witchcraft
awesome-elixir
witchcraft | awesome-elixir | |
---|---|---|
3 | 5 | |
1,177 | 12,372 | |
0.3% | - | |
0.0 | 6.8 | |
8 months ago | 15 days ago | |
Elixir | Elixir | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
witchcraft
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How to Write a Functor in Elixir
If you’re interested in trying out more functors magic in Elixir, check out Witchcraft, which has been my main inspiration for this post.
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Cool Elixir Libraries
Witchcraft – basically a port of Haskell's Prelude https://github.com/witchcrafters/witchcraft
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Algebraic Data Types in Elixir
See also, Witchcraft [0] (adds ADTs to Elixir in a subjectively better way than Dialyzer) and Gleam [1] (not Elixir but its own full blown language that uses BEAM but with much more of a Haskell-like flavor) which both offer algebraic data types in their own ways.
I used to do a lot of Python and heard of Elixir as a marrying of BEAM and dynamic typing, so I started learning it. However, as I used it more, I actually moved to TypeScript and more recently Rust after I found that I actually liked thinking in types, and I truly did miss them from Elixir.
[0] https://github.com/witchcrafters/witchcraft
[1] https://github.com/gleam-lang/gleam
awesome-elixir
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Looking for a remote Elixir / Erlang unpaid internship
click the link
- Code repositories that help you to become a better Elixir programmer
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Cool Elixir Libraries
it exists
- what are the best libraries for elixir?
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Ask HN: Is Elixir Still Relevant?
Few years ago, I was developing in Erlang and a bit in Elixir. That was very enjoyable, because the features of those languages (and especially the OTP framework) makes many things way easier.
I've been looking back at Elixir for a few weeks for one of my project, and I'm worried.
95% of the libraries I would need have not seen any commit since a few years. What's more frightening is that most libraries listed on awesome-elixir[1] seems to be unmaintained too. Almost like the Elixir community died 5 years ago (which I do not believe).
Is this normal? Would you trust a seemingly unmaintained library? If not, would you implement all of that work from scratch?
[1] - https://github.com/h4cc/awesome-elixir
What are some alternatives?
MapDiff - Calculates the difference between two (nested) maps, and returns a map representing the patch of changes.
transcripts - Changelog episode transcripts in Markdown format 📚
loom - A CRDT library with δ-CRDT support.
Plsm - Elixir mix task to generate Ecto models from already existing tables
key2value - Erlang 2-way map
Pyrlang - Erlang node implemented in Python 3.5+ (Asyncio-based)
flow - Computational parallel flows on top of GenStage
rambo - Run your command. Send input. Get output.
monadex - Upgrade your pipelines with monads.
website - Erlang Ecosystem Foundation Website
dataframe - Package providing functionality similar to Python's Pandas or R's data.frame()
libgraph - A graph data structure library for Elixir projects