tower-lsp
sorbet
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tower-lsp | sorbet | |
---|---|---|
7 | 53 | |
895 | 3,521 | |
- | 0.4% | |
5.3 | 9.9 | |
about 1 month ago | 7 days ago | |
Rust | Ruby | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
tower-lsp
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What's everyone working on this week (22/2023)?
I am using nom / nom_locate to build the parser side because I've done a handful of other projects with it, and I plan to use tower-lsp to hook up the language server side.
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State of the Ruby language server (LSP) ecosystem / looking for suggestions
I realize this might not be for everyone, but I'm writing it in Rust using Lib-ruby-parser and tower-lsp: two existing libraries that handle a bunch of the heavy lifting for me. I'm more productive in Rust than with Ruby at this point, despite doing Ruby full time for 15 years, plus I really really don't want to have to deal with a slow LSP--that was the whome impetus for this project. I started in the spring, made a bunch of headway, then backtracked to redo the internals to make it easier to handle monkeypatching, overriding/redefining of methods, etc. across your project.
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Language Server Protocol
https://github.com/ebkalderon/tower-lsp is a generalized LSP implementation in a lower-level language (Rust) so you may get a better idea by reading through that repo. It seems that the server opens a TCP socket that the client later connects to, but I'm not really sure.
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tower_lsp client/server Document Sync
I was taking a look at the tower_lsp example here (https://github.com/ebkalderon/tower-lsp/blob/master/examples/stdio.rs) and had a question about how the document sync works between the client and the server.
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how to make a lsp in rust ?
Mine all use [tower-lsp](https://github.com/ebkalderon/tower-lsp/) for the LSP protocol stuff, and then either [Tree-sitter](https://github.com/tree-sitter/tree-sitter) or [Nom](https://github.com/Geal/nom). If I do another I'll probably try [Chumsky](https://github.com/zesterer/chumsky) which combines some of the advantages of both.
- tower-lsp 0.16.0 — Lightweight framework for building LSP servers
sorbet
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The Design Principles of the Elixir Type System
Not part of the official language spec, but Ruby has Sorbet, from a company who employs Ruby core contributors and helped with the recently released JIT additions to the language, amount countless other contributions over the last couple decades.
https://sorbet.org/
- Почему я программирую на Ruby
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Bringing more sweetness to ruby with sorbet types 🍦
First let's introduce the tool: Sorbet is a gem developed by Stripe that aims to bring type notation syntax and type checking support for the Ruby ecosystem by utilizing the "Gradual typing" philosophy, it also provide type generation from YARD comments via the tapioca gem, allowing to grow alongside the already built Ruby codebase.
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An Introduction to Metaprogramming in Ruby
We have hundreds of thousands of lines of ruby code spanning many services / monoliths. Even now I find it somewhat annoying to open a controller / component that is basically an empty class def but somehow executes a bunch of complex stuff via mixins, monkey patches etc, and you have to figure out how.
We are turning to https://sorbet.org/ to reign in the madness. I'm keen to know if others are doing the same, and how they are finding it (pros and cons)
- A few words on Ruby's type annotations state
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Is Ruby on Rails still in demand?I see very few companies using it.Is it used in big tech companies like Google,Amazon,Facebook,Microsoft?
According to https://sorbet.org/ , the vast majority of code at Stripe is written in ruby.
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¿Que lenguaje de programación consideran que no está saturado?
Caso de Stripe, que tuvo que inventar Sorbet para tener type checking en ruby.
- Building GitHub with Ruby on Rails
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RJIT a New JIT for Ruby
> I guess what I'm asking is: do you see a future where there is more explicit control afforded to people who want to pick their own tradeoffs without resorting to writing everything performance-sensitive in extensions written in C/Rust/whatever?
An approach exists already in the present, and it's Stripe's Sorbet AOT compiler (https://github.com/sorbet/sorbet/tree/master/compiler).
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Has Ruby actually increased the speed significantly?
That's incorrect. You may be thinking of Stripe, and AFAICT it's not very actively developed anymore: https://github.com/sorbet/sorbet/commits/master/compiler
What are some alternatives?
tower - async fn(Request) -> Result<Response, Error>
solargraph - A Ruby language server.
kakoune-lsp - Kakoune Language Server Protocol Client
vscode-solargraph - A Visual Studio Code extension for Solargraph.
rust-analyzer - A Rust compiler front-end for IDEs
rbs - Type Signature for Ruby
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools
rubocop - A Ruby static code analyzer and formatter, based on the community Ruby style guide.
react-relay - Relay is a JavaScript framework for building data-driven React applications.
noclip.website - A digital museum of video game levels
chumsky - Write expressive, high-performance parsers with ease.
tapioca - The swiss army knife of RBI generation