I ported the frontend for https://kellnr.io from vuex to pinia, which makes the code to hold state in the frontend much cleaner.
How is the overall ML story with Rust? Is it usable in comparison to Python?
Never heard of it. I used the Rust book when I started learning it.
Is rust common in schools now or is it your personal interest that lets you use it?
What is missing in the existing ones?
Never used bstr. What was interesting about it?
Ah yes, compiles times. Off all the things that could be better in rust, my number 1.
Didn’t know that one. Thanks for sharing.
I get the feeling that there are much more game engines in rust, than games :P
I release a new version of https://kellnr.io with some bug fixes and updated Docker images (Ubuntu 24.04 base).
Or use https://kellnr.io to host your crates. It automatically builds the corresponding docs and hosts them for you. Disclaimer: I’m the author.
Cool project idea! How did you come up with it?
I you share your code here, maybe someone can help.
https://tauri.app/ is very popular and does not need electron. It uses the OS native we view.
The runtime is even called “common language runtime” (clr), as it is intended to support many different languages, which the jvm never was.
Thanks! Took me few iterations to get there.
I released https://kellnr.io 5.2.1 with a few smaller fixes and additions.
If that really works without any drawbacks, I hope it gets merged into Rust main.
I released the next minor version of https://kellnr.io which support the display of crates, cached from crates.io, in the UI now. For the first iteration of that feature, they are only shown and searchable in the crate overview and a click forwards to crates.io, as not all meta information is stored in kellnr, for cached crates. That may change in the future, if someone requests it.
Unfortunately not. But I try to work on it a few hours every week in my spare time. I think that having an easy and free crate registry is crucial for the adaption of Rust in the commercial space. Companies don’t want to share their code publicly on crates.io. My full time job is in the IT security sector. My hope is that by pushing Rust as a safe language, we can close some fundamental design flaws that languages like C/C++ introduced and make software landscape more secure.