ByStar
stork
ByStar | stork | |
---|---|---|
1 | 12 | |
1,050 | 2,712 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 1.9 | |
over 1 year ago | 10 months ago | |
Ruby | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
ByStar
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Ask HN: Could you show your personal blog here?
https://ryanbigg.com
I usually write posts about code, but this post about culture and values really resonated with a lot of people:
https://ryanbigg.com/2021/12/culture-and-values
stork
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Ask HN: What's the best way to add search to my website?
If your content is mostly static, you might want to consider pre-building an index and shipping it as a whole. You could look into something like
* https://stork-search.net/ (Rust/WASM)
* tinysearch: https://github.com/tinysearch/tinysearch (Rust/WASM)
* https://lunrjs.com/ (JS, simple, stable)
* http://elasticlunr.com/ - based on the former, slightly more sophisticated tuning options
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Ask HN: Could you show your personal blog here?
Mostly write about Elixir. Check out the search function. It is a rust library run as WASM in the browser (all the right keywords for HN hehe).
My blog: https://victorbjorklund.com/blog
Search library used: https://stork-search.net/
(And yes, I know it is totally overkill to have search when you just got a few articles)
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How to fuzzy-search html pages generated from org?
Also another alternative is stork https://stork-search.net/
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Does Github Pages support Stork search?
Stork seems perfect: https://stork-search.net/
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Ask HN: What do you use to power search for a static site?
It doesn’t do live crawling, so might not be quite what you want, but I built Stork Search (https://stork-search.net) to solve full-text search for static sites.
Today, you’d run a binary as part of a site’s build or deploy process, feeding in the input files. It generates a search index which you deploy alongside your site. The project’s JS library will load that index and turn it into a client-side interactive search interface.
I’d be curious to see if this sounds interesting or workable for you - you mentioned that you don’t want to host your own index, but does that change if “hosting the index” feels similar to hosting an image, instead of spinning up a server?
I’d be interested in building a paid addition that will crawl your site & host the index - you’re probably the 2nd person I’ve seen with that suggestion. Please let me know if you’d be interested in being a beta user.
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Lightning-Fast, Open Source Search
You can index your crawl data with StorkSearch[0] then use its js interface for search.
[0]https://stork-search.net/
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Know of any projects using WASM
stork: a fast web search made for static sites
- Impossibly fast web search, made for static sites.
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Is there anything that can generate a full-text searchable site from a bunch of HTML files?
There seems to be an open issue regarding this hopefully it is resolved soon.
- Impossibly fast web search (made for static sites)
What are some alternatives?
Chronic - Chronic is a pure Ruby natural language date parser.
elasticlunr.js - Based on lunr.js, but more flexible and customized.
ice_cube - Ruby Date Recurrence Library - Allows easy creation of recurrence rules and fast querying
fastQR - fastQR - Wasm based QR encoding
validates_timeliness - Date and time validation plugin for ActiveModel and Rails. Supports multiple ORMs and allows custom date/time formats.
feather - A Minecraft server implementation in Rust
TZinfo - TZInfo - Ruby Timezone Library
adblock-rust - Brave's Rust-based adblock engine
time_diff - Gem which calculates the difference between two times
yoroi-frontend - Yoroi Wallet - Cardano ADA Wallet - Your gateway to the financial world (extension frontend)
fugit - time tools (cron, parsing, durations, ...) for Ruby, rufus-scheduler, and flor
SIMple-Electronics - digital logic sim