tera
Ink
tera | Ink | |
---|---|---|
20 | 64 | |
3,229 | 25,811 | |
- | - | |
6.0 | 6.2 | |
1 day ago | 19 days ago | |
Rust | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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tera
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Getting Started with Axum - Rust's Most Popular Framework
You can also use HTML templating with crates like askama, tera and maud! This can be combined with the power of lightweight JavaScript libraries like htmx to speed up time to production. You can read more about this on our other article about using HTMX with Rust which you can find here.. We also collaborated with Stefan Baumgartner on an article for serving HTML with Askama!
- What is the current ideal choice for server-side rendered web frameworks?
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Server-side rendering in Rust - a Dall.E use-case
Tera, based on Jinja, as the next two
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Full-Stack-Rust: Which approach in Frontend?
Tera
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Full-stack authentication system using rust (actix-web) and sveltekit
An authentication system is an integral part of modern applications. It's so important that almost all modern applications have some sort of it. Because of their critical nature, such systems should be secure and should follow OWAP®'s recommendations on web security and password hashing as well as storage to prevent attacks such as Preimage and Dictionary attacks (common to SHA algorithms). To demonstrate some of the recommendations, we'll be building a robust session-based authentication system in Rust and a complementary frontend application. For this article series, we'll be using Rust's actix-web and some awesome crates for the backend service. SvelteKit will be used for the frontend. It should be noted however that what we'll be building is largely framework agnostic. As a result, you can decide to opt for axum, rocket, warp or any other rust's web framework for the backend and react, vue or any other javascript framework for the frontend. You can even use rust's yew, seed or some templating engines such as MiniJinja or tera at the frontend. It's entirely up to you. Our focus will be more on the concepts.
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Show HN: Robyn – the fastest Python web framework written in Rust
Or Flask!
My guess is that "fastest" refers to the request-response loop.
I'd be interested in knowing how fast it is once you tack your favourite template rendering engine on top.
It would be nice if it supported Tera, the Rust template engine that is inspired by Jinja2:
https://github.com/Keats/tera
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I made a status bar generator for xmobar (and other text based bars)
supports sophisticated templating using Tera,
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Help with warp routes
As you might've noticed I have a static www folder with all my files. If I go to /, /login, /register I want to respond with my templated HTML. If the browser asks for another file, such as index.js or something.png I want to serve it from the static folder. I someone wants to access the raw template HTML, such as index.html I want to response with a 404 message.
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Rust for web development: 3 years later
tera for email templates.
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a crate for rendering HTML to an image buffer?
I've been using Tera and Chromium Oxide to generate and render reports to PDF and its been very needs suiting. It can also render to a PNG file.
Ink
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I created a simple CLI tool that helps you code FAST!
I've always wanted to build a CLI tool, and when I realized that you can build one using React with Ink, I converted my Python script into a CLI tool.
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Delete git branches in batches
⚠️ Git for Windows Terminal is currently not supported, and the tool is limited to ink. We will look for alternatives later. Please use CMD, Vscode terminal's Git... terminal
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Setup Simple Web UI for Node.js App in Seconds
There is a good solution for some of those cases - ink. With ink, I can implement text-based UI with knowledge of React, which is neat but there are still some caveats for my usages:
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Building Reactive CLIs with Ink - React CLI library
Looks cool, right? Building a similar UI in the terminal without any library would be quite hard, though, thanks to Ink it's almost as easy as building any frontend UI with React.
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Terminal-like output library for js?
ink?
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Synchronous File Reading and Writing in Node.js
I'm writing a CLI with ink. Writing async code is important as to not block the rendering and respond to user input. I have a few loading animations that update every 100ms. Synchronous operations can make the animation hang for >500ms, making the animation choppy.
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Launch HN: Resend (YC W23) – Email API for Developers Using React
You get the comfort of using react components instead of fighting with HTML tables to make your emails look nice. I think it's awesome! It's analog to what ink[0] does with CLI outputs. Sure, you could write fancy CLI outputs in bash, but ink takes the pain out of it and makes it easy.
[0] https://github.com/vadimdemedes/ink
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Is Node.js a good way to implement a CLI app with persistence?
Due to Node's asynchronous behavior, it makes Node great for long-running processes that make a lot of HTTP requests, database calls, and other async ops, like a web server or a REST API. However, if I am making a CLI tool for pretty much personal use only, with very minimal async operations, then blocking the event loop with a synchronous function that will resolve almost immediately will make no difference perceivable to a human brain or have any speed benefits that someone can actually observe (think `fs.readFileSync` or `require('dotenv') of 10 line config file, or a quick embedded db (sqlite) query with only ~100 records. I'm wondering what the best way to implement the database part of the app synchronous. I can read/write to JSON files but it would be tricky because the data is relational, and some complex joins and other data wrangling operations are required (complex to perform in JS but are easy to implement in a SQL statement). It's not important what the operations are, that's not the point of this post. This is mostly a personal project of interest: making this CLI tool completely avoiding any async operations/using no promises. I would like to use node tho, as I said this is just out of interest and I also want to experiment with several CLI libraries such as Ink or Cliffy.
- Ink: React for interactive command-line apps
- Make interactive command-line apps with React
What are some alternatives?
askama - Type-safe, compiled Jinja-like templates for Rust
Commander.js - node.js command-line interfaces made easy
handlebars-rust - Rust templating with Handlebars
oclif - CLI for generating, building, and releasing oclif CLIs. Built by Salesforce.
actix-web - Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework for Rust.
blessed - A high-level terminal interface library for node.js.
minijinja - MiniJinja is a powerful but minimal dependency template engine for Rust compatible with Jinja/Jinja2
nestjs-commander - A module for using NestJS to build up CLI applications
maud - :pencil: Compile-time HTML templates for Rust
tui-rs - Build terminal user interfaces and dashboards using Rust
horrorshow-rs - A macro-based html builder for rust
PyLaTeX - A Python library for creating LaTeX files