ts-liveview
live_state
ts-liveview | live_state | |
---|---|---|
2 | 5 | |
152 | 160 | |
- | 5.0% | |
9.5 | 6.9 | |
12 days ago | 20 days ago | |
TypeScript | HTML | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | MIT License |
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ts-liveview
- Phoenix Dev Blog – Streams
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Ask HN: What have you created that deserves a second chance on HN?
ts-liveview: https://github.com/beenotung/ts-liveview
A lightweight implementation of the “fullstack liveview” in Typescript. You can do initial contentful rendering and realtime DOM updates from the server over http and websocket with only 6.5K of js minified (22x smaller than react, 2.6x smaller than svelte).
It was inspired from the Phoenix Liveview but evolved to adopt TSX with explicit DOM updates with querySelectors (without vdom diff-ing).
Unlike most js frameworks, it is a starter template, not a package. So you’re free to modify and extend / trim it to better fit your need.
live_state
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Web Components Will Outlive Your JavaScript Framework
Since you mention that state management is an unsolved problem with Web Components, I thought I would share a project that aims to bring a solution: https://github.com/launchscout/live_state. The basic pattern and idea of LiveState is "dispatch events, subscribe to state". The events and state updates are sent over a websocket connection, and the front end and back end libraries are a thin layer over Phoenix Channels. Currently, event handler functions are written in Elixir, but work is underway to allow them to be written in any language that compiles to WebAssembly.
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Ask HN: Why isn't Phoenix/Elixir more mainstream?
We have switched to Elixir and Phoenix as our go to stack gradually over the last 5 years. We've found that LiveView in particular, with it's ability to avoid a separate front-end framework altogether, has let us deliver applications to clients in a significantly more productive way. We were a rails shop back in the day, and were able to build things very quickly. When the whole front-end framework thing got big, it slowed us down a lot because we were building two applications, essentially. Now that we are able to go fast again we (and our clients) are enjoying things a lot more.
I should also say that if you do need to use a separate front-end for whatever reason, I've built a thing called LiveState: https://github.com/launchscout/live_state that lets you keep things far simpler and gives a "LiveView like" experience.
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What is the latest/greatest way to integrate React and Elixir?
Another option would be https://github.com/launchscout/live_state
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Phoenix Dev Blog – Streams
Thank you, haven't seen this before. Similar to LiveState[0] also
[0] https://github.com/launchscout/live_state
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Making a real-time interactive app, what is the best way to go about using Elixir as a standardized back-end for web and mobile?
I've been working on a thing to manage state via phoenix channels called live_state. The basic is idea is the front end code dispatches events which are sent up the channel, and receives state updates which are sent down the channel. The initial client I've done is js, and examples are for custom elements, but it should be fairly portable if it is of interest. I gave a talk on it at Elixirconf, video should be up eventually.
What are some alternatives?
subtls - A proof-of-concept TypeScript TLS 1.3 client
kaffy - Powerfully simple admin package for phoenix applications
uchess - ♛♔ Play chess against UCI engines in your terminal.
lit - Lit is a simple library for building fast, lightweight web components.
UrlChecker - Android app by TrianguloY: URLCheck
live_view_demos - Phoenix LiveView Demos 🚀
donutdns - Block ads, trackers, and malicious sites with donutdns - simple alternative to pihole. Run as a docker container, standalone executable or core DNS plugin. Supply custom domain block/allow lists in addition to builtin lists maintained by the ad-blocking community.
Phoenix - Peace of mind from prototype to production
metron - A C++ to Verilog translation tool with some basic guarantees that your code will work.
pathex - Fastest tool to access data in Elixir
flyctl - Command line tools for fly.io services