tooling-talks
Play
tooling-talks | Play | |
---|---|---|
9 | 31 | |
43 | 12,504 | |
- | 0.1% | |
5.0 | 9.7 | |
3 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Scala | Scala | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
tooling-talks
- Ask HN: What is your favorite Tech Podcasts these days?
- Tooling Talks Podcast – New Episode with Rebecca Mark Talking about Unison
- Tooling Talks Podcast - New episode with Rebecca Mark exploring Unison.
- Guillaume Martres: An Interactive Compiler -- New Tooling Talks episode out!
- New Tooling Talks episode with Eugune Yokota: Coding with Friends and sbt
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Tooling Talks Podcast
Recently I got a lot of comments that Tooling Talks watcher weren't really watching the live stream, but were instead listening later on. So it seemed like a fitting choice to just migrate the entire thing to podcast form. Enjoy, and listen in for the next episode where I'll be chatting with Eugene Yokota!
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Tooling Talks Episode 3 - Justin Kaeser
A big thanks to Justin for sitting down with me last weekend! For any of you that have been listening/watching, the future of Tooling Talks will change a bit as I migrate away from the live stream to a podcast. This next episode with Eugene Yokota will instead be podcasted. However, you can submit some questions that might be discussed here on GitHub.
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Tooling Talks Episode 2 - Meriam Lachkar
Big thanks to Meriam for coming and hanging out for this episode. You can get all the info you want about Tooling Talkings here on GitHub.
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Tooling Talks Episode 1 - Ólafur Páll Geirsson
Soon there will also be a full transcript here.
Play
- Play Framework 2.9.0 Release Candidate
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Reflex – Web apps in pure Python
My major complain here is that, as far as being a web framework there is precious little information here about the framework. How does this framework scale with multiple requests? What concurrency strategy is it using (threads, processes, actors, etc?). Is this opinionated (it doesn't seem so but it also doesn't say it isn't either). How does this work with popular libraries x,y,z. The full docs have a little bit more information, but not a ton. But mostly there are some cute toy examples and "built in python" and thats about it.
Lets compare this with for example play https://www.playframework.com/ I know from this that it built on Akka, its stateless, aims for predictable resource consumption, has non-blocking io, etc. There is a ton of really important information on what does this web framework actually do that is really important when you are making a choice of a framework.
I have no idea how good this framework is, but besides a few toy examples, I can't see anything that makes me thing "wow this is great I need to use this".
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Play (1) Linux manual page
A web application framework for Java/Scala: https://www.playframework.com/
- Scala opensource projects
- Play Framework for Java and Scala
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What is scala's modern Web API framework?
Scala 3 migration isn't as simple as migrating other apps, you can track the work at https://github.com/playframework/playframework/issues/11260
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How does web developement process compare to java web developement ?
And there are frameworks you can use to make development easier, like Play. And Java has plenty of choices for dependency injection frameworks.
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what library/framework should I use for backend development?
However do note, Play should be perfectly usable as well, and it's still maintained by the community: https://github.com/playframework/playframework/issues/11649
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Why I selected Elixir and Phoenix as my main stack
In university I learned a bit of Java, so maybe I could use it professionally I guess?. There were many options to choose from. DropWizard, Spark, Play Framework. But the more documented one in the internet I found was Springboot, besides there were some courses in spanish and some friends that knew something about Springboot, so I give it a chance.
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Right way to use AWS & Scala
For a backend web server I use Play - https://www.playframework.com/ which I find to be the easiest one as a backend web server. For learning/using spark I found this course from coursera to be very useful. https://www.coursera.org/learn/scala-spark-big-data
What are some alternatives?
kafka-manager - CMAK is a tool for managing Apache Kafka clusters
Spring Boot - Spring Boot
Apache Spark - Apache Spark - A unified analytics engine for large-scale data processing
Scalatra - Tiny Scala high-performance, async web framework, inspired by Sinatra
Lila - ♞ lichess.org: the forever free, adless and open source chess server ♞ [Moved to: https://github.com/lichess-org/lila]
Quarkus - Quarkus: Supersonic Subatomic Java.
learnxinyminutes-docs - Code documentation written as code! How novel and totally my idea!
Finatra - Fast, testable, Scala services built on TwitterServer and Finagle
PredictionIO - PredictionIO, a machine learning server for developers and ML engineers.
Lift - Lift Framework
scala - Scala 2 compiler and standard library. Bugs at https://github.com/scala/bug; Scala 3 at https://github.com/scala/scala3
Http4s - A minimal, idiomatic Scala interface for HTTP