book-sentences
unclutter
book-sentences | unclutter | |
---|---|---|
4 | 39 | |
55 | 1,205 | |
- | 1.3% | |
1.5 | 8.1 | |
about 1 month ago | 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
- | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
book-sentences
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7 lessons learned from The Pragmatic Programmer and The Clean Coder
The Law of Large Numbers
unclutter
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Reader View / Links2 like web view filter
no a filter for uBO (I do not think it is possible) but I really like this extension: https://github.com/lindylearn/unclutter
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Mel B calls James Corden as one of the ‘biggest d***heads in showbiz’
Other browsers can use the uncluttered extension.
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Show HN: Reader Mode, but Better
There already is crowdsourcing of broken page reports: https://github.com/lindylearn/unclutter/issues?q=is%3Aissue+...
And twitter.com is a special case: https://github.com/lindylearn/unclutter/issues/570
I'm working on those, but it's never going to be perfect unfortunately.
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Unclutter — a browser extension to read & save articles
Here’s more info: unclutter.lindylearn.io
I'm looking into this: https://github.com/lindylearn/unclutter/issues/661
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Unclutter reader mode extension — Read articles with style
It all started with a r/chrome post a few months ago, and since then we've added many improvements to our GitHub project.
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Show HN: Reader Mode that shows Hacker News comments inline
Hey! This is a reader mode browser extension I built that hides noisy page elements rather than extracting and re-rendering only the page text. The idea is to not make all articles look the same [0], have them still render graphs, and ideally to work in more cases.
There are a few "tricks": patching the site CSSOM to apply simpler mobile styles even at desktop width, detecting the likely main text & removing its non-text siblings, blocklists for classnames that contain words like "sidebar", and testing this on a few hundred popular sites.
I got carried away and also added a dark mode, page outlines, private annotations & inline Hacker News comments.
The last feature works by parsing every top-level HN comment with a quote in it (formatted with > or "") within a few minutes, and anchoring these quotes in the related article HTML. So when you click a link on HN you’ll see the parts people are talking about while reading. [1]
The code is all on GitHub!
[0] Screenshots comparing it to the Firefox reader mode: https://github.com/lindylearn/unclutter/blob/main/docs/compa...
[1] It's fun to try this on some of the "HN classics" that got 30+ quote comments over the years. The list at hn.lindylearn.io/best shows the number of “annotations” an article has beneath its title.
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Uncluttering web articles using CSS animations
You can also contribute to the existing extension for this: https://github.com/lindylearn/unclutter
More examples: unclutter.lindylearn.io The code: github.com/lindylearn/unclutter
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Show HN: Unclutter – New Reader Mode Extension with Inline Hacker News Comments
Hey! This is a reader mode browser extension I built that hides noisy page elements rather than extracting and re-rendering only their text content. The idea is to not make all articles look the same [0], have them still render graphs, and ideally to work in more cases.
There are a few "tricks": patching the site CSSOM to apply simpler mobile styles even at desktop width, cleaning up parents of DOM text nodes, blocklists for class names that contain words like "sidebar", plus manual CSS patches for popular sites.
I got carried away and also added a dark mode, page outlines, privates notes & inline Hacker News comments. [1]
The last feature works by parsing every top-level HN comment with a quote in it (formatted with > or "") within a few minutes, and anchoring these quotes in the story article HTML. So when you open a link you'll directly see the parts people are talking about here. [2]
The extension code is all on GitHub: github.com/lindylearn/unclutter
[0] Unclutter vs the Firefox reader mode: https://github.com/lindylearn/unclutter/blob/main/docs/compa...
[1] The linked website show some examples for these.
[2] It's also fun to try this on some of the "HN classics" that got 30+ quote comments over the years. The list at hn.lindylearn.io/best shows the number of "annotations" a link has beneath its title.
What are some alternatives?
murder - Large scale server deploys using BitTorrent and the BitTornado library
readability - A standalone version of the readability lib
dom-distiller - Distills the DOM
arc90-readability - A copy of the original Arc90 repo with links to many of the current ports.
bypass-paywalls-chrome - Bypass Paywalls web browser extension for Chrome and Firefox.
Readability4J - A Kotlin port of Mozilla‘s Readability. It extracts a website‘s relevant content and removes all clutter from it.
htmldate - Fast and robust date extraction from web pages, with Python or on the command-line
go-domdistiller - Go-DomDistiller is a Go port of the DOM Distiller library which implements Reader mode in Chrome for Android and Desktop. It has no dependencies on Chromium and is meant to run as a command line program or on a server.
soup-strainer - A reimplementation of the Readability/Decruft algorithm using BeautifulSoup and html5lib
article-extraction-benchmark - Article extraction benchmark: dataset and evaluation scripts
parser - 📜 Extract meaningful content from the chaos of a web page
easylist - EasyList filter subscription (EasyList, EasyPrivacy, EasyList Cookie, Fanboy's Social/Annoyances/Notifications Blocking List)