Vaadin
Play
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Vaadin | Play | |
---|---|---|
41 | 31 | |
1,766 | 12,488 | |
0.3% | 0.0% | |
5.5 | 9.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 4 days ago | |
Java | Scala | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Vaadin
- Ask HN: Why is web development such a daunting task?
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A front-end programming language that don't need html/css, do you know one ?
But there are frameworks like GWT or Vaadin for Java, but none of them really took off afaik, I've never seen a job posting with either of these.
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Always-Listening Voice Commands for Vaadin web applications
This small tutorial takes 15 minutes from the start to a working demo. We use Picovoice Porcupine Wake Word Engine to enable a Vaadin-based Java web application.
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The Future (and the Past) of the Web Is Server Side Rendering
> Slightly off topic, but I found JSF the most productive out of any framework.
In my experience, it has been a horrible technology (even when combined with PrimeFaces) for complex functionality.
When you have a page that has a bunch of tabs, which have tables with custom action buttons, row editing, row expansion, as well as composite components, modal dialogs with other tables inside of those, various dropdowns or autocomplete components and so on, it will break in new ways all the time.
Sometimes the wrong row will be selected, even if you give every element a unique ID, sometimes updating a single table row after AJAX will be nigh impossible, other times the back end methods will be called with the wrong parameters, sometimes your composite components will act in weird ways (such as using the button to close a modal dialog doing nothing).
When used on something simple, it's an okay choice, but enterprise codebases that have been developed for years (not even a decade) across multiple versions will rot faster than just having a RESTful API and some separate SPA (that can be thrown out and rewritten altogether, if need be).
Another option in the space is Vaadin which feels okay, but has its own problems: https://vaadin.com/
Of course, my experiences are subjective and my own.
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Happy path: Publishing a Web Component to Vaadin Add-on Directory
Did you find an excellent custom element that would make sense in your Vaadin Java web application? Maybe that is a web component that you previously published yourself in npmjs.com?
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Are there any recommended libraries to make Spring Boot development even faster / easier?
What you maybe asking for is something like vaadin or jhipster which marries the front with the backend. (I don't like them tbh but it worth mentioning)
- LiveView in Clojure ?
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free-for.dev
Vaadin — Build scalable UIs in Java or TypeScript, and use the integrated tooling, components and design system to iterate faster, design better and simplify the development process. Unlimited Projects with 5 years free maintenance.
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Can I use Java to build a website?
You can use Java for Backend and Frontend. A relative new kid on the block for Frontend is Qute. The general keyword you are searching for is Java Templating Engine. Specific examples would be Thymeleaf or FreeMarker. There are some framework, which offer a lot more than templating like Vaadin or Wicket. Some are just specifications like Jakarta Faces with some of their implementations MyFaces or Mojarra.
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Aire-UX Testing Framework Released to Maven Central!
This single-process, browserless testing framework allows you to inject live Vaadin or Sunshower.io widgets directly into your test-cases via CSS L4 selectors, navigate around your application to test workflows, and generally test UI interactions end-to-end quickly and safely. Comprehensive #springframework support is included via the Spring extension
Play
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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".
- Scala opensource projects
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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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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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Make your zip packages for lambdas (and many more use cases) idempotent with a zip-drop-in replacement
See https://github.com/playframework/playframework/issues/10572 and https://github.com/sbt/sbt/issues/6235 for more details and context.
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Pleasant to use Scala libraries
The most popular nowadays are - I guess - akka-http and http4s. You can also use Play if you don't want to start from scratch but prefer a framework-based approach.
- Why We’re Sticking with Ruby on Rails at GitLab
- O que estou fazendo?? Um projetinho de estudo.
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Play Framework: first release based at Open Collective
release notes: https://github.com/playframework/playframework/releases/2.8.13
What are some alternatives?
PrimeFaces - Ultimate Component Suite for JavaServer Faces
Spring Boot - Spring Boot
Apache Wicket - Apache Wicket - Component-based Java web framework
Scalatra - Tiny Scala high-performance, async web framework, inspired by Sinatra
Quarkus - Quarkus: Supersonic Subatomic Java.
ZK - ZK is a highly productive Java framework for building amazing enterprise web and mobile applications
Finatra - Fast, testable, Scala services built on TwitterServer and Finagle
Lift - Lift Framework
Spring - Spring Framework
Http4s - A minimal, idiomatic Scala interface for HTTP