Perlite
api-playground
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Perlite | api-playground | |
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5 | 2 | |
883 | - | |
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8.0 | - | |
3 months ago | - | |
CSS | ||
MIT License | - |
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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.
Perlite
- Selfhosted obsidian alternative
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Is there a way to show a read-only version of your obsidian project on the web, so that people can't copy it?
there is a self hosted version here https://github.com/secure-77/Perlite
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Still no web app? Are there any workarounds besides NeverInstall?
yes, there is a self-hosting option called perlite. Here is a link: Perlite on GitHub
- Host your Obsidian notes with MkDocs & Nginx
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Show HN: My new free note taking tool
I share a folder between my Obsidian vault and the folder PineDocs uses with Syncthing (because the machine that runs PineDocs is not my laptop), so as soon as I save my files the site is immediately updated, but PineDocs was not designed with Obsidian in mind, the links work but not the advanced features Obsidian offers.
On the other hand, Perlite [1] is (I never really tested it but it looks cool) designed with Obsidian in mind so maybe it supports more features.
[1] https://github.com/secure-77/Perlite
api-playground
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Show HN: My new free note taking tool
GitLab team member here.
Maybe you can re-use the script I shared in this comment [0] to query the GitLab REST API to generate an index. I'm a fan of using the API programmatically, and tend to avoid git checkout/grep/etc. inside CI/CD pipelines (works too, everyone is free to choose their way).
Yet again, I love API challenges, so I've created a new script which parses a defined markdown footer for Tags and Due date, and generates an ordered index by due date. I did not know which format you are using, so I made up my own, see the MR description [1] and docs [2].
The script lives in [3] and is a mix of fetching files, parsing content with regex, and generating the index + creating a commit to upload automatically.
A demo overview is shown in [4] with the generated index.md, ordered by due date and linking the files by parsed heading title, file paths, and tags.
Hope it helps, feel free to repurpose, or ping me for questions on the GitLab community forum [5]. My Python code is a little rusty, I am slowly adopting all the 3.x design patterns after many years with 2.x.
I might follow your idea with notes and custom footer parsing. That's a really nifty idea, and helps solve my own chaos :-)
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32155848
[1] https://gitlab.com/dnsmichi/api-playground/-/merge_requests/...
[2] https://gitlab.com/dnsmichi/api-playground/-/tree/main/pytho...
[3] https://gitlab.com/dnsmichi/api-playground/-/tree/main/pytho...
[4] https://gitlab.com/dnsmichi/api-playground/-/tree/main/demo/...
[5] https://forum.gitlab.com/u/dnsmichi/summary
What are some alternatives?
Obsidian-Homepage - A dashboard for your obsidian vault.
voiceliner - Braindump better.
vscode-todo-md - VSCode extension for Todo tracking based on "todo.txt" format.
dev - Press the . key on any repo
obsidian-wielder - Clojure inside your Obsidian documents!
privatize - Partially encrypt/decrypt a file based on the presence of a heredoc
dev - Development repository for the CodeMirror editor project
observability
opsindev.news
Gitea - Git with a cup of tea! Painless self-hosted all-in-one software development service, including Git hosting, code review, team collaboration, package registry and CI/CD