cmark
tokei
cmark | tokei | |
---|---|---|
10 | 30 | |
1,571 | 10,006 | |
1.0% | - | |
8.7 | 5.7 | |
9 days ago | 12 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
cmark
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Ask HN: What's the simplest static website generator?
I use GNU make. Write content in markdown, feed it to https://github.com/commonmark/cmark to create html. I intended to splice files together using xslt but echo and cat written in the makefile sufficed.
I'm not totally sure I'd recommend that but I do like the markdown => html flow.
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Building a Personal Internet from Markdown Files
I seem to be in the middle of trying to build something similar to this. I want it to run on an android phone but otherwise the same sort of idea, offline-first information I want access to.
There's some weirdness around android browsers refusing to load html from the phone itself on security grounds. The OP uses a "progressive web app" which seems to be the proper way to do this at some point in the past, but firefox has killed that for some reason. Thus the most difficult part of the project seems to be persuading my phone to render html without copying the files to some server (or running a fileserver on the phone itself, to look at from the phone, which seems absurd).
What I can offer for people stumbling down the same path:
- Obsidian works fine as for ad hoc authoring of markdown while walking around
- It is known on stack overflow that markdown can't be sanely parsed into an AST
- That knowledge is kind of a branding misfire, the 'markdown' one is looking for is here https://github.com/commonmark/cmark
- That cmark binary + some foreach-file style script will turn markdown into html or xml. If you choose makefile and put spaces in the name of files you'll have a moderately bad few minutes cursing your tools
- Given that output xml/html, you can build whatever other html you see fit
- That html can be written back to the obsidian vault and opened by a phone browser (at least if it's a single file)
- CSS thus far appears to be required, I was really hoping to annotate the html instead
First 90% done here, second 90% to go.
- commonmark/cmark: CommonMark standard-based Markdown parsing and rendering library and program in C
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Using Rust with Elixir for code reuse and performance
Yeah no doubt it, although in this case the C implementation has been a long running project that's under the official commonmark GitHub repo at https://github.com/commonmark/cmark.
But I think the most important thing here is an Elixir NIF already exists to use it. The blog post as is leaves readers having to implement ~100 lines of Elixir code to use the Rust version because the authors of blog post didn't include that in the article, or open source it as a library for others to use.
So from a reader's POV, if your goal is to get a highly stable, fast and safe Markdown parser running in Elixir, the Elixir cmark library I linked in a parent comment solves that problem out of the box.
- Share Your Tasks That Help You Use Tasker!
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How do I link and use a c library?
I'm confused about how to use a c library (specifically, cmark) from zig.
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My favorite cli/tui programs:
Writing Documents Markdown (and md2pdf or cmark + html2ps + ps2pdf) / plain text / groff
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Presenting SwiftDown my markdown live editor package
It's built on top of cmark which make it fast, and use pure markdown without any proprietary format. It currently supports both macOS and iOS.
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Thoughts on lex/GNU Flex?
However, writing a proper markdown parser is quite difficult as you have to support nesting and many weird corner cases. So, if you do not need to write your own parser (e.g. for learning purposes), it would be a lot easier to use an existing parser and write a custom renderer for roff. Some such parsers are cmark, commonmark.js, and goldmark.
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My stack will outlive yours
I just use the small reference C implementation of CommonMark and it works great:
https://github.com/commonmark/cmark
There is an example where you load it via shared library in Python, i.e. send a Markdown string and get back an HTML string.
tokei
- XAMPPRocky/tokei: Count your code, quickly
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The Linux Kernel Prepares for Rust 1.77 Upgrade
So If we would only count code and not comments, it is only 9489 LoC Rust. Which would be about 0.03% and if we take all lines and not only LoC it would be around 0.05%
[0] https://github.com/XAMPPRocky/tokei
[1] https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/b401b621758e46812da...
- Tokei: Display statistics about your code, quickly
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SOOOO many Errors when upgrading
thirdly: found this (https://github.com/XAMPPRocky/tokei) and wanted to analyze languages used on my system, didn't see a package manager (apt) for it that I had. So i installed cargo via apt-get rustup. Added the bin folder to $PATH via PATH=$PATH:~/.cargo/bin. But did not make it permanent. And stupidly rand tokei on "/", realizing how long and unhelpful that would be killed it. Then ran it in a dump folder with some very nested repo dumps, and tons of wolfram.nb files. After killing that too, and attempting to kill via system monitor. Still have two of those as zombie processes.
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What "nice-to-have" CLI tools do you know?
tokei
- How long is your neovim config?
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How do you name your crates?
For what it's worth, tokei seems to be named after tokei.
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[media] Onefetch v2.13 is typically 2x faster and now supports ~100 programming languages
BTW, for more info on how it is done, you can check out tokei which is the library use by onefetch for code statistics.
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Pytokei: a python binding for rust's tokei
With pytokei you can count code quickly using all the power from tokei, but from python.
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Rust Easy! Modern Cross-platform Command Line Tools to Supercharge Your Terminal
Tokei is a nice utility to count lines and stats of code. It is very fast, accurate, and has a nice output. It supports over 150 languages and can output in JSON, YAML, CBOR, and human-readable tables.
What are some alternatives?
rss-proxy - RSS-proxy allows you to do create an RSS or ATOM feed of almost any website, just by analyzing just the static HTML structure.
cloc - cloc counts blank lines, comment lines, and physical lines of source code in many programming languages.
nimler - Erlang/Elixir NIFs in Nim
coreutils - Cross-platform Rust rewrite of the GNU coreutils
re2c - Lexer generator for C, C++, Go and Rust.
uwc
cmark - 💧 Elixir NIF for cmark (C), a parser library following the CommonMark spec, a compatible implementation of Markdown.
trust-dns - A Rust based DNS client, server, and resolver [Moved to: https://github.com/hickory-dns/hickory-dns]
lowdown - simple markdown translator
rrun - minimalistic command launcher in rust
pulldown-cmark - An efficient, reliable parser for CommonMark, a standard dialect of Markdown
habitat - Modern applications with built-in automation