templ
Task
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templ
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Migrating Next.js App to GO + Templ & HTMX
Templ for the templating engine. Although Go already have a decent templating engine, I'm planning to use Templ because it's more powerful and flexible. I really like this library and I'm planning to use it in my future projects.
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π€ My top 3 Go packages that I wish I'd known about earlier
β¨ In recent months, I have been developing web projects using GOTTHA stack: Go + Templ + Tailwind CSS + htmx + Alpine.js. As soon as I'm ready to talk about all the subtleties and pitfalls, I'll post it on my social networks.
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Go + Hypermedia - A Learning Journey (Part 1)
Templ - HTML templating for Go
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Go Beyond the Basics: Mastering Toast Notifications with Go and HTMX
html/template - we will be using the standard HTML templating library built into Go. It is a great library and perfect for simple things like this, though if you have a more complicated project (I assume you do), I would look into using something like templ.
- Templ β Build HTML with Go
- Show HN: CPU Prices on eBay
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LuaX: A Lua Dialect with JSX
Cool project and if it works for you and you're happy, that's all what counts.
When I read the article, I was thinking that Go templates were used wrong. I was thinking there must be a way to define the template so you inject the content and don't need to define the start and the end of the html, but instead yield a block of other html as some kind of argument. I was trying to look it up, but couldn't find documentation on this. Maybe the author is right and I'm wrong.
And I was wondering why the author isn't using something like Templ [0], which is kind of JSX with Go as hosting language. Probably because it needs the preprocessor / compile step?
[0] https://github.com/a-h/templ
- Templ: A language for writing HTML user interfaces in Go
Task
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Show HN: Workflow Orchestrator in Golang
So many tools in this space! This one looks a little bit like go-task, but it seems maybe better for production workflows because if timeout support, while go-task seems more aimed to command line work/makefile replacement.
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https://github.com/go-task/task
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Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
View on GitHub
- Task: A task runner / alternative to GNU Make
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Using Make β writing less Makefile
A similar tool is `task` https://taskfile.dev/ . It is quite capable and also a single executable. I've grown to quite like it.
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Whatβs with DevOps engineers using `make` of all things?
check out tasks - a bit of a learning curve but arguably more powerful imo
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Go Development with Hot Reload Using Taskfile
That's when I came across taskfile.dev. Task is an automation tool designed to be more accessible than other options, such as GNU Make.
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Poetry (Packaging) in motion
Full disclosure, I did not review Conda or Hatch fully. Not that there is anything explicitly wrong with either of them. Conda is too specific to the scientific community for my general taste. Hatch seems to go well with Conda and also uses the PyProject manifest as well. It's nice that it gives you several built in tools, similar to commit hooks, but I tend to like to roll my own via a Taskfile and run them with Poetry.
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Building RESTful API with Hexagonal Architecture in Go
Taskfile is a tool for streamlining repetitive development tasks. It helps automate activities like building, testing, and deploying applications. Unlike Makefile, Taskfile uses YAML for configuration, making it more readable and user-friendly.
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We built the fastest CI in the world. It failed
9. We test everything with another promotion which runs make targets which build docker containers to run python scripts (pytest)
This is also built by a complicated web of wildcarded makefile targets, which need to be interoperable and support a few if/else cases for specific components.
My plan is to migrate all of this to something simpler and more straightforward, or at least more maintainable, which is honestly probably going to turn into taskfile[0] instead of makefiles, and then simple python scripts for the glue that ties everything together or does more complex logic.
My hope is that it can be more straightforward and easier to maintain, with more component-ized logic, but realistically every step in that labyrinthine build process (and that's just the open-source version!) came from a decision made by a very talented team of engineers who know far more about the process and the product than I do. At this point I'm wondering if it would make 'more sense' to replace it with a giant python script of some kind and get access to all the logic we need all at once (it would not).
[0] https://taskfile.dev/
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Exploring GCP With Terraform: Setting Up The Environment And Project
task - a task runner and a replacement for make
What are some alternatives?
go-htmx-examples - go-htmx-examples
just - π€ Just a command runner
quicktemplate - Fast, powerful, yet easy to use template engine for Go. Optimized for speed, zero memory allocations in hot paths. Up to 20x faster than html/template
doit - task management & automation tool
pongo2 - Django-syntax like template-engine for Go
goreleaser - Deliver Go binaries as fast and easily as possible
bass - a low fidelity scripting language for project infrastructure
boilr - :zap: boilerplate template manager that generates files or directories from template repositories
gomponents - View components in pure Go, that render to HTML 5.
JobRunner - Framework for performing work asynchronously, outside of the request flow
mustache - The mustache template language in Go
taskctl - Concurrent task runner, developer's routine tasks automation toolkit. Simple modern alternative to GNU Make π§°