maud
whichever-compiles | maud | |
---|---|---|
2 | 29 | |
92 | 1,932 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 6.4 | |
about 3 years ago | about 2 months ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | Apache License 2.0 |
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whichever-compiles
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Programming in C++ is hard, Software Engineering in C++ is even harder
I don't think "Rustaholics" need to be told about this? See for example https://github.com/m-ou-se/whichever-compiles
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Maud: A Rust macro for writing HTML
You can't build an IDE that definitely just "understands Rust macros" since procedural macros in particular are in effect modifying your compiler. Maud is a proc macro.
Mara's whichever_compiles! macro for example: https://github.com/m-ou-se/whichever-compiles -- that macro is forking your compiler to try out all the branches and throwing away branches which caused a compile error.
Clearly your IDE should throw its hands up and say, I don't understand what this does, I give up.
In general doing something useful with Rust macros is a more tractable problem for an IDE than say the C pre-processor, because Rust's macros have a stronger syntax, but the proc macro is potentially much too powerful / dangerous to try to evaluate.
maud
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Templ: A language for writing HTML user interfaces in Go
I would like to mention maud in this context:
https://github.com/lambda-fairy/maud
It is refreshingly different from other Rust templating libraries. It uses a proc-macro that compiles your HTML into Rust code. I also happen to use it in conjunction with HTMX and it works very well for me (at least in small projects).
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Getting Started with Axum - Rust's Most Popular Framework
You can also use HTML templating with crates like askama, tera and maud! This can be combined with the power of lightweight JavaScript libraries like htmx to speed up time to production. You can read more about this on our other article about using HTMX with Rust which you can find here.. We also collaborated with Stefan Baumgartner on an article for serving HTML with Askama!
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RustGPT: ChatGPT UI Built with Rust, Htmx, SQLite
I think a lot of us reach for Jinja-style templates so it feels a little more like we're writing bare HTML. But they're of course still just templates, and they need a build step before they become valid HTML.
So it's true, if you're willing to use a DSL embedded in your server language (like JSX), then you'll have the full language tooling available to you. And this probably isn't giving up much over language-specific templates.
A JSX-equivalent for the Rust server-side rendering world would probably be maud [1] or leptops [2].
[1] https://github.com/lambda-fairy/maud
[2] https://github.com/leptos-rs/leptos
- Hyper – A fast and correct HTTP implementation for Rust
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Want a web app to respond to local file changes. Is Tauri the solution here?
Maud as a performant templating engine that will ensure your templates are well-formed at compile-time and, in effect, minify the generated HTML output by not passing through unnecessary whitespace.
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Rust tech stack
Maud is a fast Slim/Haml-esque templating engine which will automatically minify your HTML at no extra charge because whitespace isn't significant in its syntax.
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rust web dev??
If you want to do backend development, give actix-web or Axum a try. If you need templating, take a look at Maud and if you want an ORM, take a look at SeaORM.
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Any web frameworks that could compare to Symfony?
Personally, I'd recommend Maud if you don't need something with runtime reloading. Not only is it much faster, it implements a template language that is effectively the Rust-syntax equivalent to Slim or Haml using a procedural macro, so you get compile-time verification that your HTML output is well-formed.
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Anyone from a Typescript/React background who tried out Rust for the 1st time?
For templating, Maud is fast, gives compile-time well-formedness guarantees, and outputs minified HTML by default as a side-effect of it being based on Rust macros. (It's of a similar design philosophy to Slim and Haml)
- I love building a startup in Rust. I wouldn't pick it again