awesome
TOAST UI Editor
Our great sponsors
awesome | TOAST UI Editor | |
---|---|---|
145 | 17 | |
299,232 | 16,745 | |
- | 0.5% | |
7.3 | 0.0 | |
8 days ago | 10 days ago | |
Shell | TypeScript | |
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | 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.
awesome
-
AI-generated content, other unfavorable practices get CNET on Wikipedia banlist
In the days before "google it" was a synonym for "find it", we had different curated link sites, and even pyhsical magazines with hand-curated lists of links that people interested in a certain topic might find interesting. This still exists today in some forms, for example the "awesome lists" that you see for some programming topics, for example https://github.com/sindresorhus/awesome .
Just like there was a time when 90%-99% of all email traffic was viagra spam, I imagine in the future most of the internet by volume will be AI-generated trash, and those in the know will still circulate lists of where the other 1% can be found.
An even brighter scenario is that someone, maybe a kid tinkering in their garage, figures out how to make a search engine that finds the good stuff, doesn't immediately die to AI bot farms' SEO efforts, and is financially viable.
-
Resources I wish I knew when I started my career
2. Awesome Lists
-
The Top 10 GitHub Repositories Making Waves ππ
Software Engineering Blogs
-
Kyutai AI research lab with a $330M budget that will make everything open source
He appears to be the original creator of the βAwesome Xβ repo: https://github.com/sindresorhus/awesome
-
β¨7 Github Repositories to Master React
Awesome React
-
Do you know any books about programming worth reading?
I'm just going to leave this here: awesome git repo
-
No More Problems With GitHub Issues
You don't need any particular requirement to consult issues section on GitHub. If you need a place to follow along this post, my chosen repository for today's blog post is Awesome.
-
Artist for Hire?
I have an awesome list GitHub repository that needs a few icons & a banner made. I was wondering if any students in graphic design would be willing to commission a few for me? I'm willing to pay either hourly, or by the project and can pay cash or venmo. Note that the art will end up as CC0, so you'd essentially be waiving any right to the artwork.
-
Pulling my site from Google over AI training
yah, come to think of it in the curated space, this reminds me of that awesome X family of github pages. Looks like someone compiled a bunch of them here https://github.com/sindresorhus/awesome#databases. I have found those to be highly valuable treasure troves pregnant with rich and relevant information.
-
Top 10 "Must Have" Repositories for Web Developers
10. Awesome
TOAST UI Editor
-
I'm making a GlowUI text editor to get back into coding
If you need a WYSIWYG markdown editor you can try Toast UI Editor or simply use Markdown Live add-on for Visual Studio Code
-
Is there a way to edit callouts in preview mode
- Toast UI Editor: https://ui.toast.com/tui-editor
-
Ask HN: Any good out of the box WYSIWYG and MD JavaScript libs?
https://github.com/nhn/tui.editor Might be close to what you are after.
- Using external Editor
-
Ask HN: Help me pick a front-end framework
Can you elaborate a bit more on this part, please?
> I'm thinking of building a text-annotation based app _alone in my spare time_. The core usage loop is about viewing and interacting with "visual markup" applied to a body of text. So lots of tooltips/hoverbars I guess.
Or show us a mockup... doesn't have to be anything fancy, just like a pen and paper sketch or a simple Figma.
I'm asking because it kinda sounds like you're wanting to do something like an online IDE or Google Docs, where you're manipulating a body of text in the style of a rich text editor. If that's the case, it's possible the HTML DOM model isn't quite the right fit for you... you may find it better to abstract over a Canvas or WebGL object instead of trying to shoehorn that experience into the raw DOM. That way you have full control over rendering, outside of the normal layout/styling/rendering loop. It might also make a good case for a single-page app (at least the majority of the editor itself would be, and the other stuff -- marketing, blog, etc. -- can be routed to individual pages).
In that case, it wouldn't be so much a question of "framework" in the sense of React, Vue, etc., which traditionally work on the DOM. It might be more a question of "engine", like whether to use something like PixiJS to manipulate the graphics layer vs rolling your own. State management can be done with something like Redux (even without React), or if you choose to use a frontend framework for the rest of it, you can maybe use their state solution with your rendering engine.
In addition to choosing a low-level graphics lib, you can also look at some existing rich text markup solutions. A CMS I used had a good blog post on this: https://www.datocms.com/docs/structured-text/dast#datocms-ab... along with their open-source editor: https://github.com/datocms/structured-text
A more widespread one is the toast UI editor: https://ui.toast.com/tui-editor
I know you're not just working in Markdown, but these give you an idea of what it's like to work with complex text trees in JS.
Once you have the actual text editor part figured out, choosing the wrapper around it (again, just for marketing pages, etc.) is relatively trivial compared to the difficulty of your editor app. I really like Next.js myself (if you choose React), but I don't think you could really go wrong with any of the major choices today... React/Vue/Svelte/etc. And it looks to me like the complexity of your site wouldn't really be around that anyway, but the editor portion.
Lastly: I don't think ANY JS tool or package is going to be maintained in 10 years. Frankly, 2 years is a long time in the JS ecosystem :( I'm not defending this phenomenon, I hate it too, but that's the reality of it. If long-term maintenance is a goal of yours, you might want to consider writing abstraction layers over third-party tools you use, so you can easily swap them out when future things come out (because they will). The web itself is changing too fast for libraries to keep up; instead, people just write new ones every few years. An example of this is the pathway from the Canvas to WebGL to workers to WASM (and how to juggle heavy computational vs rendering loops around)... a lot of the old Canvas-based renderers, which were super powerful in their time, are now too slow vs the modern alternatives. Nobody is going to port the old stuff over, they just make new libs. It's likely that trend will continue in the JS world (that whatever you write today will be obsoleted by a new web API in a few years).
Lastly, as an aside, TypeScript is a superset of JS... if you find a JS project/lib/plugin that you want to use, there will often be types for it made by the community (https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped) , or you can write your own types for it. I don't really have an opinion about TypeScript vs writing in some other language and compiling to JS, but it would probably be easier to find help (especially frontend) in the future if you stick with TypeScript instead of convoluting your stack with multiple languages. Sounds like most of your app will be clientside anyway with limited backend needs.
---------
Tech aside... have you considered partnering with a frontend dev for this? I know you said "alone", but just having someone set up the basic skeleton of such an app with you for the first month or two could be super helpful. Or a UX person to help you with some of the interactions before you start serious coding. They don't have to be with you the whole journey, but maybe they can help jumpstart your project so you can then work on adding features & polish in your spare time, instead of figuring out basic architecture? Unless, of course, that's the part you actually enjoy. In that case, don't let anyone rob of you that :)
Have fun! Sounds like a cool project.
-
Is there any *real* WYSIWYG markdown editor besides Typora?
I think the Toast UI Editor can achieve what you want, and it does a pretty good job at that. Is built upon ProseMirror. Won't be a lot else out there since it's actually quite a hard thing to achieve once you get into the detail.
-
Stick - Shareable Git-powered notebooks
Ideas to add: - add markdown editor that works via plain JS - ability from UI to rollback to previous note version (git checkout) - Ability to create directories for notes
-
TOAST UI Editor VS ink - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 7 May 2022
-
Implement ToastUI Editor with Next.JS (w/ TypeScript)
To make it as brief as possible, this post will only deal with some of the issues that you might encounter while implementing ToastUI Editor inside Next.JS projects.
-
Switching Rich Text Editors, Part 1: Picking Tiptap
ToastUI (https://ui.toast.com/tui-editor), which builds on ProseMirror, was really easy to set up and has been very stable for us. It's a WYSIWYG editor that just renders markdown, which is what we wanted to have as the base representation for written content so we have some portability later depending on how our product evolves.
What are some alternatives?
free-for-dev - A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
daisyui - πΌ πΌ πΌ πΌ πΌ βThe most popular, free and open-source Tailwind CSS component library
quill - Quill is a modern WYSIWYG editor built for compatibility and extensibility.
vitepress - Vite & Vue powered static site generator.
TinyMCE - The world's #1 JavaScript library for rich text editing. Available for React, Vue and Angular
MacType-Profile - Best mactype experience
SimpleMDE - A simple, beautiful, and embeddable JavaScript Markdown editor. Delightful editing for beginners and experts alike. Features built-in autosaving and spell checking.
developer-roadmap - Interactive roadmaps, guides and other educational content to help developers grow in their careers.
fullcalendar - Full-sized drag & drop event calendar in JavaScript
public-apis - A collective list of free APIs
ckeditor-releases - Official distribution releases of CKEditor 4.