hypher
bookdown
hypher | bookdown | |
---|---|---|
3 | 7 | |
564 | 3,646 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 7.4 | |
almost 6 years ago | 23 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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hypher
- Don't Fire Your Illustrator
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The Elements of Typographic Style Applied to the Web
I think it’s already possible to get some of the way there on the web today (having fine-grained control and avoiding Walde-r’s). Check out Hypher (https://github.com/bramstein/hypher). If you’re using Gatsby and Markdown, I wrote a small plugin to be able use it there:
https://www.gatsbyjs.com/plugins/gatsby-remark-hypher/
and
https://github.com/siawyoung/remark-hypher
(An example of how it looks like: https://siawyoung.com)
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I self-published a paperback and eBook using LaTeX and Pandoc
yes, so as a general rule for any publishing scenario where hyphenation is important you have an automated solution, for example for a small company / single person you might set up something using https://github.com/bramstein/hypher or find a similar tool.
Also this tends to be sort of overkill for what most people want so - as with most tech - gotta evaluate if it's worth the time and effort.
bookdown
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Books.jl: Create Books with Julia
If you can pre-build the index, Lunr seems to work well, but it doesn't support Chinese. R/bookdown switched for these reasons recently to fuse.js.
There is discussion of some of the other options and their tradeoffs here:
https://github.com/rstudio/bookdown/issues/1031
- bookdown: Authoring Books and Technical Documents with R Markdown
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Bookdown vs. Jupyter-book. Any advantages of using one over the other?
I'm familiar with R Bookdown and I know it produces some excellent results as far as HTML books go, with plenty of templates already available for those who don't know or don't like CSS/JS.
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Introducing: an Eleventy starter project for WCAG reports
Awesome idea. I do something similar using GitHub issues to capture each issue, tag with relevant WCAG criteria, then export markdown for each issue via a python script that links cross references from GitHub issues, creates links for all WCAG criteria referenced and then complies into all into HTML (and PDF if needed) using https://bookdown.org
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Ph.D student looking for *casual* machine learning source to lear from for R
Have a look in https://bookdown.org/, lots of resources there.
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Good projects/books for learning R?
You can try the R Bookdown site (https://bookdown.org/)! There's access to a lot of free R material there and is one of the main places where I learned R.
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I self-published a paperback and eBook using LaTeX and Pandoc
Did you try bookdown?
https://github.com/rstudio/bookdown/
What are some alternatives?
arara
mdBook - Create book from markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
Weave.jl - Scientific reports/literate programming for Julia
ePubViewer - ePub viewer with dictionary, themes, search, offline support, and more
Books.jl - Create books with Julia
koodo-reader - A modern ebook manager and reader with sync and backup capacities for Windows, macOS, Linux and Web
tufte_algorithms_book - A template for textbooks in the same style as Algorithms for Optimization
starter-book - A book starter to kickstart your writing journey 🎉
Nova-TeX-Suite - Nova support for TeX, LaTeX and ConTeXt
crowbook - Converts books written in Markdown to HTML, LaTeX/PDF and EPUB
kableExtra - Construct Complex Table with knitr::kable() + pipe.