Hanami is quite nice. I haven’t had the opportunity to use it in anger but I have had a crush on it for a while now.
I really do hope ROM-rb, the not-orm Hanami uses, gets some development love as a consequence of this more formal merger. It’s a rad tool with enough rough edges that I had to switch away from it when launching a product a few years ago.
I'm happy someone's challenging the Rails almost-monoculture in the Ruby ecosystem, but Hanami doesn't seem to bring much to the table. Is there anything in this release that Rails hasn't had for years?
Hanami is quite nice. I haven’t had the opportunity to use it in anger but I have had a crush on it for a while now.
I really do hope ROM-rb, the not-orm Hanami uses, gets some development love as a consequence of this more formal merger. It’s a rad tool with enough rough edges that I had to switch away from it when launching a product a few years ago.
I'm happy someone's challenging the Rails almost-monoculture in the Ruby ecosystem, but Hanami doesn't seem to bring much to the table. Is there anything in this release that Rails hasn't had for years?
What Hanami brings is an intentional and well-reasoned architecture that supports building maintainable applications. It has taste.
It'd be nice to see some benchmarks to compare the before vs after on the perf gains in the Faster by default heading.
Love the work though; having beautifully crafted options like Hanami around is a joy.