JRuby
Spree Commerce
| JRuby | Spree Commerce | |
|---|---|---|
| 27 | 26 | |
| 3,857 | 15,098 | |
| 0.2% | 0.5% | |
| 9.9 | 9.9 | |
| 5 days ago | 4 days ago | |
| Ruby | Ruby | |
| GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 1-Clause 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.
JRuby
- Ruby Executes JIT Code: The Hidden Mechanics Behind the Magic
Are you aware of jruby?
https://www.jruby.org/
It is ruby running on a Java Virtual Machine. Imposes all downsides of the JVM (try to allocate more that 4GByte per object!) and provides JVMs concurrency model. Currently supports Ruby 3.1 (it claims to support 3.4, read the fine print if your specific feature is supported!)
- Java at 30: The Genius Behind the Code That Changed Tech
Another way to look at it based on coming across it in enterprise:
How did he build something adopted by so many enterprises?
It does some things at scale very well and has been afforded the performance improvements of very smart people for 30y.
It’s not to say the language isn’t verbose, one of my favourite features was the ability to write code in other languages right inside the a Java app pretty well in-line by using the JVM, thanks to JSR-223.
It was possible to write Ruby or Python code via Jruby or Jython and run it in the JVM.
https://www.jython.org/
https://www.jruby.org/
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/scrip...
- Calling Java from JRuby
- Shoes makes building little graphical programs for Mac, Windows, Linux simple
As someone who has looked at Shoes several times but never dove in, it's confusing how Shoes 4 has been the "preview version" of Shoes for, like, a decade or more. It made me actively avoid getting invested in Shoes 3 (the release promoted on the linked website) because Shoes 4 requires JRuby and I am happy with CRuby (the Ruby interpreter most people think of when they hear "Ruby").
https://github.com/shoes/shoes4/
http://www.rubydoc.info/github/shoes/shoes4
No disrespect to the developers but to me it feels like taking over a GUI toolkit created "to teach programming to everyone" (to quote the Shoes 4 readme) and making it depend upon a super-complicated enterprise-focused Ruby was sort of Missing The Point™ in a huge way.
Heck I couldn't even switch to JRuby if I wanted to because I <3 Ractors and JRuby still lacks CRuby 3.0 feature parity: https://github.com/jruby/jruby/issues/7459
- JRuby 9.4.2.0 released with many fixes and improvements
__callee__ now properly returns the name under which a method was called, which will be the new name in the case of aliased methods. #2305, #7702
- JRuby 9.4.0.0 Released, now supporting Ruby 3.1 and Rails 7
Issue tracker: https://github.com/jruby/jruby/issues
- JRuby 9.3.9.0 Released with stdlib CVE fixes
rdoc has been updated to 6.3.3 to fix all known CVEs. (#7396, #7404)
- JRuby 9.3.8.0 Released - with support for lightweight fibers!
Altering the visibility of an included module method no longer changes what super method gets called. (#7240, #7343, #7344, #7356)
- Golang in the JVM
It looks like the readme is copy pasta from jruby: https://github.com/jruby/jruby
- JRuby 9.3.4.0 released
Homepage: https://www.jruby.org/
Spree Commerce
- 15 Open-Source Projects to Replace Popular SaaS Tools & Apps 👨💻🔥
👩💻 GitHub link | ⭐ 12.9K stars | 💻 Website link
- Ask HN: Suggestions about platform to develop a customizable B2B marketplace
- What is the right approach to handle an inventory system with Items and prices that may change over time? How do you adjust Item prices without affecting a past Sale that references it?
A good system to study is Spree https://github.com/spree/spree. It has an inventory and billing system and supports different adjustments and sale configurations. If you don't want to use it wholesale it's a solid Rails application that does most of what you want so you can use it as solid inspiration.
- Self-hosted FOSS eCommerce solution suggestions
Spree Commerce: https://spreecommerce.org/
- My Open Source eCommerce List
- Laravel ECommerce Platforms
- PHP ECommerce Platforms
- Webshop preporuka za tehnologiju
- Are there any open source Rails templates for online stores .
Maybe Spree?
- ROR ecommerce tutorial?
I'd say Solidus and Spree are you best options rather than trying to roll out you own ecommerce solution.
What are some alternatives?
Rubinius - The Rubinius Language Platform
Solidus - 🛒 Solidus, the open-source eCommerce framework for industry trailblazers.
Opal - Ruby ♥︎ JavaScript
ROR Ecommerce - Ruby on Rails Ecommerce platform, perfect for your small business solution.
MRuby - Lightweight Ruby
Bagisto - Free and open source laravel eCommerce platform