techoverview
techoverview
TechOverview
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A blog where i just write about technology and tools that i find and am trying out
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techoverview · 2 years ago
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StreamBuilder: our open-source framework for powering your dashboard.
Today, we’re abnormally jazzed to announce that we’re open-sourcing the custom framework we built to power your dashboard on Tumblr. We call it StreamBuilder, and we’ve been using it for many years.
First things first. What is open-sourcing? Open sourcing is a decentralized software development model that encourages open collaboration. In more accessible language, it is any program whose source code is made available for use or modification as users or other developers see fit.
What, then, is StreamBuilder? Well, every time you hit your Following feed, or For You, or search results, a blog’s posts, a list of tagged posts, or even check out blog recommendations, you’re using this framework under the hood. If you want to dive into the code, check it out here on GitHub!
StreamBuilder has a lot going on. The primary architecture centers around “streams” of content: whether posts from a blog, a list of blogs you’re following, posts using a specific tag, or posts relating to a search. These are separate kinds of streams, which can be mixed together, filtered based on certain criteria, ranked for relevancy or engagement likelihood, and more.
On your Tumblr dashboard today you can see how there are posts from blogs you follow, mixed with posts from tags you follow, mixed with blog recommendations. Each of those is a separate stream, with its own logic, but sharing this same framework. We inject those recommendations at certain intervals, filter posts based on who you’re blocking, and rank the posts for relevancy if you have “Best stuff first�� enabled. Those are all examples of the functionality StreamBuilder affords for us.
So, what’s included in the box?
The full framework library of code that we use today, on Tumblr, to power almost every feed of content you see on the platform.
A YAML syntax for composing streams of content, and how to filter, inject, and rank them.
Abstractions for programmatically composing, filtering, ranking, injecting, and debugging streams.
Abstractions for composing streams together—such as with carousels, for streams-within-streams.
An abstraction for cursor-based pagination for complex stream templates.
Unit tests covering the public interface for the library and most of the underlying code.
What’s still to come
Documentation. We have a lot to migrate from our own internal tools and put in here!
More example stream templates and example implementations of different common streams.
If you have questions, please check out the code and file an issue there.
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techoverview · 3 years ago
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Recently i went to search for alternativ for Visio the graphing tool. I needed the ability to make bpmn plot that i would like to not have to pay for. Most online tools i would find require either an account or paid plans, the free ones often only notified the user of this when wanting to save/export the workthey did to a local file. Here's where yworks with their yed tool comes in. I have workes with quite a few tools loke this but honestly this is one kf the best interfaces to greate simple workflow graphics and stuff like that. And you can just use it locally as well as online on their website both for free. As far as the provacy notice that they have it seems like this tool is more of a sideproduct since they sell the sdk that is used to make this graphing software. so it is likely a good demonstartion what is possible. atleast thats what it seems like.
TLDR. if you need a way to create a graph and don't have visio you should give yEd a try. I think its one of the best tools like this out there.
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