antiframework
learn
antiframework | learn | |
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1 | 8 | |
1 | 330 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 5.9 | |
about 2 years ago | over 1 year ago | |
Java | HTML | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
antiframework
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Ask HN: What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
I'm not a professional software developer, it's just my hobby.
Story is, I wanted to make some simple website project using Java, so I had to use some sort of web framework since I've read that CGI should not be used for medium sized project (like very simple social network, or whatever stores and handles data server-side). All the web frameworks I tested for Java (Javalin, Spring, something else I dont remember name of) used Maven, which I'm not familiar with. Why not create my own web framework then? Insert xkcd 927 With knowledge about HTTP protocol, I started making simple framework which uses sockets and regex for request handling, and allows developer to create simple endpoints. Main point is simplicity. It doesn't need any dependencies, just compile it to JAR, import to Your project, and that's it. Project itself is faaaaaaar from perfection, however it works as far as I tested it, and I think young/beginner developers would find it fun and easy to use in private projects.
Framework is in very early development stage, many things might change.
https://github.com/d3suu/antiframework
learn
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I started work on making books available within Popcorn-Time
I don't have a way to find and curate audiobooks. Plus, LibGen books are already available on IPFS so all I need is collect links. I have been running https://learnawesome.org/ so books seemed far more approachable.
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Show HN: Lurnby, a tool for better learning, is now open source
Fantastic! I'll have a deeper look and see if there's any opportunities for integrating this into https://learnawesome.org (which is also open-source).
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Ask HN: What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
I am building https://learnawesome.org
It's an attempt to organize world's knowledge. Right now, it looks like GoodReads-like social network for learning resources organized by topics, formats, difficulty levels etc. But there's a knowledge-graph that separates ideas and the medium those ideas are expressed in. For eg: "Sapiens - the book" and "TED Talk given by Yuval Harari" are connected to the same node.
This idea isn't anything new. Here is Danny Hillis talking about it at OSCON 2012: https://youtu.be/wKcZ8ozCah0
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What is the best place to find a Rails mentor?
https://github.com/learn-awesome/learn for example
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Is there an app like Goodreads that actually has an easy UI?
Perhaps https://learnawesome.org/.
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How to circumvent Sci-Hub ISP block
I have been dealing with the same problem for curating resources at https://learnawesome.org. Projects like Openlibrary do collect unique identifiers for _books_, but for everything else, it mostly takes manual effort. For example, I collect talks/podcasts by the author where they discuss ideas from their books. Then there are summaries written by others.
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Show HN: Vellum – An interactive list of nonfiction books reviewed by academics
This is a fantastic effort! Kudos :-)
I have been collecting learning resources and their reviews by experts at https://learnawesome.org/ (open-source, built with Ruby on Rails and TailwindCSS). Would you be kind enough to share the raw JSON files for their books?
LearnAwesome has its own topic taxonomy so it will still require tagging topics manually, but it can save me some effort on scraping/parsing LSE/Nature sites.
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Kenneth Kuttler's Free Math Books
I have been adding a number of these free books at https://learnawesome.org/
Do you really care about the format being PDF or is it about the books being FREE? I'd like to make common queries like yours easier. LearnAwesome is open-source, so of course you're free to contribute: https://github.com/learn-awesome/learn
What are some alternatives?
xenops - An editing environment for LaTeX mathematical documents
budibase - Budibase is an open-source low code platform that helps you build internal tools in minutes 🚀
wikiref - A web extension that makes extracting, editing, and exporting Wikipedia references easy!
Logisim-Dark - A fork of Logisim with a Darcula-like look and feel
Open-Sentencing - To help public defenders better serve their clients, Open Sentencing shows racial bias in data such as demographics providing insights for each case
Lurnby - A tool for active reading and personal knowledge management
ClassicUO - ClassicUO - an open source implementation of the Ultima Online Classic Client.
genki-study-resources - A collection of exercises for practicing what is taught in Genki: An Integrated Course in Elementary Japanese.
duckduckbang - Meta search page that utilises duckduckgo !bang query operators.
notes - IPFS Collaborative Notebook for Research
sqltorrent
net-torrent