10 Best Tools for Developers Listed on BetaPage in November

Shiny Wadge
BetaPage
Published in
5 min readDec 3, 2018
Photo by Émile Perron on Unsplash

Let’s have a look at some of the best tools for developers listed on BetaPage in the month of November:

  1. Doka

Doka is a JavaScript image editor for your website. It lets you do high-performance transforming, resizing, flipping, cropping, and rotating of images. It’s just your perfect companion for editing photo albums, social media content, profile pictures, or any other web-based use case that requires image editing. It has a beautiful device agnostic design that fits in everywhere and packs everything you could need while cropping images.

2. Getform 2.0

Getform 2.0 is a form backend platform for developers and designers. You need no ugly style, no form builder, no iframe, no CSS override, or no library to operate it. All you need to do is just give a name to your form and specify a custom redirect URL. You can then see your submissions with full data, all listed and timestamped. Get notified then via email or mobile app. It helps you manage your form backend, saves your development time, and lets you enjoy easy configuration.

3. CV Compiler

CV Compiler helps you get a tech CV worth a job at Google, Netflix, Amazon, Facebook, and more such big names. It’s an online revision tool that scans your dev resume and indicates the weak points in it in real time. All you have to do is upload your CV in English as a doc or PDF file, wherein, 5MB can be the max file size. Unlock the full toolkit and craft a killer cover letter and tech resume. It is seriously a huge time saver and will definitely boost your interview chances.

4. PhotoSwipe

PhotoSwipe is the first open-source gallery that supports JavaScript-based image zooming. Image zooming would still work even if a browser’s native zooming has been disabled. It manipulates the browser’s history so that the user can link to each gallery and close the gallery with a ‘back’ button. It also supports all the basic gestures: drag to pan, double tap to zoom, tap to toggle the controls, pinch to zoom out, spread to zoom in, flick to the next image, and more.

5. Clojure

Clojure is a fast, practical, and a robust programming language which comes with a set of useful features which together form a powerful, coherent, and a simple tool. It combines the interactive development and approachability of a scripting language with a robust and efficient infrastructure for multithreaded programming. It provides easy access to the Java frameworks, with optional type interference and type hints in order to ensure that calls to Java can avoid reflection.

6. NixOS

NixOS is a purely functional Linux distribution which comes with a unique approach to configuration and package management. It is completely declarative and built on top of the Nix package manager which makes upgrading systems reliable. It has atomic upgrades and rollbacks. It is also a great system for DevOps use since it has safe upgrades and declarative specs. Its cloud deployment too, NixOps, allows you to manage and provision networks of NixOS machines in environments like VirtualBox and Amazon EC2.

7. MonoCorpus

MonoCorpus is a note-taking app for machine learning and software engineers meant to encourage sharing, learning, and easier development. Increase documentation of your team and yourself without slowing your velocity. Instead of dedicating time to write them, you can simply take notes as a part of your process. Take them in Latex of markdown and learn incrementally by never forgetting what you have done. Some of its features include:

  • Share solutions and record notes
  • Work by project
  • Unobtrusive UI
  • Work as a team
  • Track your work

8. Event Store

Event Store is a functional and open-source database with complex event processing in JavaScript. It stores your data as a series of immutable events over time and makes it easy to build event-sourced applications. It can run as a cluster of nodes containing the same data and has a native HTTP interface, which is based on the AtomPub protocol. Its features include:

  • Event sourcing
  • High availability
  • Great performance
  • Open source
  • Projections
  • Client interfaces

9. Amp

Amp is a complete text editor for your terminal. It has got everything that you need to get started without any configuration. It is a lightweight, feature-packed, expressive, and text-based UI. It is built to run on a server or inside your terminal. It is not a heavy web-based UI and pairs incredibly well with tmux and Alacrity. It is written in Rust, which is a high-performance, low-level, modern language without any garbage collection.

10. Saleor 2.0

Saleor 2.0 is an open source storefront for great e-commerce experiences. It is powered by GraphQL server running on top of Django 2 framework and Python 3. It is a modern stack, easy to customize, built to scale and sure to provide a great experience. It is optimized for cloud deployments using Docker.

Hope this helped! Try these out today! Also, do not forget to check the tools for developers listed on BetaPage in October here.

Happy reading!

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Shiny Wadge
BetaPage

#Editor#Blogger#Writer …Currently Working with BetaPage https://betapage.co/