quickadd
rich
quickadd | rich | |
---|---|---|
38 | 149 | |
190 | 47,552 | |
0.5% | 1.0% | |
5.3 | 7.8 | |
3 months ago | 20 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
quickadd
- Ship Faster by Organising Less
-
From a Day to 17 Minutes: How We’ve Dealt with Slow Build Times
by Adam Pavlisin & Slavo Glinsky ➤➤➤ https://acreom.com
-
My productivity app is a never-ending .txt file
there's a much better way providing simplicity with full data ownership and real tasks out of the box in daily documents https://acreom.com
-
100% User-Supported
the premise of this article is false. acreom [1] is VC backed, and doesn’t implement any of the mentioned practices. No price subsidising (quite the opposite), no pressure to create lock-in or monetize user data etc. There’s nothing wrong with being VC backed given the expectations between investors, the team and users are aligned.
[1] https://acreom.com/
-
Skiff is shutting down in six months
Check out https://acreom.com, you literally own the software, it's local-first, E2EE, integrated, runs on markdown files, and once you download the app you can keep it forever.
-
Show HN: Find consistent and conflict-free shortcuts for your app
Hello HN! Maker of Keycheck.dev here.
Keycheck is an open-source web app that lets you quickly find consistent and conflict-free shortcuts for your app. Currently featuring over 100 apps, and 1400 shortcuts.
When designing keyboard shortcuts for our main app - acreom (https://acreom.com/), we wanted to create a great keyboard user experience. This involves designing shortcuts which are easy to hit, easy to remember, and do not clash with the system shortcuts. We have learned that there’s no reason to reinvent the wheel and it’s easier to follow conventions from other popular apps to achieve this. Finding this out, however, was frustrating, and involved lots of manual work of downloading and signing in to other apps.
We decided to solve this problem and open-source our solution to help other makers in the process of designing shortcuts. You can match any key combination against combinations of other apps, search shortcuts by their keybinds, descriptions, or by app, and explore the apps and see their shortcuts. Feel free to play around and explore all the possibilities.
The code is fully open-sourced (https://github.com/Acreom/keycheck) and contributions are welcome! If you are a maker, feel free add your app to help other makers and increase visibility for your own project.
Looking forward to the feedback!
-
A CEO's Guide to Emacs
with the steep learning curve of setting it up followed by the never ending UX complexities emacs seems like it's for people who get satisfaction of spending time setting things up rather than being effective. A modern alternative of this is Notion.
On the contrary, for people who care about getting stuff done with a capture-first organize-later interface that works out of the box like an iPhone, options are limited.
for the curious ones I'm building one myself https://acreom.com
- Welche Note taking/Wiki App nutzt ihr, falls überhaupt?
-
Created a versus list for Note Taking Apps (last tab). What do you guys think? Did I miss anything?
- acreom (https://acreom.com)
-
Ask HN: Who is hiring? (July 2023)
acreom | DevRel (remote) or Prague (Czechia)
https://acreom.com is a markdown knowledge base with tasks for developers. We're building a delightful and integrated interface developers love using alongside their code editors to organise their work.
reach out to me directly /martin at acreom dot com/ for more info.
rich
- Ask HN: Interesting TUIs (text user interfaces), maybe forgotten ones?
- Rich is a Python library for rich text and beautiful formatting in the terminal
-
Neat Parallel Output in Python
There is an open issue [1] on GitHub to make it more modular and get rid of markdown and syntax highlighting but I have no hope for rich to get more minimal.
[1]: https://github.com/Textualize/rich/issues/2277
-
Ask HN: Programmers and Technologists in Scotland
I hope he doesn't mind, but the creator of Rich and Textualize is a good guy, and Scottish: https://www.willmcgugan.com/about/
https://www.textualize.io/
https://github.com/Textualize/rich
-
Python 3.12
They keep getting improved error messaging and this is one of my favorite features. But I'd love if we could get some real rich text. Idk if anyone else uses rich, but it has infected all my programs now. Not just to print with colors, but because it makes debugging so much easier. Not just print(f"{var=}") but the handler[0,1]. Color is so important to these types of things and so is formatting. Plus, the progress bars are nice and have almost completely replaced tqdm for me[2]. They're just easier and prettier.
[0] https://rich.readthedocs.io/en/stable/logging.html
[1] Try this example: https://github.com/Textualize/rich/blob/master/examples/exce...
[2] Side note: does anyone know how to get these properly working when using DDP with pytorch? I get flickering when using this and I think it is actually down to a pytorch issue and how they're handling their loggers and flushing the screen. I know pytorch doesn't want to depend on rich, but hey, pip uses rich so why shouldn't everyone?
-
colors.crumb - first Crumb usable. Extending Crumb with basic terminal styling and RGB, HEX, ANSI conversion functions.
colors.crumb extends Crumb with basic terminal styling functions and RGB, HEX, ANSI conversion functions. It is in the realm of JavaScript's chalk and Python's rich but slightly more functional 😉.
-
Textual: Rapid Application Development Framework for Python
I am working on a new python project and one of the first things I added was https://github.com/Textualize/rich because of how easy it is to make things look good in the terminal.
-
What are you rewriting in rust?
I am not rewriting anything but I'd love to have a library like `rich` in Rust: https://github.com/textualize/rich
-
Things to do with standalone script
Add some cool-looking stuff to your output with rich.
-
I made a library for making user terminal input really really pretty!
You might consider taking inspiration from the rich module. In particular, I like how rich supports inline color theming which seems much more cumbersome in your framework, requiring the use of context managers as well as familiarity with how your framework structures color objects. Other than that though, I'm impressed!
What are some alternatives?
roqr - QR codes that will rock your world
tqdm - :zap: A Fast, Extensible Progress Bar for Python and CLI
markwhen - Make a cascading timeline from markdown-like text. Supports simple American/European date styles, ISO8601, images, links, locations, and more.
colorama - Simple cross-platform colored terminal text in Python
chrono - A natural language date parser in Javascript
python-prompt-toolkit - Library for building powerful interactive command line applications in Python
notebook - Tool for Thought. ʚɞ
textual - The lean application framework for Python. Build sophisticated user interfaces with a simple Python API. Run your apps in the terminal and a web browser.
notes
blessed - Blessed is an easy, practical library for making python terminal apps
notable - The Markdown-based note-taking app that doesn't suck.
alive-progress - A new kind of Progress Bar, with real-time throughput, ETA, and very cool animations!