todomvc
realworld
todomvc | realworld | |
---|---|---|
60 | 121 | |
28,485 | 78,316 | |
0.1% | 0.4% | |
7.5 | 8.1 | |
19 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
todomvc
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Unison Cloud
The odd thing is unison started purely as a language. Now there's a platform.
I often find the best way to understand complex things is to dig all the way back to when they were being thought up. In this case there's a blog post from 2017 that I still find useful when thinking about Unison:
https://pchiusano.github.io/2017-01-20/why-not-haskell.html
Key quote:
Composability is destroyed at program boundaries, therefore extend these boundaries outward, until all the computational resources of civilization are joined in a single planetary-scale computer
(With the open sourcing of the language I doubt it will be one computer anymore, but it's an interesting window into the original idea)
Personally I find there's a lot to this. It's interesting that we're really, really good at composing code within a program. I can map, filter, loop and do whatever I want to nested data structures with complete type safety to my heart's content. My editor's autocompleting, docs are showing up on hover, it's easy to test, all's well.
But as soon as I want cron involved, and maybe a little state-- this is all wrecked. Also deployment gets more annoying as they talk about a lot.
So I think Unison always had to have a platform to support bringing this stuff into the language, even though they built the language first.
I'd love to hear some opinions from outside Unison about how they like using this language, tooling and hosting.
I'd like to hear this too.
Also, it would be great if there was something like https://eugenkiss.github.io/7guis/ or https://todomvc.com/ for platforms that we could use to compare Unison, AWS, etc etc. Or is there already a 7GUIs for platforms that I don't know about?
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Hooking-up a headless CMS to React apps
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/tastejs/todomvc.git
- TodoMVC: Helping you select an MV* framework
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Is Software Engineering Real Engineering?
The problem with this question is that, if it's not engineering, what is it? A better question is motivated by studying the history of chemistry and its progenitor, alchemy. That is: is software development alchemy or chemistry?
Software development alchemy. Just like alchemy, software dev is not standardized, everyone has their own idiosyncratic naming systems, classifications and rules-of-thumb. Like alchemists, software engineers are often jealous of their proprietary knowledge. Just like alchemists, they admired, feared and loathed for having secret knowledge. And just like alchemists, you have to be exceedingly brilliant to work in such a chaotic field and get anything done.
What changed alchemy into chemistry, and what is the analog to that in software? Arguably the change started with notion of conservation of mass and energy, and the development of the periodic table (thanks to Lavoisier and Mendeleev, respectively). As for what that analog is for software, first we need a characterization of the field. With alchemy and chemistry both, it's essentially mixing stuff together, heating and cooling it, and seeing what happens. But what is it for software?
Software engineering is often mistaken for computer science. Computer science is a tiny subset of software engineering. In practice, almost all of computer science is encapsulated in a few, tiny standard libraries - the places where bubble-sorts and hash maps live. (This mistake is consistent, and leads to "leet code" style interview questions which are irrelevant to actual work). I'd characterize software engineering as the set of solutions to a boundary value problem[0] described as "a set of interacting screens with behaviors pleasing to humans". The current solutions to this problem have been idiosyncratically shaped by resource constraints that rapidly relaxed over time[1], and characterized by elements discovered at random by necessity: e.g. kernels, processes, files, procedures, terminals, etc. In this analysis "language" functions as a kind of "coordinate system" as in physics[2][3], within which each of these elements are described, and within which elements are combined to make new elements, which eventually yield a solution to the boundary problem (which is termed "application").
I don't particularly know what the standardization of software engineering will look like, but I'm certain that this analysis, or something similar to it, is the first steps in the right direction. Personally, I look forward to the day we can shed the considerable weight of our alchemical origins.
0 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boundary_value_problem
1 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moore's_law
2 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordinate_system
3 - https://www.rosettacode.org/wiki/Rosetta_Code - the same problem is solved in many languages. For applications: https://todomvc.com/
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Ask HN: What is the point of Front end Framework?
Compare the source code at https://todomvc.com/ to see what various frameworks bring to the table. VanillaJS is generally 2-3x as much code since you have to implement the MVC logic yourself.
- Todo MVC – Helping you select a JavaScript MV* framework
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Scala PlayFramework and Angular JS - too much effort in terms of duplication and mixing concetps
There is an example (not mine) of AnjularJS controllers, how much JS I have to write:https://github.com/tastejs/todomvc/tree/gh-pages/architecture-examples/angularjs/js
- Lesson 13 : Flutter | Clean Architecture | ToDo Model
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What is the best way to learn angular besides angular documentation? Any resources? Books?
Learn by doing. You could recreate the TodoMVC app.
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How easy is ruby to learn from zero experience coding
How easy or hard to build Shopify without zero coding experience? Shopify is a big thing =) So that would be hard to build with zero coding experience. Start with a todo list, micro blog, or something small in scope that interests you. https://todomvc.com/ is interesting since it is the identical app, written in many different ways, different languages and frameworks - and you can use them as reference to see how others have built something.
realworld
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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.
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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.
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10 GitHub Repos to Become a Better Backend Developer
View on GitHub
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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
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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
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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?
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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?
jotai - 👻 Primitive and flexible state management for React
fastapi-realworld-example-app - Backend logic implementation for https://github.com/gothinkster/realworld with awesome FastAPI
futurecoder - 100% free and interactive Python course for beginners
spicedb - Open Source, Google Zanzibar-inspired permissions database to enable fine-grained access control for customer applications
angular-spotify - Spotify client built with Angular 15, Nx Workspace, ngrx, TailwindCSS and ng-zorro
jhipster-sample-app - This is a sample application created with JHipster
concise-encoding - The secure data format for a modern world
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.
awayto - Awayto is a curated development platform, producing great value with minimal investment. With all the ways there are to reach a solution, it's important to understand the landscape of tools to use.
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
tyrian - Elm-inspired Scala UI library.
nestjs-realworld-example-app - Exemplary real world backend API built with NestJS + TypeORM / Prisma