagger API
We ran into some minor issues (#1201, #1210, #1355, #1356 and #1769) and fixed some stuff we stumbled upon along the way, although it didn't really bother us as well (#1451 and #1769).
-
Integrating Swagger/OpenAPI generated python server with existing Flask application
I am interested in integrating a swagger-codegen generated Python server with an existing Flask application. swagger-codegen generates a Python implementation based on the Connexion library from a Swagger API specification.
-
How to replace type methods in Swift to improve testability
The method takes a query, String, and a completion block, (Result<[String], Error>) -> Void, which is triggered once the request finishes. Its internal implementation doesn't really matter since it could be from an external framework or generated by a code generator from the API specification.
-
Where are the documentation for server stub generation with swagger codegen?
The Java codegen options are here: https://github.com/swagger-api/swagger-codegen/issues/7795 (believe it or not).
-
Should I migrate to TS?
Creating TS types/interfaces manually can be tedious. But, if you have JSON responses of your APIs, you can quickly convert those JSON responses to TS interfaces using VS Code extension Paste JSON as Code. Also, if your backend already uses Swagger for API, you can auto-generate all the TS types of your API models using swagger-codegen
gqlgen
-
Who moved my error codes? Adding error types to your GoLang GraphQL Server
GraphQL’s spec, as it turns out, does not specify how servers should handle internal errors at all, leaving it entirely to the choice of the frameworks’ creators. Take for example our GoLang GraphQL framework of choice - gqlgen. It makes no distinction between intentional and unexpected errors: all errors are returned as-is to the client within the error message. Internal errors, which often contain sensitive information like network details and internal URIs, would leak to clients easily if not caught manually by the programmer.
-
“Go is hard to justify unless at massive scale”
Better look into this one: https://github.com/99designs/gqlgen for GraphQL powered by Go. It's spec first approach and requires the least boilerplate code to write. It also incorporates seamlessly with Apollo Federation.
-
Go with PHP
I left PHP for Go.
- with http://sqlc.dev I don't have to write ORM or model code anymore.
- with http://goa.design I can have well-documented API's that any team can generate a client for in any language. It also generates the HTTP JSON and gRPC servers for me so I can focus on my logic.
- with https://github.com/99designs/gqlgen I can define GraphQL revolvers that play well with sqlc (any RDBMS) or I can use a key-value store.
- speaking of key-value stores, Go allows them to be embedded! Even SQLite now has the https://litestream.io/ project to make it super simple to use a durable, always backed-up SQLite database even in a serverless context.
Go is faster, uses less memory, and has really-well designed stdlib without all the bugs I used to face trying to use the PHP stdlib.
-
Golang tech stack
Gqlgen if I need GraphQL
-
Scalable APIs with GraphQL Server Codegen Preset
Some of these features are inspired by gqlgen so check it out if you need a Golang GraphQL server implementation.
-
How to develop a Web app in go
If you want to use GraphQL: https://github.com/99designs/gqlgen
-
Libraries you use most of your projects?
In addition to the ones you mentioned, I also always use: + sqlc - Compile SQL to type-safe code + gqlgen - generate GraphQL server from schema + oapi-codegen - Go client and server boilerplate from OpenAPI 3 specifications + pester - Go http calls with retries and backoff + backoff - exponential backoff algorithm in Go
-
Ent: An Entity Framework for Go
I have no experience in Django but in Ent with GraphQL.
Ent is not a full-featured web framework so you need to implement many of features by your own or use other libraries (e.g. http server and session management).
If you are only looking for ORM + GraphQL then I highly recommend trying Entgql, an Ent extension for GraphQL with Gqlgen library [1]. Once you define an ORM schema, it will generate GraphQL Query for Relay server. Still you need to implement GraphQL Mutations by your own but at least it will create Input types for you (both for Create/Update).
-
Best packages?
gqlgen for GraphQL services. It's well documented and maintained.
-
Decent examples querying models from Postgres
For me sqlc work wonders. If you are developing a user facing api and are fine to go with graphql, with gqlgen you can even autobind (search the page for @goModel) the models that sqlc generates from your queries. A glorious match
What are some alternatives?
openapi-generator - OpenAPI Generator allows generation of API client libraries (SDK generation), server stubs, documentation and configuration automatically given an OpenAPI Spec (v2, v3)
graphql-go - GraphQL server with a focus on ease of use
servant-purescript - Translate servant API to purescript code, with the help of purescript-bridge.
Fiber - ⚡️ Express inspired web framework written in Go
oapi-codegen - Generate Go client and server boilerplate from OpenAPI 3 specifications
Gin - Gin is a HTTP web framework written in Go (Golang). It features a Martini-like API with much better performance -- up to 40 times faster. If you need smashing performance, get yourself some Gin.
NSwag - The Swagger/OpenAPI toolchain for .NET, ASP.NET Core and TypeScript.
Echo - High performance, minimalist Go web framework
yesod-persistent - A RESTful Haskell web framework built on WAI.
go-kit - A standard library for microservices.
haskell-bitmex-client - Haskell API for BitMEX
fasthttprouter - A high performance fasthttp request router that scales well