tapir
realworld
tapir | realworld | |
---|---|---|
14 | 121 | |
1,294 | 78,316 | |
0.9% | 0.4% | |
9.8 | 8.1 | |
about 8 hours ago | about 2 months ago | |
Scala | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
tapir
-
what library/framework should I use for backend development?
You're not confined to the usual suggestions below (play, http4s). There's a ton of options. (I wrote test cases using a bunch of different frameworks a few years ago at https://github.com/hohonuuli/msdemos). Having written services using a variety of frameworks in production, I would strongly suggest using one that auto-generates API docs (openapi, swagger) for you. That will save you a huge amount of time later on. For heavier services, like the one at https://fathomnet.org/, I tend to the Java side (Quarkus is my current top choice, but Micronaut and Helidon are both great). For everything else I use Scala. My go-to right now is tapir using a vertx backend. See https://tapir.softwaremill.com/
-
Micronaut vs others(Spring Boot, Quarkus and co.)
Tapir is a Scala framework. (which runs on the JDK) Since the recent release of version 1.0, it's become my go to for many projects. It doens't provide much in the way of integrations with 3rd party frameworks, but I actually prefer that. It does autogenerate great swagger docs though.
-
Programming language comparison by reimplementing the same transit data app
I do wonder where the recommendation to use http4s for beginners came from. http4s is a very capable library (and if you care much about composition it is excellent), but I wouldn't describe the documentation as beginner friendly.
A slightly better starting point for scala 3 + type-safe server building is tapir e.g. https://github.com/softwaremill/tapir/blob/master/examples3/... . With that, you get a declarative definition of your endpoints (+ error types, auth, etc.) that you can use for both servers and clients, which comes very handy when writing integration tests of course.
> absolutely ridiculous the fetishization of extremely complex FP and type-level hacking that goes on in the ecosystem
An alternative way to look at it is that there is a lot of essential domain complexity that gets encoded via the type system to let the compiler do the hard work. That "extremely complex FP" does not arrive out of nowhere - I really recommend at least skimming through the slides from rossabaker, the http4s designer, that motivate where the core type signature comes from https://rossabaker.github.io/boston-http4s/#2
I suppose one of the "features" that I like about the (typelevel) community is that the approach of "worse is better" is not taken, and a lot of effort is expended to make things correct, modular and orthogonal. This has the drawback of increased upfront complexity, that anecdotally pays off the moment your compiler does not error and the program runs as intended.
-
Scala.js AWS Lambda, using Scala 3
Did you try tapir? There is a module for deploying aws lambda with Scala js. Not sure whether it is compatible with Scala 3, I am sticking with Scala 2 until Scala 3 gets more mature.
-
Library recommendations?
I'm aware, but it's a design decision that was made on purpose, and which I find in practice not a big problem at all.
-
Monorepo: seeking for an advice for bi-lang project
Backend is source of truth for types on frontend (backend generated OpenAPI definition with tapir, frontend takes it with orval)
-
Experienced dev new to Scala looking for a quick answer to get me on the right track - Advice on *standard* Scala framework stack to quickly set up a web-app backend ;
In all cases I would strongly suggest to have a look at Tapir, regardless of the server implementation that you pick.
-
tAPIr 1.0 release [INFOGRAPHIC]
Check the infographic below, to see this tool history, functionalities and more. Make sure, to take tAPIr for a spin here and share your feedback with us in the comment section!
-
Scala vs Kotlin for REST API
Tapir is awesome, and you can pick the server backend according to your preferred ecosystem (for instance http4s + doobie, Zio + Quill, Akka + Slick, ...)
-
Resources for learning about http4s and Typelevel ecosystem?
Finally I would strongly recommend having a look at Tapir. Even if you don't need to share endpoints or generate OpenAPI documentation, it provides a really neat abstraction on top of http4s.
realworld
-
Yet Another Tour of an Open-Source Elm SPA
In light of all this, it became exceedingly clear that someone else needed to step in and help. Why not me? Well, it can be me. And, after 3 months of development, I am happy to announce (again) dwayne/elm-conduit (demo), an open-source Elm SPA for RealWorld's Medium.com clone.
-
Ask HN: Reference applications to idiomatically learn languages/frameworks?
https://github.com/gothinkster/realworld
It's just for web app (a Todo app). Your GIS AND CLI ideas are interesting, I haven't seen anything similar to realworld for those.
-
10 GitHub Repos to Become a Better Backend Developer
View on GitHub
-
Rage: Fast web framework compatible with Rails
So what would be a better benchmark? Perhaps a "standard" "real world" app, like https://github.com/gothinkster/realworld
Or something simpler?
- Realworld: “The mother of all demo apps” – Exemplary fullstack Medium.com clone
-
Monitoring Spring Boot with OpenTelemetry
RealWorld example app is a full-stack application called "Conduit" that consists of a backend that serves JSON API and a frontend UI. There are numerous implementations for different languages and frameworks, but in this tutorial you will be using the Spring backend and the React frontend.
- how do replace or set value on {item.Title} on dynamic html in map
-
A common question about how to find repositories to contribute to
Github has millions of projects, some large fraction with more than 100 stars, so it doesn't seem like you are searching very hard. But more importantly, why "100 stars"? Stars are meaningless and arbitrary. Many developers use stars like bookmarks. I just did a quick search and noticed a project like realworld (just a demo for learning, 65 contributors) has have more stars than Bitcoin (900+ developers, perhaps you have heard of it?)
- [DUDA] ¿Algún proyecto de prueba o idea para empezar a practicar en DevOps?
-
Any good project links which demonstrate the effectiveness of composition?
I feel you, context API sometimes overcomplicates everything. Let me introduce to you RealWorld. It is a great project that uses composition to make its structure scalable. It is actually a codebase that implements various fragments of a larger scale project such as Medium or Twitter. Check it out here: https://github.com/gothinkster/realworld. I hope this helps!
What are some alternatives?
smithy4s - https://disneystreaming.github.io/smithy4s/
fastapi-realworld-example-app - Backend logic implementation for https://github.com/gothinkster/realworld with awesome FastAPI
http4s-jwt-auth - :lock: Opinionated JWT authentication library for Http4s
spicedb - Open Source, Google Zanzibar-inspired permissions database to enable fine-grained access control for customer applications
distage-example - Example project built using distage, tagless final, http4s, doobie and zio
jhipster-sample-app - This is a sample application created with JHipster
scala-http-client - Extends the akka-http-client with retry logic, error handling, logging and signing
fingerprintjs - Browser fingerprinting library. Accuracy of this version is 40-60%, accuracy of the commercial Fingerprint Identification is 99.5%. V4 of this library is BSL licensed.
pfps-shopping-cart - :shopping_cart: The Shopping Cart application developed in the book "Practical FP in Scala: A hands-on approach"
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
AkkaGRPC - Akka gRPC
nestjs-realworld-example-app - Exemplary real world backend API built with NestJS + TypeORM / Prisma