doc-browser
feeds
doc-browser | feeds | |
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2 | 42 | |
129 | 689 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 8.6 | |
over 2 years ago | 17 days ago | |
Jupyter Notebook | ||
Mozilla Public 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.
doc-browser
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How I’m a Productive Programmer With a Memory of a Fruit Fly
The advantage of being open source is there is an entire ecosystem developed around it. Apart from offering more docs than Dash, it also has a VS.Code Extension, native macOs and Linux apps and more.
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I’m a Productive Programmer with a Memory of a Fruit Fly
Not for me. Maybe I need to dig in, I'm on bullseye, maybe it's only in the older build repositories?
Anyway, I found this https://github.com/qwfy/doc-browser that I'm compiling right now to see how it works, looks keyboard focused, simpler and supports DevDocs, and bonus it supports Hoogle if you're a Haskeller.
feeds
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Show HN: I automated 1/2 of my typing
https://kapeli.com/dash
Somewhat similar tool to Autokey for MacOS that I use as a text expander.
Allows for great customization - appending ; to a phrase ensures you don't accidentally expand a keystroke into a phrase/URL/etc
";url" expands into "whatever string you configure"
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Custom Instructions for ChatGPT
This reminded me that I needed to settle on a good system-wide Snippets manager for MacOS.
Having waded through the morass of buggy and subscription-only services many times in the past, I thought to give the open-source Espanso another go, but its last commit was many months ago and I simply could not get it to recognise Ventura permissions.
It was then that I remembered that the excellent Dash (https://kapeli.com/dash), for which I had already paid a very reasonable one-off fee, has a snippets manager. And it’s perfect.
- Googling for answers costs you time
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How can I find what styles are available as an argument for a modifier?
I use Dash for my API reference, partly because it also has all the other references I need for other languages. It’s easier to paw through when you’ve got exactly this sort of problem.
- [Serious] I don't get why people like Mac and I feel like I'm missing out
- Zeal is an offline documentation browser for software developers
- help me out
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Software Developer Mac Apps
Dash. Look up documentation really fast. Also useful for system wide snippets.
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This sub turned me onto Raycast, but... No syncing of settings / keyboard shortcuts between machines??
Hey, the app I recommend shows you all the commands you need per app not just for macOS! Support for programming languages? Download this. For git, docker and neovim download this one.
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quicklisp-apropos: Apropos across Quicklisp libraries
Some time ago I had a thought that it would be interesting to make something like https://quickref.common-lisp.net/ but in form of docset for [Dash](https://kapeli.com/dash) documentation browser. This will give not only the search, but also a browsable documentation on all Common Lisp packages!
What are some alternatives?
devdocs.el - Emacs viewer for DevDocs
iiab - Internet-in-a-Box - Build your own LIBRARY OF ALEXANDRIA with a Raspberry Pi !
Dash-User-Contributions - Dash repo of user contributed docsets
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
helm-dash - Browse Dash docsets inside emacs
sol - MacOS launcher & command palette
ase-docset
nango - A single API for all your integrations.
zeal - Offline documentation browser inspired by Dash
i3-cheatsheet-hot-key - Provides a hot key for creating/opening a custom cheatsheet for the window(application) in focus
compress - Text compression for generating keyboard expansions