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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:
djot
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LaTeX and Neovim for technical note-taking
I know this doesn't solve your problem directly, but I recommend people to try out Djot[0], a markup language from the author of CommonMark.
Djot has a single well-defined spec, and most of the basic formatting has the same syntax as (a) Markdown, so switching is pretty painless. It has as a main goal to be legible and visually aesthetic as-is, just like Markdown.
What Djot adds is its _predictability_. Nested formatting, precedence order, line breaks behavior, nested blocks, mixed inline and block formatting, custom attributes are all laid out precisely in the spec in a thought-out manner. Till this day I still can't remember how to put line break within a list item in Markdown (and I'm sure there're more than one way).
[0]: https://djot.net/
- Pandoc 3.1.12 Released
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Pandoc
Worth noting that the author has also created a markup language, djot.
https://github.com/jgm/djot
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Augmenting the Markdown Language for Great Python Graphical Interfaces
Every time I see people doing something with Markdown, I wish they just replace it with support for Djot[0] instead. It is a Markdown alternative by the creator of Pandoc and CommonMark that fixes all of the most egregious mistakes, while being legible and visually pleasant as-is. It is also syntactically similar to Markdown, which should ease adoption.
[0] https://github.com/jgm/djot
- Djot is a light markup syntax
- Beyond Markdown
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HELP!!! Stuck forever
Are you using markdown? It might make sense to look at 'djot' as well: https://djot.net/; it's a new 'light' markup language conceived as a successor to commonmark; development is led by none other than John McFarlane (author of pandoc, & also led commonmark standardization) Djot makes it really easy to attach arbitrary attributes to block elements as well as inline elements; and the parser records source positions in the output -- all of which makes it really convenient keeping track of elements changing position or value.
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Is there a way to send data from neovim in real-time to other applications? Want to create a neovim qmk bridge.
I have a simple script that sends a djot buffer (https://github.com/jgm/djot) to the parser, if there's a change, on the CursorHold event.
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wiki.vim v0.6 is released
Since you mentioned you were considering moving to CommonMark, have you had time to look into Djot (also by jpm)? Djot is meant to be easier to parse, and I'm planning to write a tree-sitter grammar for it.
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Typst, a modern LaTeX alternative written in Rust, is now open source
Another recent development here is https://djot.net/ (by the pandoc author). It indeed thoroughly solves both:
What are some alternatives?
docrb - 📖 An opinionated documentation generator for Ruby
typst - A new markup-based typesetting system that is powerful and easy to learn.
raito - Mini Markdown Wiki/CMS in 8kb of JavaScript
mdBook - Create book from markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
MQTT-Explorer - An all-round MQTT client that provides a structured topic overview
Zato - ESB, SOA, REST, APIs and Cloud Integrations in Python
Grav - Modern, Crazy Fast, Ridiculously Easy and Amazingly Powerful Flat-File CMS powered by PHP, Markdown, Twig, and Symfony
scroll - Tools for thought. An extensible alternative to Markdown.
mdx - Markdown for the component era
pdfsyntax - A Python library to inspect and modify the internal structure of a PDF file
pdfquery - A fast and friendly PDF scraping library.