TabFS
Asciidoctor
TabFS | Asciidoctor | |
---|---|---|
27 | 35 | |
3,780 | 4,647 | |
- | 0.6% | |
1.6 | 8.7 | |
about 1 year ago | about 1 month ago | |
JavaScript | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT 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.
TabFS
- The File Filesystem
- Ask HN: What is your wishlist for a new browser interface?
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On Desktop GUI Minimalism
It may not be exactly what you have in mind but there is an interesting extension along similar lines (mostly for chrome) called TabFS that mounts your open tabs as a filesystem...
https://omar.website/tabfs/
- bash command to catch opened url by browser
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TabDB: Using browser tabs as a database like only a maniac would
I hoped it does something like TabFS and I could query my tabs content with SQL but it's not. Seems useless to me, sorry.
https://github.com/osnr/TabFS
- How do I get the list of "opened tabs" on firefox? Active and inactive tabs.
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Ask HN: Alternatives to organizing code in files and folders?
> Using ls for listing modules/classes...
Interesting. Just made me think of using a custom filesystem to navigate a codebase. Similar to: https://github.com/osnr/TabFS. I wonder if anyone has done this.
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How I Built A Python Command Line Tool To Enhance My Browser Usage
You might also be interested in TabFS https://omar.website/tabfs/ - which would exposes the browser's tab as a filesystem.
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TabFS – a browser extension that mounts the browser tabs as a filesystem
Hmm, this might be the right audience - anyone with C and JS skills want to poke at https://github.com/osnr/TabFS/issues/75 and maybe come up with a pull request? (I got as far as I could on the C side, all the details are in the issue, but I'm not sure what shape the javascript side of the fix would be...)
Asciidoctor
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I don't always use LaTeX, but when I do, I compile to HTML (2013)
You have also AsciiDoctor ( https://asciidoctor.org/ ) which is alive and well. I am using it for technical CS documentation internally, but only for single page documents. I did not try to deploy their whole multi-document setup called Antora ( https://antora.org/ ).
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[DEV][App Release] Markor 2.11 adds AsciiDoc and CSV Support
AsciiDoc File support. ( #1876, #808, #2022)
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Good software/SaaS for Technical Documentation CMS
If Maths is important to you, take a look at Asciidoc - https://asciidoctor.org/
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Documentation generators and custom syntax highlighting
I use Asciidoctor, highlightjs, a custom highlight.js language definition and that bash script:
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I wish Asciidoc was more popular
AsciiDoc is so close to being good. It slam dunks Markdown, but they just have a few nagging issues that they refuse to fix, for 9 years now:
https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor/issues/1087
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Markdown, Asciidoc, or reStructuredText - a tale of docs-as-code
Asciidoctor is a Ruby-based text processor for parsing AsciiDoc into a document model and converting it to HTML5, PDF, EPUB3, and other formats. Built-in converters for HTML5, DocBook5, and man pages are available in Asciidoctor. Asciidoctor has an out-of-the-box default stylesheet and built-in integrations for MathJax (display beautiful math in your browser), highlight.js, Rouge, and Pygments (syntax highlighting), as well as Font Awesome (for icons). Although Asciidoctor is written in Ruby, that does not mean you need to know Ruby to use it. Asciidoctor can be executed on a JVM using AsciidoctorJ or in any JavaScript environment (including the browser) using Asciidoctor.js. You can choose any one of three Asciidoctor processors (Ruby, JavaScript, Java/JVM) and get the same experience. You can also use the Asciidoctor Maven Plugin to convert your Asciidoc documentation using Asciidoctor from an Apache Maven build.
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Designing Go Libraries: The Talk: The Article
asciidoctor for writing
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Docs as code vs a tool that can work with .md and xml?
If you're looking at AsciiDoc, you'll want to look at Asciidoctor: https://asciidoctor.org/
- Diving deeper into custom PDF and ePub generation
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Mau: a lightweight markup language based on Jinja
The third system that I found was AsciiDoc, which started as a Python project, abandoned for a while and eventually resurrected by Dan Allen with Asciidoctor. AsciiDoc has a lot of features and I consider it superior to Markdown, but Asciidoctor is a Ruby program, and this made it difficult for me to use it. In addition, the standard output of Asciidoctor is a nice single HTML page but again customising it is a pain. I eventually created the site of the book using it, but adding my Google Analytics code and a sitemap.xml to the HTML wasn't trivial, not to mention customising the look of elements such as admonitions.
What are some alternatives?
yet-another-speed-dial - a modern speed dial for chrome, edge and firefox
RDoc - RDoc produces HTML and online documentation for Ruby projects.
firefox-sidebery-minimal-style - Universal minimal style for Firefox and Sidebery
Zettlr - Your One-Stop Publication Workbench
warpinator - Share files across the LAN
plantuml - Generate diagrams from textual description
chrome-session-dump - A program for extracting information from chrome session files.
ansible-doc-generator - CLI for documenting Ansible roles into Markdown files.
side-view - An experiment with opening mobile views of pages in the sidebar
GitHub Changelog Generator - Automatically generate change log from your tags, issues, labels and pull requests on GitHub.
btfs - A bittorrent filesystem based on FUSE.
hugo-PaperMod - A fast, clean, responsive Hugo theme.