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Flyweight Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to flyweight
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SurveyJS
Open-Source JSON Form Builder to Create Dynamic Forms Right in Your App. With SurveyJS form UI libraries, you can build and style forms in a fully-integrated drag & drop form builder, render them in your JS app, and store form submission data in any backend, inc. PHP, ASP.NET Core, and Node.js.
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Knex
A query builder for PostgreSQL, MySQL, CockroachDB, SQL Server, SQLite3 and Oracle, designed to be flexible, portable, and fun to use.
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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d2-playground
An online runner to play, learn, and create with D2, the modern diagram scripting language that turns text to diagrams.
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rdb
Javascript and Typescript ORM with full intellisense, no-code generations. Works over http as well.
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
flyweight reviews and mentions
- Flyweight: A Node.js ORM Specifically for SQLite
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Show HN: Quietone – search audio and video by transcript
Hey. This is my first electron app. It is called Quietone and I just thought it would be cool to navigate and manipulate videos by their transcript because searching through videos for the things I was looking for was very slow otherwise.
I used whisper.cpp to do the transcribing. It has held up really well. The tiny model (the fastest one) can transcribe 2 hours of video in a couple of minutes on my m2 mac mini and the accurate of even the tiny model is pretty good.
I used Electron Forge to package the app for different operating systems and distribution channels. There are no guides on the internet on how to do that properly so that took quite a bit of time to figure out.
At multiple stages I had to look through source code of Electron Forge's dependencies to figure out how I was supposed to use it to correctly sign the app for the mac app store.
I made this app using the tools I like to use, which is not very typical. I use straight javascript, no transpiling, and I wrote every single library myself from the ORM https://github.com/thebinarysearchtree/flyweight to the front-end framework, which is a thin wrapper over web components.
Oh yeah, Electron recently started supporting esm, but Electron Forge doesn't fully support it so I had to use esbuild to compile to cjs just for the packaging step.
I use events to make everything change in real-time in the UI. Umm... oh yeah I did include yt-dlp features but had to remove that for the store versions.
It is available on the mac store, and soon on the windows store. There is also a trial you can download. The windows store experience is not very polished compared to the mac store. I was amazed that there are humans reviewers looking through everything I upload. hah.
Anyway, I have to go find a job now and hope my username doesn't check out. Bye. Thanks for reading my blog.
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Is TypeScript actually worth It?
I wrote https://github.com/thebinarysearchtree/flyweight in JavaScript, not TypeScript. It generates TypeScript declaration files as it types SQL, which helps with intellisense support in VSCode. That is the only reason I use TypeScript.
I don't like TypeScript though, and would never write anything in it. I have a long history with C# and I came to conclusions about this topic a long time ago. I just prefer writing JavaScript, it is more fun and more productive.
Flyweight is quite a complex library. It parses arbitrarily complex SQL. This is more complex than most of the things people work on and claim they need static typing. It isn't millions of lines of code, but often those codebases aren't complex, they are just many independent components that in themselves are not that complex.
The amount of time I spend having to update the TypeScript aspect of my library is really quite annoying. Also, with regards to your point about libraries not including type information - this is also true for the actual native APIs in the browser and so on as well. For example, TypeScript doesn't recognise the "indices" property of regular expression matches.
- GitHub - thebinarysearchtree/flyweight: An ORM for SQLite
- Flyweight: An ORM for SQLite
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A note from our sponsor - SurveyJS
surveyjs.io | 24 Apr 2024
Stats
thebinarysearchtree/flyweight is an open source project licensed under MIT License which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of flyweight is JavaScript.
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