Best DevOps Software for TypeScript

Find and compare the best DevOps software for TypeScript in 2024

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top DevOps software for TypeScript on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    PyCharm Reviews
    Top Pick

    PyCharm

    JetBrains

    $199 per user per year
    21 Ratings
    All the Python tools in one location. PyCharm will take care of the routine, saving you time. To make the most of PyCharm's productivity features, you should focus on the important things. PyCharm has all the information you need about your code. PyCharm can help you with intelligent code completion, quick error checking and quick fixes, project navigation, and many other things. The IDE allows you to write clean and maintainable code and helps you maintain control of quality with PEP8 tests, testing assistance and smart refactorings. PyCharm was created by programmers for programmers to give you all the tools you need to create Python code. PyCharm offers smart code completion, code inspections and quick-fixes. It also includes automated code refactorings.
  • 2
    Merico Reviews

    Merico

    Merico

    $2.50 per month
    Old analytics measure surface-level signals. Merico analyzes the code directly, determining what is important with deep program analysis. It is difficult to measure engineering performance. It is difficult to measure engineering performance. Few companies attempt it. Most of those that do use misleading signals and inaccurate information miss opportunities for improvement and recognition. Analytics and evaluation tools have tended to focus on superficial metrics to measure quality and productivity. Developers know that this isn’t the right approach. Merico was created to address this problem. Your team can get the insights they need straight from the codebase with commit-level analysis. Merico's information is indestructible from the inaccuracies caused by measuring processes. Developers can improve, prioritize, or evolve with specificity by having a direct connection to the code. Merico allows teams to set clear goals and track progress with concrete benchmarks.
  • 3
    Phylum Reviews
    Phylum defends applications at the perimeter of the open-source ecosystem and the tools used to build software. Its automated analysis engine scans third-party code as soon as it’s published into the open-source ecosystem to vet software packages, identify risks, inform users and block attacks. Think of Phylum like a firewall for open-source code. Phylum can be deployed in front of artifact repository managers, integrate directly with package managers or be deployed in CI/CD pipelines. Phylum users benefit from its powerful, automated analysis engine that reports proprietary findings instead of relying on manually curated lists. Phylum uses SAST, heuristics, machine learning and artificial intelligence to detect and report zero-day findings. Users know more risks, sooner and earlier in the development lifecycle for the strongest software supply chain defense. The Phylum policy library allows users to toggle on the blocking of critical vulnerabilities, attacks like typosquats, obfuscated code and dependency confusion, copyleft licenses, and more. Additionally, the flexibility of OPA enables customers to develop incredibly flexible and granular policies that fit their unique needs.
  • 4
    Trigger.dev Reviews

    Trigger.dev

    Trigger.dev

    $10 per month
    We'll take care of the rest. From deployment to elastic scaling, just write normal async codes. No timeouts and real-time monitoring. Zero infrastructure to manage. Trigger.dev, an open-source platform and SDK, allows developers to create background jobs that run for a long time without timeouts directly from their existing codebase. It supports JavaScript and TypeScript to allow for the writing of reliable, asynchronous code which integrates seamlessly into existing workflows. The platform provides features like API integrations and webhooks. It also offers scheduling, delays, and concurrency control without the need for servers. Trigger.dev has built-in monitoring tools that include real-time updates on run status, advanced filtering and custom alerts sent via email, Slack or webhooks. Its architecture allows for elastic scaling, which is essential to efficiently handle varying workloads. Developers can deploy tasks via a command-line, while the platform handles scaling management.
  • 5
    Nexus Repository Pro Reviews
    Manage binaries and create artifacts throughout your software supply chain. All components, binaries and artifacts are available from one source. Distribute parts and containers efficiently to developers. More than 100,000 organizations worldwide have used this product. Distribute Maven/Java components, npm and NuGet, Helm and Docker, OBR, APT and GO, R components, and many more. From dev to delivery, manage components: binaries and containers, assemblies, and finished products. Advanced support for Java Virtual Machine (JVM), including Gradle, Ant and Maven, as well as Ivy. Compatible with Eclipse, IntelliJ and Hudson, Jenkins, Puppets, Puppets, Chef, Docker and many other popular tools. High availability and innovation available 24x7x365. One source of truth for all components throughout your software development lifecycle, including QA, staging, operations. Integrate with existing user access provisioning systems such as LDAP, Atlassian Crowd and more.
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