emanote
pandoc
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emanote | pandoc | |
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20 | 420 | |
735 | 32,312 | |
2.7% | - | |
9.3 | 9.8 | |
6 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v2.0 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.
emanote
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Taking math notes on your computer [LINUX]
Im personally using Emanote which does exactly what you describe. It supports LaTeX and lots of other features via Pandoc. Its also very nice to use in that it supports hot-reloading, instead of requiring manual refreshing. The only downside for some might be that its installed via the Nix ecosystem which is (great but) a bit of a rabbit hole you might not want to deal with, particularly depending on your level of technicality on the computer.
- Emanote – Haskell-powered structured view of your plain-text notes
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Recommendation for simple static sure generator based on Markdown
Have you considered neuron or it's successor emanote?
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Notion alternative ?
Emanote! Very lightweight. One of the things I can't stand about Notion is its speed.
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Junior developer looking for a Haskell codebase to work on and a mentor to help me
Also, I'm willing to mentor anyone who is interested in improving Ema or Emanote.
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Haskell Open Source Projects I thought could use some exposure
Clarification: Emanote is a successor to Neuron, and written on top of Ema.
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Do you have personal wikis, websites or blogs full of your notes & documentation you like to share?
I use obsidian (previously just vim) and emanote (previously neuron) to compile some (but not all) of my notes to a static site.
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What do you use Haskell for in your daily computer usage?
I maintain an extended version of Emanote in Haskell (as an Ema app) that does custom stuff like visualize my hledger transactions, track time, generate invoice and provide custom views of my Markdown notebook, like a Twitter-like timeline generated from H2 headings (with date) from across notes.
- Ask HN: Share Your Personal Site
pandoc
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Beautifying Org Mode in Emacs (2018)
My main authoring tool is then Emacs Markdown Mode (https://jblevins.org/projects/markdown-mode/). For data entry, it comes with some bells and whistles similar to org-mode, like C-c C-l for inserting links etc.
I seldom export my notes for external usage, but if it is the case, I use lowdown (https://kristaps.bsd.lv/lowdown/) which also comes with some nice output targets (among the more unusual are Groff and Terminal). Of cource pandoc (https://pandoc.org/) does a very good job here, too.
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Show HN: I made a tool to clean and convert any webpage to Markdown
This is one of those things that the ever-amazing pandoc (https://pandoc.org/) does very well, on top of supporting virtually every other document format.
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LaTeX makes me so angry at word
Folks feel the same way about Markdown versus LaTeX: why use something significantly more complicated where a looser, human-readable grammar works better?
For any other situations, I use https://pandoc.org/, or, generate a Word doc scriptomatically.
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📓 Versionner et builder l'eBook de son Entretien Annuel d'Evaluation sur Git(Hub)
pandoc toolchain pour builder une version confortable/imprimable en phase de travail (ePub, pdf, docx, html)
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Launch HN: Onedoc (YC W24) – A better way to create PDFs
Congrats on the launch, I guess, but there are so many free options that I can't think of a situation where paying $0.25 per document would be justified...? Just to name a few:
Back in the days, I used to use XSL-FO [0] and it was okay. It was not very precise but it rarely if ever broke, and was perfectly integrated with an XML/XSLT solution. Yeah, this was a long time ago.
Last month I used html-to-pdfmake [1] and it's also not very precise and more fragile, but very efficient and fast.
Yet another approach would be to pro grammatically generate .rtf files (for example) and use Pandoc [2] to produce PDFs (I have not tried this in production but don't see why it wouldn't work).
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XSL_Formatting_Objects
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Ask HN: Looking for lightweight personal blogging platform
Others have mentioned static site generators. I like Hakyll [1] because it can tightly integrate with Pandoc [2] and allows you to develop custom solutions if your needs ever grow.
[1]: https://jaspervdj.be/hakyll/
[2]: https://pandoc.org/
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Show HN: CLI for generating beautiful PDF for offline reading
Have you compared it with a conversion by pandoc (https://pandoc.org/)?
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Pandoc
I have used it to kickstart a blogging project that I wish to come back to soon. The Lua inter-op for custom readers, writers and filters is great but I wish there was more editor integration and even perhaps an official IDE/editor with built-in debugging features (probably something already do-able with Emacs but I haven't checked). The only blocker for my project is no support for "ChunkedDoc" for Lua filters [1] which forces me to write more code and a complicated Makefile.
- I don't always use LaTeX, but when I do, I compile to HTML (2013)
- What Happened to Pandoc-Discuss?
What are some alternatives?
neuron - Future-proof note-taking and publishing based on Zettelkasten (superseded by Emanote: https://github.com/srid/emanote)
pandoc-highlighting-extensions - Extensions to Pandoc syntax highlighting
obsidian-dataview - A data index and query language over Markdown files, for https://obsidian.md/.
obsidian-html - :file_cabinet: A simple tool to convert an Obsidian vault into a static directory of HTML files.
git-crypt - Transparent file encryption in git
obsidian-export - Rust library and CLI to export an Obsidian vault to regular Markdown
TiddlyWiki - A self-contained JavaScript wiki for the browser, Node.js, AWS Lambda etc.
Obsidian-MD-To-PDF - A command line python script to convert Obsidian md files to a pdf
patat - Terminal-based presentations using Pandoc
kramdown - kramdown is a fast, pure Ruby Markdown superset converter, using a strict syntax definition and supporting several common extensions.
plaintextaccounting - The plaintextaccounting.org website, a portal to Ledger, hledger, beancount and co. Also the PTA wiki.
wavedrom - :ocean: Digital timing diagram rendering engine