madness
commonmark-spec
madness | commonmark-spec | |
---|---|---|
3 | 48 | |
107 | 4,835 | |
- | 0.2% | |
8.6 | 6.9 | |
15 days ago | 3 months ago | |
Ruby | Python | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
madness
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We Should Have Markdown Rendered Websites
Website is broken, but I infer from the comments that this would fit the bill:
https://github.com/DannyBen/madness/
My company uses it internally for a load of things. I love writing in MD and pushing to gerrit and when it is submitted the change is live.
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Create and edit Markdown from a browser and publish as HTML from web server
Might be interested in this: https://madness.dannyb.co/
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Build your self-hosted Evernote
Clone the notebook repo on the machine where you want to expose the Markdown web server and then install Madness and its dependencies:
commonmark-spec
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How to add a man page to your Ruby project, using kramdown-man and markdown
Edit: this is because GitHub uses cmark-gfm, which is a fork of cmark, which implements the CommonMark variant of markdown. Looks like CommonMark still doesn't support definition lists. :(
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How do you host documentation for your spouse or other users?
BookStack dev here. There's no specific "import" option but you can use the Markdown editor in BookStack and paste in your Markdown content there. The API is essentially just an endpoint to accept the same kind of data, for of course you could automate against the API for batch import. One thing to keep in mind is that BookStack markdown support is fairly tightly scoped to (commonmark + tables + tasklists), although HTML within MD is supported.
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On why Markdown is not a good, or even a half-decent, markup language
>A single canonical reference
https://commonmark.org/
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Get ready for Bear 2 - We have a quick blog post with some important details and ways you can get notified once it's out!
Typically with major new releases of software, when the number left of the dot (e.g. 2.0) increases, it’s shipped as a separate product. Not always, but generally. The Bear folks can speak for themselves but IIRC a lot of the code was refactored / rewritten to support, for example, CommonMark. So, under the hood, it’s literally brand new in some respects.
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Best website to write a rulebook for ttrpgs
I use Obsidian (https://obsidian.md) for a lot of things, including my RPG stuff, and there are options for exporting things as PDFs. It’s great for getting organized and doing research, but I would use other tools for long-form writing and layout. What I like about Obsidian though is that everything is done in Markdown (https://commonmark.org) and I can use Pandoc (https://pandoc.org) to transform the source to whatever I need. The caveat is that Obsidian uses a flavor of Markdown with some non-standard extensions, so a pure Markdown editor like Typora (https://typora.io) might be a better choice depending on your needs.
- What is the most minimal, strictest variant of Markdown?
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How to display an image
yes, this is the "inventor" of markdown and those rules will always work. Hugo uses something called "Commonmark" which is developed on top of the original markdown. But the original rules will always work too.
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Lightweight Markup for Ukrainian Texts?
Reddit and many other sites support Markdown as an easy way to add emphasis, links, headings, etc. Markdown does not contain any keywords, as it is intended to be language-independent. However, Markdown syntax makes heavy use of square brackets [] and other characters that are difficult to type with an Ukrainian keyboard layout, e.g., the backtick `.
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I wish Asciidoc was more popular
Check out commonmark, that is the Markdown standard supported by numerous converters including pandoc.
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I wrote a markdown to html converter
And if this is an exercise into that you can use a Markdown spec like CommonMark which is the spec Reddit and a variety of other sites use.
What are some alternatives?
docrb - 📖 An opinionated documentation generator for Ruby
pandoc - Universal markup converter
raito - Mini Markdown Wiki/CMS in 8kb of JavaScript
kramdown - kramdown is a fast, pure Ruby Markdown superset converter, using a strict syntax definition and supporting several common extensions.
MQTT-Explorer - An all-round MQTT client that provides a structured topic overview
marktext - 📝A simple and elegant markdown editor, available for Linux, macOS and Windows.
Grav - Modern, Crazy Fast, Ridiculously Easy and Amazingly Powerful Flat-File CMS powered by PHP, Markdown, Twig, and Symfony
markdown-it-katex - Add Math to your Markdown with a KaTeX plugin for Markdown-it
mdx - Markdown for the component era
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
Zato - ESB, SOA, REST, APIs and Cloud Integrations in Python
rehype-sanitize - plugin to sanitize HTML