No features have been listed yet.
No Flagsmith videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
Based on our record, Flagsmith should be more popular than Apache POI. It has been mentiond 13 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Considering all these points, the team at Flagsmith has developed a feature flag management platform Flagsmith and made it open source. The core functionality is open and you can check out the GitHub repository here. I have utilized and authored several blogs discussing their excellent offerings and strategies. - Source: dev.to / 2 months ago
Flagsmith - Release features with confidence; manage feature flags across web, mobile, and server side applications. Use our hosted API, deploy to your own private cloud, or run on-premise. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
Flagsmith is written in Django and is open source as well: https://flagsmith.com. Source: almost 2 years ago
Before we dive in, one important call-out: We provide our feature management product to customers in three ways depending on how they want to have it managed: Fully Managed SaaS API, Fully Managed Private Cloud SaaS API and Self-Hosted. The infrastructure costs that we are sharing is for our customers that leverage our Fully Managed SaaS API offering (try it free: https://flagsmith.com/) which represents a portion... - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
On March 15th, Sebastian Rindom, the CEO & Co-founder of Medusa, did an interview with Flagsmith where he talked about how Medusa started, why create a headless commerce solution, why make it open-source, and more. - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
Recently I needed to write an Azure Function app that uses the Apache POI library for getting the text from Microsoft Word 94 documents (and yes, I am fully aware that the year is currently 2024, but some people still have 30 year old documents kicking around!). - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
I need to add the apache poi to my project (I need hssf, ss and xssf). I downloaded a jar file from the internet but it does not contain xssf. I went to http://poi.apache.org/ and I downloaded this: http://www.apache.org/dyn/closer.cgi/poi/release/src/poi-src-3.9-20121203.zip, I extract it..and got stucked. I tried Part 1 but that was only for JavaDoc. Source: about 1 year ago
- Using Ports to call CLIs that take care of this (e.g. Poppler for PDFs, Libreoffice in `--headless` mode) - Use jInterface to startup a JVM with Apache POI to work on this specific workflow (I have an example here to work with Java Image API). You can also do this with other languages (Golang , Python and other). Source: over 1 year ago
If you can use third party libraries, you can look at Apache POI (https://poi.apache.org/). It allows you to read, write and manipulate Excel and CSV files. Source: over 1 year ago
Java may be boring to work with, but its power, maturity and ecosystem is unparalleled. I don't remember the PDF library (there are many), but Office stuff used Apache POI. Source: over 1 year ago
LaunchDarkly - LaunchDarkly is a powerful development tool which allows software developers to roll out updates and new features.
Guava - Google core libraries for Java 6+.
ConfigCat - ConfigCat is a developer-centric feature flag service with unlimited team size, awesome support, and a reasonable price tag.
RxJava - RxJava – Reactive Extensions for the JVM is a library for composing asynchronous and event-based programs using observable sequences.
Unleash - Open source Feature toggle/flag service. Helps developers decrease their time-to-market and to increase learning through experimentation.
Java - A concurrent, class-based, object-oriented, language specifically designed to have as few implementation dependencies as possible