realworld-springboot-java
BookStack
| realworld-springboot-java | BookStack | |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 321 | |
| 224 | 18,841 | |
| 0.0% | 0.7% | |
| 2.7 | 9.6 | |
| over 2 years ago | 1 day ago | |
| Java | PHP | |
| MIT License | MIT |
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.
realworld-springboot-java
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I Created API Docs for 5 Open-source Projects Within 10 Minutes
realworld-springboot-java: ReadWorld.io backend project using spring boot java using spring-security, spring-data-jpa
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How did you guys learn Junit?
I think looking at examples helps. https://github.com/raeperd/realworld-springboot-java
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Github
Resposta curta
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Is there a website similar to LeetCode with some Spring challenges?
This is the React + Redux frontend project, and for Spring Boot I'm not sure what your prospective company uses to interfact with the Database, but it's normally JPA, therefore this Spring Boot + JPA project is a good start.
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Quality java resources
Spring Boot with JPA: [Link] [Link] (both seem to use it)
BookStack
- BookStack Moves from GitHub to Codeberg
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PHP 8.5 gets released today, here's what's new
> My favourite PHP product at the moment is BookStack (https://www.bookstackapp.com/), a really good wiki.
Another wiki that uses php is Wikipedia.
People like to shit on php but it powers some of the largest sites in the world.
At the end of the day, programming language doesn't matter much. You can be a good programmer in any language and a bad programmer in any language.
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Ask HN: Best self-hosted wiki solution in 2025? Mediawiki or something else?
We use outline (https://github.com/outline/outline) at work and it works pretty well for us. It supports collaborative editing, which was the main reason we went with it.
Personally, I use bookstack (https://github.com/BookStackApp/BookStack) at home. Mostly because I really like the mental model of using Bookshelves, Books, Chapters and Pages to sort my notes in.
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Self-hosting with Podman
Additionally at some point people behind this product decided to change the licensing model, and allow the use of community editions for up to 5 nodes. It wasn't my case, but that pushed me to use something more independent. So I started using dockge, then added another service for docker logs, version monitor, and keeps adding applications that are fun to use, for example homebox or bookstack. It was fun until I released the cost of energy and maintenance effort need to keep it running, at my home. Every internet issue, or power issue takes my setup down. Maybe it was not happening very often, but when I wasn’t home, and the hardware was down, there was no chance to fix it remotely. And I started relaying on that service. That is why I simply decided to migrate to hetzner, and podman at the same time, and use remote NFS. However, let's start from the beginning.
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I Created API Docs for 5 Open-source Projects Within 10 Minutes
BookStack: A platform for storing and organising information and documentation.
- BookStack: Simple and Free Wiki Software
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Information flow - how I capture the notes
Joplin open-source tool, with paid Sync service. However, it supports WebDav sync. As a user of Fastmail have a lot lot of storage for it. Those parts work great, links, complexity level, and clear Markdown. Themes, mobile app, tags, everything I needed was there. Unfortunately, again, for short notes, my go-to app becomes memos, for long-form BookStack, seems to be the best solution. Why? Firstly my love for self-hosted solutions boomed, also Joplin even if looks perfect for my use case was some reason hard to describe and did not encourage me to write. Soo.. I back to Obsidian.
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Show HN: I am building an open-source Confluence and Notion alternative
We use Bookstack[0] for this and I can recommend it. Free and open source.
[0] https://www.bookstackapp.com/
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15 open-source tools to elevate your software design workflow
Link | Demo | Github | License
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What wiki platforms are you using and how is it structured?
While I haven't used it, Bookstack is spoken of favourably.
What are some alternatives?
spring-boot-realworld-example-app - Example Spring codebase containing real world examples (CRUD, auth, advanced patterns, etc) that adheres to the RealWorld API spec.
Wiki.js - Wiki.js | A modern and powerful wiki app built on Node.js
spring-reddit-clone - Reddit clone built using Spring Boot, Spring Security with JWT Authentication, Spring Data JPA with MySQL, Spring MVC. The frontend is built using Angular - You can find the frontend source code here - https://github.com/SaiUpadhyayula/angular-reddit-clone
Outline - The fastest knowledge base for growing teams. Beautiful, realtime collaborative, feature packed, and markdown compatible.
effective-java-summary - A personnal summary of the book Effective Java by Joshua Bloch
docmost - Docmost is an open-source collaborative wiki and documentation software. It is an open-source alternative to Confluence and Notion.