marker
zim-desktop-wiki
marker | zim-desktop-wiki | |
---|---|---|
8 | 164 | |
8,225 | 1,858 | |
- | 0.8% | |
7.8 | 8.5 | |
5 days ago | 25 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
marker
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LlamaCloud and LlamaParse
You may want to try https://github.com/VikParuchuri/surya (I'm the author). I've only benchmarked against tesseract, but it outperforms it by a lot (benchmarks in repo). Happy to discuss.
You could also try https://github.com/VikParuchuri/marker for general PDF parsing (I'm also the author) - it seems like you're more focused on tables.
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Show HN: Texify – OCR math images to LaTeX and Markdown
Hi HN - I made texify to convert equations to markdown/LaTeX for my project marker [1] then realized it could be generally useful.
Texify converts equations and surrounding text to Markdown, with embedded LaTeX (MathJax compatible).
You can either use a GUI to select equations (inline or block) from PDFs and images to convert, or use the CLI to batch convert images. It works on CPU, GPU, or MPS (Mac).
The closest open source comparisons are pix2tex and nougat - marker is more accurate than both of them for this task. However, nougat is more for entire pages, and pix2tex is more for block equations (not inline equations and text).
I trained texify for 2 days on 4x A6000 GPUs - I was pleasantly surprised how far I could get with limited GPU resources by reframing the problem to use small parameter counts/images.
Texify is licensed for commercial use, with the weights under CC-BY-SA 4.0. Fine them here - https://huggingface.co/vikp/texify .
See the texify repo for more details, benchmarks, how to install, etc.
[1] https://github.com/VikParuchuri/marker
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Show HN: Talk to any ArXiv paper just by changing the URL
https://github.com/VikParuchuri/marker
Both are tools to convert pdfs into Latex or Markup with latex formulas. Maybe that helps
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 11 Dec 2023
- Marker: Convert PDF to Markdown quickly with high accuracy
- FLaNK Stack for 04 December 2023
zim-desktop-wiki
- Ask HN: FOSS notes offline app with navigation tree, ideally cross platform?
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Show HN: A Python-based static site generator using Jinja templates
I'll slightly modify your argument; because Pure HTML does suck:
Why don't people make static sites with a simple "Markdown-or-Similar to HTML" converter, CSS, and vanilla JS...etc?
(This is what I do, btw -- http://zim-wiki.org + a template)
- Zim – A Desktop Wiki
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Show HN: A directory of open source alternatives to proprietary software
You should add Zim [1] to the "Personal Knowledge Management" section :)
[1] https://zim-wiki.org
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Sent – simple plaintext presentation tool
https://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/s5/
And I just tweaked the CSS and added a bit of logic to included the possibility of one image per slide; as well as editing slides not with raw HTML but with https://zim-wiki.org (because that's what I'm really used to, I'm sure any Markdown thing would work just as well).
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The rise and fall of the standard user interface
Absolutely; recently I realize I wish I'd never learned vim. I use too many other programs that are at least CUA-ish ( http://zim-wiki.org is the most important app I use ) and now I kind of want out. I haven't yet tried Modeless Vim, but that looks like my next experiment.
https://github.com/SebastianMuskalla/ModelessVim
- Zed is now open source
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Writing HTML in HTML
It is so hard not to feel REALLY SMUG reading stuff like this, as someone who has run my own website as the working primary source for my college instruction for the past 15 years or so using https://zim-wiki.org. (before Markdown was much of a thing!)
It's borderline bizarre to have watched this method of doing things kind of die out, and then also come back in the form of "static site generators" -- which, frankly, are still way clunkier than this.
Write in Zim, export to html, rsync to site. Easy.
- Note-apps =HELL
- Ask HN: What are some unpopular technologies you wish people knew more about?
What are some alternatives?
voyager - 🛰️ An approximate nearest-neighbor search library for Python and Java with a focus on ease of use, simplicity, and deployability.
obsidian-mind-map - An Obsidian plugin for displaying markdown notes as mind maps using Markmap.
llmsherpa - Developer APIs to Accelerate LLM Projects
vimwiki - Personal Wiki for Vim
PyMuPDF - PyMuPDF is a high performance Python library for data extraction, analysis, conversion & manipulation of PDF (and other) documents.
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
node-gtk - GTK+ bindings for NodeJS (via GObject introspection)
logseq - A local-first, non-linear, outliner notebook for organizing and sharing your personal knowledge base. Use it to organize your todo list, to write your journals, or to record your unique life.
FLiPStackWeekly - FLaNK AI Weekly covering Apache NiFi, Apache Flink, Apache Kafka, Apache Spark, Apache Iceberg, Apache Ozone, Apache Pulsar, and more...
obsidian-dataview - A data index and query language over Markdown files, for https://obsidian.md/.
langchain4j - Java version of LangChain
Trilium Notes - Build your personal knowledge base with Trilium Notes