HACKER Q&A
📣 pcloadletter_

What's your go-to tech stack (or services/products) for side projects?


I know this depends quite a bit on the application, but is there a general stack you use that you know you can knock out something quickly and deploy on the cheap?


  👤 c-nik Accepted Answer ✓
- Django if I need authentication and something more long-term that won't change much.

- Nextjs if I need to do some quick demo or test something and having a frontend. (Also, I haven't tried the authentication with Nextjs, it might be as easy to use as the one Django provides).

- Astro/Vitepress for online documentation and static sites (I am testing both for small projects).


👤 dimitrisnl
Laravel. I don't even like PHP, but I will always bootstrap something with Laravel. It's just too easy.

I'm reading up Elixir/Phoenix to spice things up though.


👤 bilsbie
I’m out of the game but I’d use Django. Not sure the simplest hosting these days.

Is there any kind of database service for no setup, tuning, or maintenance?


👤 reducesuffering
Next.js on Vercel

A complete frontend+backend page at /my_path with a file at /my_path/page.tsx with ~20 lines in a single file that handles backend request, DB query, backend response, frontend html templating and client-side JS interactivity.


👤 interbased
I’ve used Flask with Python to deploy a front end for my code. It was pretty straightforward and you can find boilerplate to start.

👤 meiraleal
JavaScript, Lit/Web components, indexedDB, PWA, Github Pages. No backend, no building.

👤 mikewarot
Lazarus/free Pascal for local GUI applications

👤 bnchrch
Quickly? without blocking myself?

Nextjs + Hasura