ggplotnim
calibre
ggplotnim | calibre | |
---|---|---|
5 | 862 | |
175 | 18,335 | |
- | - | |
9.1 | 9.9 | |
3 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Nim | Python | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
ggplotnim
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Chinchilla Scaling: A Replication Attempt
That is certainly true (and why added a general "embed plot data as bitmap into SVG/PDF" option to https://github.com/Vindaar/ggplotnim that works not only for raster heatmaps). But realistically such plots are often not ideal anyway (too many data points in a plot is often a sign that a different type of plot would be better; typically one that aggregates in some way) and it's just another argument to make the data for plots available as well.
- The Origin of Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures Album Cover Art (2015)
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Converting my PhD thesis into HTML
Well, personally as I write almost all my code in Nim and am the developer of ggplotnim [0], I simply write a source code snippet with some short Nim code, generate a plot and dump the filename into the Org file.
If I had more time and wanted something more convenient and magical, I would probably write a elisp function that takes X Y (Z) columns and generates a plot from those using a simple Nim program in the back that receives the data, generates the plot and returns it somehow. Haven't given this much thought though.
[0]: https://github.com/Vindaar/ggplotnim
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Anyone attempted to make Nim serve R's role? How is it currently?
I have been using Nim for all of my recent data munging and analysis. There's https://github.com/Vindaar/ggplotnim for plots (among others) and everything else has just been normal code. There's also https://github.com/SciNim/Datamancer if you need something more like tidyverse.
- ggplotnim: A port of ggplot2 for Nim
calibre
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Calibre: Unlock the Data in Your Breath
Not to be confused with Calibre, the excellent ebook software by Kovid Goyal:
https://calibre-ebook.com/
- A newbie with two questions
- Kindle 2nd gen
- Send to Kindle
- Questions for “Unsupported” Kindle Users!
- Kindle can't find via USB transferred files?
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Need help editing epub in Sigil
Glad you were able to fix it, but what about trying Calibre? It is free and makes it easy to adjust things, add info, and change front covers.
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Manga on Kindle?
Or using Calibre (pdf or azw3) https://calibre-ebook.com
- kindle won’t show me books
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Ebooks
There are already some very good ebooks solutions out there so there's really no need. Calibre for the backend and database management, Calibre-Web for the front end, and Openbooks for content.
What are some alternatives?
Datamancer - A dataframe library with a dplyr like API
zotero - Zotero is a free, easy-to-use tool to help you collect, organize, annotate, cite, and share your research sources.
boomer - Zoomer application for Linux
tachiyomi - Free and open source manga reader for Android.
napi-nim - Write NodeJS native extensions in Nim
Readarr - Book Manager and Automation (Sonarr for Ebooks)
rnim - A bridge between R and Nim
Sigil - Sigil is a multi-platform EPUB ebook editor
nim-plotly - plotly wrapper for nim-lang
Kavita - Kavita is a fast, feature rich, cross platform reading server. Built with the goal of being a full solution for all your reading needs. Setup your own server and share your reading collection with your friends and family.
mathpix-markdown-it - Markdown rendering + Latex extras (equations, tables, ...), with conversion features, for the scientific community
remarkable-hacks - additional functionality via binary patching