woodpecker
svgbobrus
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woodpecker | svgbobrus | |
---|---|---|
4 | 29 | |
1,942 | 3,701 | |
- | - | |
2.0 | 6.0 | |
28 days ago | 17 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
woodpecker
- What are some less popular but well-made crates you'd like others to know about?
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[Media] Introducing `pdc` a load testing library that can hit 500,000 req/sec
drill
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[ANN] servant-benchmark v0.1.1.1
I've recently published servant-benchmark, a small library that produces request files from Servant APIs to be used by external benchmarking tools. It currently supports exports for wrk, siege, and drill.
svgbobrus
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Pikchr: A PIC-like markup language for diagrams in technical documentation
I recently had to draw some diagrams for documenting something. After looking at various Markdown-friendly options I landed on svgbob[1]. I believe it's a superior solution to these kinds of graph drawing tools for Markdown for one specific reason: the code is still readable. When I go to look at a Markdown file I don't always open the output. I will commonly open up a README file in Vim or just cat it to the terminal. In this case diagrams like those in this post is next to useless. I'm not going to read through some complex drawing definitions and try to visualise the results. With svgbob (or Typograms[2] or any of the other similar options) you can still read the Markdown text document and see the diagrams which is great!
Of course this comes with a tradeoff, drawing the diagrams can be a bit of a pain. But I believe this can be solved by a good Markdown editor or editor plugin. Alternatively a spec like this could be converted into an svgbob-compatible diagram.
- How to draw beautiful software architecture diagrams
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Ascii to svg tool svgbob v0.7.0 is just released with support for drawing arcs in quarter interval
Online playground svgbob-editor is also updated to use the latest version of svgbob. It is however a painfully slow to edit the diagrams from there, so it's better if you draw the diagram somwhere else and paste it to there.
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Explaining Code Using ASCII Art
https://ivanceras.github.io/svgbob-editor/
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Your one project with rust that you think is one of the best projects you have made.
Code
svgbob
- Include diagrams in your Markdown files with Mermaid
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Technologies I'm Learning in 2022
Fellow Pinoy programmer here. I would say Rust has a bright future ahead. I have a few opensource project in rust as well.
What are some alternatives?
woodpecker - Drill is an HTTP load testing application written in Rust
habitat - Modern applications with built-in automation
coreutils - Cross-platform Rust rewrite of the GNU coreutils
trust-dns - A Rust based DNS client, server, and resolver [Moved to: https://github.com/hickory-dns/hickory-dns]
parity-bitcoin - The Parity Bitcoin client
Image-Processing-CLI-in-Rust - CLI for image processing with histograms, binary treshold and other functions
PumpkinDB - Immutable Ordered Key-Value Database Engine
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
svgcleaner - svgcleaner could help you to clean up your SVG files from the unnecessary data.
mdBook - Create book from markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
asciiflow - ASCIIFlow
imag - imag - Text based personal information management suite