Openly
proselint
Openly | proselint | |
---|---|---|
4 | 9 | |
125 | 4,292 | |
-0.8% | 0.6% | |
5.7 | 5.1 | |
30 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Gherkin | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
Openly
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Writing like a pro with Vale and Neovim
They don't mention that can write the rules yourself and also pick and choose from existing rules from github.
There is an attempt to build and open source version of grammarly using vale rules here.
https://github.com/testthedocs/Openly
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A little grammar help, anyone?
Check out Openly (https://github.com/testthedocs/Openly) -- it's a "Vale linter style that attempts to emulate some features of the commercial, and closed source, Grammarly."
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Markdown Linting
Grammarly Clone in Vale
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"Stealing" style guide content
There's even a project of someone trying to simulate Grammarly, although it looks a bit dead right now: https://github.com/testthedocs/Openly
proselint
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Getting Started with Technical Writing
So cool. Looks like the proseline site is down. For anyone else who wanted to read the approach - https://github.com/amperser/proselint/blob/b5b7536bec5fd461e...
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Writing like a pro with vale & neovim
You can try proselint, which also has built-in support in null-ls. Its LaTeX support isn't perfect, but it's workable.
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Help with autocompletion for prose writing.
Something like grammar-guard, proselint and/or language-tool?
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Grammar checker for scientific writing
Yep, though there's not a lot to see! Follow the instructions for installing proselint at https://github.com/amperser/proselint and configure as follows:
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Is there a reliable Grammarly package for Emacs?
Vale uses a customizable grammar checker, and you can download some open-source configurations to start working with from the link above. Then, you just need to add something like below to your Emacs configuration: (flycheck-define-checker vale "A prose linter" :command ("vale" "--output" "line" source) :standard-input nil :error-patterns ((error line-start (file-name) ":" line ":" column ":" (id (one-or-more (not (any ":")))) ":" (message) line-end)) :modes (markdown-mode org-mode text-mode) ) (add-to-list 'flycheck-checkers 'vale 'append) (setq flycheck-vale-executable "/usr/local/bin/vale") It looks like you can do something similar with Proselint, which looks wonderful and I have been meaning to try using in my day-to-day: https://unconj.ca/blog/linting-prose-in-emacs.html .
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Markdown Linting
proselint
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Setting up VIM for blogging
Full list here. Since the tool is a linter, it sounds like it should work with language servers. I use CoC.nvim for LSP features. Thankfully some smart guys have figured out how to make proselint work with coc.nvim & coc-diagnostic (see here). Now it works for my blog posts just like clangd does for my C++ code.
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novelWriter 1.0
You're looking for proselint. https://github.com/amperser/proselint
What are some alternatives?
languagetool - Style and Grammar Checker for 25+ Languages
vim-pencil - Rethinking Vim as a tool for writing
vale-styles - Checks for Vale based on popular style guides
vale - :pencil: A markup-aware linter for prose built with speed and extensibility in mind.
vscode-ltex - LTeX: Grammar/spell checker :mag::heavy_check_mark: for VS Code using LanguageTool with support for LaTeX :mortar_board:, Markdown :pencil:, and others
write-good - Naive linter for English prose
docs - Linode guides and tutorials.
novelWriter - novelWriter is an open source plain text editor designed for writing novels. It supports a minimal markdown-like syntax for formatting text. It is written with Python 3 (3.9+) and Qt 5 (5.15) for cross-platform support.
lsp-grammarly - lsp-mode ❤️ grammarly
Vale - Compiler for the Vale programming language - http://vale.dev/
coc-diagnostic - diagnostic-languageserver extension for coc.nvim