A large-scale build tool. The successor to Buck. Ready for users ∈ {C++, Python, Rust, Erlang, OCaml}.
Buck2, a large scale, fast, reliable, and extensible build tool developed and used by Meta. Buck2 supports a variety of languages on many platforms.
Convert curl commands to code.
Convert curl commands to Python, JavaScript, PHP, R, Go, C#, Ruby, Rust, Elixir, Java, MATLAB, Dart, CFML, Ansible URI or JSON.
Laragon is a portable, isolated, fast & powerful universal development environment for PHP, Node.js, Python, Java, Go, Ruby. It is fast, lightweight, easy-to-use and easy-to-extend.
Laragon is great for building and managing modern web applications. It is focused on performance - designed around stability, simplicity, flexibility and freedom.
yq is a portable command-line YAML, JSON, XML, CSV and properties processor.
a lightweight and portable command-line YAML, JSON and XML processor. yq uses jq like syntax but works with yaml files as well as json, xml, properties, csv and tsv. It doesn't yet support everything jq does - but it does support the most common operations and functions, and more is being added continuously.
yq is written in go - so you can download a dependency free binary for your platform and you are good to go!
Minio is an object storage server built for cloud application developers and devops compatible with Amazon S3
BuntDB is a fast, embeddable, in-memory key/value database for Go with geospatial support.
BuntDB is a low-level, in-memory, key/value store in pure Go. It persists to disk, is ACID compliant, and uses locking for multiple readers and a single writer. It supports custom indexes and geospatial data. It's ideal for projects that need a dependable database and favor speed over data size.
Monsti is a free and open source CMS written in Go and designed to host multiple websites or blogs. It is mainly designed for web projects like personal, small business, or small NGO websites.
It provides a simple web frontend for basic site building and editing tasks. More advanced tasks like adding new content types have to be done by writing modules in Go that communicate to Monsti via RPC using a high level API.