based.cooking
zr
based.cooking | zr | |
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16 | 2 | |
2,167 | 25 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.6 | |
12 days ago | 5 months ago | |
CSS | Go | |
The Unlicense | 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.
based.cooking
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Google Made Me Ruin a Perfectly Good Website
https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/based.cooking
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Setting up a pure html website with quark
Good stuff! It looks like you may need to set up SSL certs. I'll also bring your attention to the hugo-driven site, based.cooking, since it is a relatively suckless recipe site as well. Its github repo is here
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Itβs a family secret...
That reminds me of based.cooking, which is a repository of recipes, but does not really have the family element you were talking about or GPL-3. However your idea seems pretty cool, I just don't know how someone could get families to learn about it.
- simple CLI cooking application I'm working on
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Based Cooking | a simple online cookbook without ads
Source Code
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recipes
Also, turns out that site has a source repo if one wanted to clone it locally (or contribute): https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/based.cooking
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Ask HN: What are some fun, conversational GitHub repos to contribute to?
- https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/based.cooking
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Feed somebody else this bullsh*t
Just recipes, and anyone can contribute their own: https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/based.cooking
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Show HN: Recipes, Not Mommy Blogs
A person by the name of Luke Smith actually started a project with a similar goal of aggregating recipes a while ago: https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/based.cooking
Here's the current site, albeit it's built in a fairly minimalist fashion: https://based.cooking/
I guess the entire initiative came out of complaining about modern web bloat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvDyQUpaFf4
Here he talks more about the actual site: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ykNEkiYr0QM
Personally, i don't really enjoy his tone or vocabulary choices, but the site works and one has to admire creating lightweight websites, even if they're largely incompatible with the modern trends in content publishing.
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A search engine that favors text-heavy sites and punishes modern web design
Wow this is immediately useful
Already discovered this recipe site: https://based.cooking/
I love how adding recipes is through pull requests: https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/based.cooking/pulls
zr
- ZR β offline and serverless stackoverflow/man/etc. low memory search
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A search engine that favors text-heavy sites and punishes modern web design
Amazing!
I have only one recommendation that might make the search a bit more relevant, e.g when searching for 'linux locking' or 'kernel locking' kind of things.
Try to upsort things that match near the top of the content, like the top of the man page vs middle vs bottom.
One easy way to do it without having to store the positions, is to index the ngrams with max(sqrt,8) of their line number, this will cover first 64 lines, you can also use log() or just decide ad hock, top, middle, bottom of the document, so you can use only 3 values.
e.g. https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v5.0/kernel-hacking/locking.... would do unreliable_1 guide_1 locking_1 ... then at line 4 kernel_2 locking_2 ... after line 50 ... then_7 ... and after that everything will be _8.
then just make the query "kernel locking" to "dismax(kernel_1 OR kernel_2 OR kernel_3...) AND dismax(locking_1 OR locking_2 ...) with some tiebreaker of 0.1 or so, you can also say "i want to upsort things on the same line, or few lines apart" by modifying the query a bit.
It works really well and costs very little in terms of space, i tried it at https://github.com/jackdoe/zr while searching all of stackoverfow/man pages and etc and was pretty surprised by the result.
This approach is a bit cheaper than storing the positions because positions are (lets say) 4 bytes per term per doc, while this approach has fixed uppre bound cost of 8*4 per document (assuming 4 byte document ids)
What are some alternatives?
a-little-game-called-mario - open source collective hell game
Gigablast - Nov 20 2017 -- A distributed open source search engine and spider/crawler written in C/C++ for Linux on Intel/AMD. From gigablast dot com, which has binaries for download. See the README.md file at the very bottom of this page for instructions.
showcase-recipe-search - Instantly search 2M cooking recipes using Typesense Search (an open source alternative to Algolia / ElasticSearch) β‘ π₯ π
notebook - On programming, Portuguese taxes, Polish language and other cool stuff.
nyum - A simple Pandoc-powered static site generator for your recipe collection β it effortlessly turns a set of Markdown-formatted recipes into a lightweight, responsive, searchable website.
kiss-cooking - Stupid Simple Site for Cooking Recipes
Grimgrains - Plant-based cooking website
UsTaxes - Tax filing web application
oscooking - opensource.cooking website
based.cooking - A simple culinary website.
proposal-pipeline-operator - A proposal for adding a useful pipe operator to JavaScript.