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Colossus vs Django REST framework: What are the differences?

Introduction: In the realm of web development, Colossus and Django REST framework are two powerful tools that serve different purposes. Understanding the key differences between them is crucial in deciding which one to use for a specific project.

  1. Language Support: Colossus is primarily built for Scala, whereas Django REST framework is built for Python. This difference in language support means that developers need to be proficient in the respective languages to leverage the features of each framework effectively.

  2. Framework Scope: Colossus is a low-level web service framework that provides developers with the building blocks to create highly optimized, high-performance services. On the other hand, Django REST framework is a high-level framework that offers a set of robust tools and functionalities for building RESTful APIs quickly and efficiently.

  3. Learning Curve: Due to its low-level nature, Colossus requires a deeper understanding of networking concepts and systems programming compared to Django REST framework. Developers who are new to web development may find Django REST framework easier to learn and work with initially.

  4. Community Support: Django REST framework has a larger and more active community compared to Colossus. This means that developers working with Django REST framework have access to a wealth of documentation, tutorials, and community support, making it easier to troubleshoot issues and seek help when needed.

  5. Flexibility vs. Opinionation: Colossus provides developers with greater flexibility in designing and structuring their web services, allowing for more customization. In contrast, Django REST framework follows a more opinionated approach, providing clear guidelines and best practices for API development, which can streamline the development process but may limit flexibility in certain cases.

  6. Ecosystem Integration: Django REST framework integrates seamlessly with the broader Django ecosystem, making it easier to work with other Django components such as ORM, authentication, and admin interface. Colossus, being a standalone framework, may require more effort to integrate with other ecosystem components, especially if they are not Scala-based.

In Summary, understanding the differences between Colossus and Django REST framework in terms of language support, framework scope, learning curve, community support, flexibility, and ecosystem integration is essential for developers to choose the right tool for their web development projects.

Advice on Colossus and Django REST framework
Needs advice
on
Django REST frameworkDjango REST framework
and
FastAPIFastAPI

Not sure if we should use DRF or FastAPI. I hear many good things about FastAPI, but it doesn't seem to have a big community. Most important things for us: - speed - ease of development - scalability & security

We're likely going to use MongoDB, so not sure if that changes anything. Would appreciate any help!

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Replies (4)
Karan Mittal
Full Stack Engineer-Freelancer at HemansAI · | 5 upvotes · 30.3K views
Recommends
on
FastAPIFastAPI

I have worked with both frameworks, for your use case I would recommend using FastAPI. DRF, is no doubt an amazing framework and makes various things easy, but Django's MongoDB support is not that good currently, and since its a big framework, there are various things DRF and Django automatically do when you are using their predefined backend engines, which is not in the case of the MonoDB a NoSQL db. FastAPI will give you the flexibility and speed, for the community front, its also growing quite well there.

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Adnan Siddiqi
ETL Developer at Tellus Home · | 5 upvotes · 29.7K views
Recommends
on
FastAPIFastAPI

FastAPI might not have a big community but the documentation is awesome and covers every aspect of the framework itself. I'd recommend coming up with a pilot project yourself and try it on your own. It has a bit learning curve as FastAPI itself is a combo of a few existing projects otherwise it is amazing.

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Recommends

Depends on if you're building an api/microservice or a monolith. Django has a bigger ecosystem of plugins which may, or may not, save you from writng code yourself. DJango can "kind of" work with mongo, but it's really designed to go along with an SQL database. It's also an aging ecosytem though, with many unmaintained plugins.

FastAPI will win out in pretty much every other respect.

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Recommends

I've used both in production.

Simply put: if there's a relational database or it's more than just a handful of endpoints, Django REST Framework is the way to go.

FastAPI is like Flask in that it shines where you want it to do very little for you. If you want it to do a lot for "free", the Django-verse is and will continue to be better.

Last of all, I'll add that we refactored away from FastAPI to just use Starlette under the hood, because FastAPI pretty much assumes you want a REST API, and when don't want a REST API, you begin fighting with it.

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Muhammad Waleed
The Community Management · | 3 upvotes · 138.3K views
Needs advice
on
Django REST frameworkDjango REST framework
and
FlaskFlask

Hey! So I am planning to make an e-commerce website with React Native as my frontend technology stack and MongoDB as my database. I was wondering what will be the best REST framework to use for my backend that will simply serve the frontend. Is Django rest framework a good option or should I go with Flask? I am currently leaning towards flask as the development team is well versed in it. Please help!

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Replies (2)
Preeti Yuankrathok
Software Consultant at CODIUM · | 2 upvotes · 63.7K views

If the application is simple such as less endpoint or simple logic, I'd suggest Flask. But what you're building is quite a large system that contains many logics and a lot of models. So I'd suggest you with Django and Django REST framework. Django ORM is also one of the best ORM in the world as well.

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Mayur Borse
Software Engineer at hyphenOs · | 2 upvotes · 67.2K views
Recommends
on
FastAPIFastAPIfastapifastapi

FastAPI is modern microframework. If you haven't used any of them, I'd suggest FastAPI. Django REST is also good if you have previous experience with it.

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haydenlingle

I'm going to do an independent study with React for school, and I'm looking to build a full-stack application. I have lots of experience with react, but everything else I'd need is somewhat foreign to me. What I'm looking for is to provide a back-end for a React application.

I'm trying to find a back-end framework that can provide and integrate with almost everything I need (database, API, authentication). I will also need to be able to host everything eventually online rather than just locally on my computer. I don't want to use something that is just click-and-go: I want to learn a lot but find something that has much built in functionality, so I don't have to completely re-invent the wheel.

Does anyone else have experience with a stack you'd recommend that is a happy medium of helpful features while still requiring you to understand and implement the functionality yourself? Something well documented (e.g., it's easy to find documentation regarding putting all the pieces together) would be great.

Thanks in advance!

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Replies (7)
Marcelo Escobar
Recommends
on
RailsRails

Greate documentation, lot's of info on StackOverflow and it's easy to learn, a lot of things it's already implemented on the stack. It's based on Ruby which is stable and constantly evolving.

Ruby/Rails have a lot of gems(libraries) that will allow you to connect to many DB systems, implement JWT or use a library for authentication.

I have a lot of API's created in Rails that respond to website and mobile apps, and you can create your first one without a lot of stress, responding with JSON easily.

You can use VSCode has good support for ruby and you will have all syntax help etc, I use Atom but I don't have the syntax support, didn't found a good package for that.

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Recommends
on
Node.jsNode.js

The most popular stack that comes to mind for your case if MERN ( Mongo, Express, React and Node) I would use Nodejs + Express for backend. Easy to build dynamic and powerful REST APIs. For DB, it would be Mongo DB and front end can be React + Redux (for global state management). Plus NPM has a ton of packages for most cases. PS : Webstorm (free for students) or VS Code ( free for all) for IDE

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Alberto Mazaira
Recommends
on
Node.jsNode.jsRailsRails

I would take either Rails or Node for your problem.

Rails is a great framework: super complete in regards of testing frameworks, authentication libraries, great community support.... but I would say that the latest versions are a bit of a mess for newcomers, because of the way they manage assets: if the assets are served by the framework(Assets Pipeline) vs using Webpack .

If you are already familiar with React, Node is another great framework that will require a bit more effort on selecting the dependencies but for your use case seems a great candidate.

In regards of what you are commenting about learning during the process, both can be Dockerized pretty easy and you can spend some time digging on the lifecycle of putting it into production. Rails has a ridiculous easy way of deploying with Heroku avoiding any kind of work, but if you want to get your hands dirty you can deploy either of the frameworks on a Dockerized environment to any cloud provider you like. That part is really interesting too, and if you are interested on the Devops side, I would say that Node is a bit easier and more convenient(smaller image sizes and times to build) than Rails. All in all:

Rails pros: stable framework, great community support, great testing utilities. Rails cons: How they manage the assets lately(Assets Pipeline vs Webpack), dockerize the app.

Node pros: You are already familiar with Js, simple, easy to put in prod allowing to spend time in the Devops side. Node cons: Dependency management in Js environments is a pain in the ass

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Julien DeFrance
Principal Software Engineer at Tophatter · | 4 upvotes · 50.1K views
Recommends
on
RailsRails

Rails is an easy framework to pick up, and you'll get to love all of the magic it does for you. Some of that can be a little confusing at first but once you've got acquainted, this is part of the productivity Rails offers as opposed to other languages or frameworks that sometimes tend to require developers to waste a ton of valuable time setting up their own boilerplate when starting to work on a new project. More pragmatically, Rails is still extremely popular at both startups and at large companies, you can use it to power web applications, or backend APIs, and this will be extremely valuable on your resume. There also is a very large/rich set of libraries (called gems) that will allow you to focus on your actual project/product, rather than rebuilding what already exists. I'd recommend you go with the latest versions of Ruby (3.0) and Rails (6.1.1) so you are from the get-go learning them in their most current form.

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Node.js is great if you already know Javascript. If not, JS is pretty easy to learn. There are many resources and tutorials online for JS and Node. ASP.NET (Core) is a good option if you know C# or need high performance. Node.js isn't a complete framework like .NET, so you need to add Express or another HTTP server, and Database connectors etc.

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Rogério R. Alcântara
Recommends

Although not entirely confident, as I've never used Django and I've not used ASP.NET since 2.0, but given your requirements, at first thought, I'd go with Rails.

Yet, may I ask if have you considered some BAAS such as Firebase, Hasura and the like? Although I've admittedly suffered a bit with Firebase - I'm not totally sure if I've used it correctly, tho. But I've heard really awesome things about Hasura. This slant compairson shows some Firebase's alternatives that I've never heard. In your position, I would have a look.

Cheers.

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kristan-dev
Senior Solutions Analyst · | 8 upvotes · 345.4K views

My journey to developing REST APIs started with Flask Restful, and I've found it to be enough for the needs of my project back then. Now that I've started investing more time on personal projects, I've yet to decide if I should move to use Django for writing REST APIs. I often see job posts looking for Python+Django developers, but it's usually for full-stack developers. I'm primarily interested in Data Engineering, so most of my web projects are back end.

Should I continue with what I know (Flask) or move on to Django?

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Replies (1)
Rafael Torres
Technical Lead at 4Agile · | 9 upvotes · 335.9K views

If you want to be a Web developer with knowledge in another frontend and NoSql technology, maybe continue with Flask. However, if you want to create very fast solutions to grow up with a new business and merge these with data analysis and other tools, Django is the answer. Basically read more about the service architecture where you feel more comfortable, Microservice or Monolithic, but please will not married with any because they solve issues to different contexts.

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Saurav Pandit
Application Devloper at Bny Mellon · | 6 upvotes · 290.7K views

I have just started learning Python 3 weeks ago. I want to create a REST API using python. The API will be used to save form data in an Oracle database. The front end is using AngularJS 8 with Angular Material. In python, there are so many frameworks to develop REST APIs.

I am looking for some suggestions which REST framework to choose?

Here are some features I am looking for:

  • Easy integration and unit testing, like in Angular. We just want to run a command.

  • Code packaging, like in java maven project we can build and package. I am looking for something which I can push in as an artifact and deploy whole code as a package.

  • Support for swagger/ OpenAPI

  • Support for JSON Web Token

  • Support for test case coverage report

Framework can have features included or can be available by extension. Also, you can suggest a framework other than the ones I have mentioned.

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Replies (1)
Recommends
on
FlaskFlask
at

For starters flask provides a beautiful and easy way to create REST APIs. Also its supported by excellent beginner docs as well as a very active community. Another good thing with Flask is its widely available list of plugins which allow you to build as you go. Its also good in performance and can scale to a quite decent level. However, if you are sure your project is going to be fairly big, it would be better to start with Django as it provides a lot of features out of the box and is extremely stable in performance. Both these frameworks have support for Swagger, JWT, Coverage Report although you have to install plugins for them. Deploying both of these are fairly simple and there is huge documentation available. Django has one of the best documentations I have come across. I hope I was able to answer your queries.

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Decisions about Colossus and Django REST framework
Shiqi Lin
Software Developer at BigClarity · | 3 upvotes · 211.8K views

We will use Django to set up our backend and Django REST Framework (DRF) for our API creation. The easiness of performing development tasks (eg. user authentication, URL routing, and schema migration) attracts our attention. Also, Django with PostgreSQL provides many benefits: 1. Some data types in Django will only work with PostgreSQL; 2. Django offers django.contrib.postgres to operate on PostgreSQL; 3. Django supports many features of PostgreSQL. Moreover, Django is compatible with Redis.

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Pros of Colossus
Pros of Django REST framework
    Be the first to leave a pro
    • 66
      Easy to use
    • 65
      Browsable api
    • 53
      Great documentation
    • 50
      Customizable
    • 42
      Fast development
    • 9
      Easy to use, customizable, pluggable, serializer
    • 8
      Python
    • 7
      Django ORM
    • 5
      FastSerialize
    • 3
      Less code
    • 2
      Easy implementation

    Sign up to add or upvote prosMake informed product decisions

    Cons of Colossus
    Cons of Django REST framework
      Be the first to leave a con
      • 2
        Bad documentation
      • 2
        Reimplements Django functionality
      • 1
        No support for URL Namespaces
      • 0
        Bad CSRF handling

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      - No public GitHub repository available -

      What is Colossus?

      Colossus is a lightweight framework for building high-performance applications in Scala that require non-blocking network I/O. In particular Colossus is focused on low-latency stateless microservices where often the service is little more than an abstraction over a database and/or cache. For this use case, Colossus aims to maximize performance while keeping the interface clean and concise.

      What is Django REST framework?

      It is a powerful and flexible toolkit that makes it easy to build Web APIs.

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      What are some alternatives to Colossus and Django REST framework?
      Magneto
      Magneto was built by Automation Engineers for Automation Engineers out of necessity for a mobile centric test automation framework that's easy to setup, run and utilize.
      ExpressJS
      Express is a minimal and flexible node.js web application framework, providing a robust set of features for building single and multi-page, and hybrid web applications.
      Flask
      Flask is intended for getting started very quickly and was developed with best intentions in mind.
      Sinatra
      Sinatra is a DSL for quickly creating web applications in Ruby with minimal effort.
      FastAPI
      It is a modern, fast (high-performance), web framework for building APIs with Python 3.6+ based on standard Python type hints.
      See all alternatives