Dev Community Libhunt

Leo Migdal
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dev community libhunt

Use the searchbox above to find a project, topic or a programming language. Alternatively, browse our top programming languages: If you are interested in programming languages popularity, you should check out The LibHunt Index of the most popular programming languages. I'm sharing the list of the top trending Python libraries from LibHunt Python. This should help you find something new and useful. As expected, almost everything is AI related.

AI is here to stay, and that's what almost everyone is raving after. Is there a library you'd like being added here? Something that's been on your radar for the last few months that was growing fast. Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink.

For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Application example built with Angular 13 and adding the Progressive Web Application (PWA) using the @angular/pwa library. SurveyJS: Build JSON-Driven Surveys and Forms with Full Data Control. Add the SurveyJS UI components to your JS app (React/Angular/Vue3). Securely collect and analyze data without sending it to 3rd-party servers. Fully customizable, works with any backend, and ideal for data-heavy apps.

Learn more. Application example built with Angular 14 and hosted on GitHub Pages using GitHub Actions. Application example built with Angular 15 with authentication using the Supabase service. Application example built with Angular 15 and adding the map Leaflet component using the leaflet library. I've been improving the new version of LibHunt here and there for the last several months, and I think I've reached a reasonably presentable version. As a software dev myself, I'm looking for alternatives to the libraries I use quite often.

Of course, I've been "eating my own dog food" and using LibHunt to find alternatives. What I had been doing is using the regular search function. I'd copy the name of the library from github, paste it in LibHunt's search box, and click on the first result in most cases. That has been working pretty well, yet it felt a bit cumbersome. This morning I had the following idea. Given that most popular open-source projects are hosted GitHub, and I'm already tracking them, I could support a similar URL schema in LibHunt so that the only difference from GitHub is the domain name.

I got it implemented, tested and deployed in less than half an hour. So simple, and it saves all the copy-pasting, clicking and searching. Now, if you are looking for alternatives to a popular open-source project, I strongly believe that the quickest and most convenient solution is LibHunt. As of now, the lists with alternatives (and similar projects) on LibHunt are based on three factors: Of course, these factors and methods are not perfect. However, they work pretty well in most cases.

And as more people suggest alternatives and more posts from around the net are tracked, the quality of the lists will only improve. First and foremost, LibHunt is one of my dreams (🙋‍♂️@StanBright). As a software engineer with a 15+ years of experience, I've been through many programming languages, and I've noticed similar patterns in my needs with every new language. On the whole, LibHunt is an embodiment of satisfying my own requirements with the idea of making it useful to the wider community of fellow software developers. My thinking is that it could be helpful and popular enough, so that I can make enough money out of it (through sponsorships) to support and improve it for the foreseeable decades. LibHunt's goal is to be the go-to website for developers looking for libraries and open source projects to get their work done.

It monitors everything that's posted on Reddit, HackerNews & Dev.to (almost in real-time). Then, if an open-source repository gets mentioned, we record that and use it to compile the lists of popular and similar projects. LibHunt lists with alternatives, similar projects, popular projects or programming languages are licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. I.e. you can use, share or adapt them freely as long as you give appropriate attribution to LibHunt. Apart of our main website, we run a network of sub-community websites focused on popular programming languages, technologies and frameworks.

You can find categorized projects and share your relevant content with the community there. Exciting news! Wave, the next-generation programming language built with Rust, is now featured on LibHunt! Not only that, but Wave is also being compared to other established Rust-based languages like Leo, KCL, and Erg. This is a huge step forward in getting Wave recognized in the developer community! LibHunt is a platform that tracks and compares open-source projects based on GitHub activity, mentions on tech blogs (like Dev.to, Reddit, etc.), and overall developer interest.

The fact that Wave has been included and is already being compared to well-known Rust-based languages means that it's gaining attention as a promising new programming language! 📌 Check out Wave's LibHunt page here: 👉 LibHunt Wave Page

People Also Search

Use The Searchbox Above To Find A Project, Topic Or

Use the searchbox above to find a project, topic or a programming language. Alternatively, browse our top programming languages: If you are interested in programming languages popularity, you should check out The LibHunt Index of the most popular programming languages. I'm sharing the list of the top trending Python libraries from LibHunt Python. This should help you find something new and useful....

AI Is Here To Stay, And That's What Almost Everyone

AI is here to stay, and that's what almost everyone is raving after. Is there a library you'd like being added here? Something that's been on your radar for the last few months that was growing fast. Templates let you quickly answer FAQs or store snippets for re-use. Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalin...

For Further Actions, You May Consider Blocking This Person And/or

For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse Application example built with Angular 13 and adding the Progressive Web Application (PWA) using the @angular/pwa library. SurveyJS: Build JSON-Driven Surveys and Forms with Full Data Control. Add the SurveyJS UI components to your JS app (React/Angular/Vue3). Securely collect and analyze data without sending it to 3...

Learn More. Application Example Built With Angular 14 And Hosted

Learn more. Application example built with Angular 14 and hosted on GitHub Pages using GitHub Actions. Application example built with Angular 15 with authentication using the Supabase service. Application example built with Angular 15 and adding the map Leaflet component using the leaflet library. I've been improving the new version of LibHunt here and there for the last several months, and I thin...

Of Course, I've Been "eating My Own Dog Food" And

Of course, I've been "eating my own dog food" and using LibHunt to find alternatives. What I had been doing is using the regular search function. I'd copy the name of the library from github, paste it in LibHunt's search box, and click on the first result in most cases. That has been working pretty well, yet it felt a bit cumbersome. This morning I had the following idea. Given that most popular o...