ibus-typing-booster
opendyslexic
ibus-typing-booster | opendyslexic | |
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7 | 295 | |
217 | 542 | |
- | - | |
9.1 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | about 2 years ago | |
Python | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 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.
ibus-typing-booster
- Is there global autocorrect for linux?
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What's a good emoji picker?
I like Emoji Picker. It's in the Fedora repos (dnf install emoji-picker). 👍
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x11: intercept and alter keyboard input
Would be easier to use ibus-typing-booster with spellcheck
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How to use emojis on linux mint?
You might be able to install ibus-typing-booster and do similar to https://mike-fabian.github.io/ibus-typing-booster/ as another solution
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Having a really hard time switching to Linux...
Workaround: https://github.com/mike-fabian/ibus-typing-booster. Works nicely for Gnome and Ubuntu-based distros, while others have a quite elaborate manual setup.
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Gnome Characters aliases
GitHub - mike-fabian/ibus-typing-booster: ibus-typing-booster is a completion input method for faster typing
opendyslexic
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Do you have some methods to increase your reading?
I changed the font on my kindle to open dyslexic & it made a huge difference in my ability to focus on what I’m reading. You’ll know pretty quickly if it will work for you.
- Is there global autocorrect for linux?
- OpenDyslexic: A Typeface for Dyslexia
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Effect of Perceptual Load on Performance Within IDE in People with ADHD Symptoms
Too bad the article is not open-access, as I would expect from JetBrains.
Extra cognitive load slows everyone. It's just that the effect is measurably distinct in people with executive function (distractability) issues, with respect to speed. The distinction between debugging and coding is not really active vs monotonous but driven by your own ideas vs chasing (a problem). The study isn't realistic, but it's designed to get a measurable result (and to showcase the "efficiency tracking" plugin).
Anecdotally, everyone adjusts their IDE, or accommodates what can't (easily) be changed. Too bad that wisdom is lost and hard to share.
I think the solution here is more configurable UI's, with the configuration being automated/scriptable so that once you've established your preferences, you can replicate them through upgrades, etc.
The most configurable IDE of course is Eclipse (which is in decline because no one gets paid directly to write for it, and it's cheaper to publish a language server for your new language than build an IDE). You can arrange views as you like, change menu and toolbar visibility, change key bindings, and of course add whatever plugins/features you need. You can save view configurations as a workspace and save various preferences. But because components come from everywhere, support for configuration capture varies.
People share their dotfiles for shell and vi/emacs configuration, but not their IDE configurations. It's too bad, because then there would be a configuration population to analyze when raising UI issues.
ADHD and ASD are a broad spectrum. It may help to join the tribe because it validates our experience, but then we can fail to recognize our brain's specific biases. Worse, anyone over 7 has been getting good at compensating, which hides the issue, and our culture of excellence/competition/success == good (therefore failure bad) further obscures with shame, defeat, and self-sabotage. Legal requirements for accommodation help set a global floor, but may also work as a local ceiling by supplanting ordinary fellow-feeling.
For reading fatigue, consider a dyslexia font, e.g., https://opendyslexic.org.
- Home | OpenDyslexic. OpenDyslexic is a typeface designed against some common symptoms of dyslexia. If you like the way you are able to read this page, and others, then this typeface is for you!
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Dyslexia font support
GitHub link Website link Source license SIL-OFL I've come across this font that aims to make reading easier for people with dyslexia and I've never seen it implemented before. I feel like it would be really cool if it got implemented into more things :)
- I am genuinely confused about this and have been for a while, but always felt like I'd look stupid if I asked. Do historians not know what year he was born? Surely he would've known, and I imagine he would've told people.
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Boosts v2.5 wishlist
I would really like to see OpenDyslexic as a font option in boosts
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Does this happen to you guys as well?
https://opendyslexic.org This is where it was made I think you can download an add on here to change all your fonts, as well as ‘most’ applications use open dyslexia or dyslexia open as the font name
What are some alternatives?
egl-wayland - The EGLStream-based Wayland external platform
comic-mono-font - A legible monospace font... the very typeface you’ve been trained to recognize since childhood
Emote - Emoji Picker for Linux written in GTK3
comic-shanns - a classy font
touchegg - Linux multi-touch gesture recognizer
fantasque-sans - A font family with a great monospaced variant for programmers.
slimbookbattery - Slimbook Battery 4
Ligaturizer - Programming Fonts with Ligatures added (& a script to add them to other fonts)
TLP - TLP - Optimize Linux Laptop Battery Life
virgil - The font that powers Excalidraw
mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace - Mouse scroll wheel acceleration in user space
excalidraw - Virtual whiteboard for sketching hand-drawn like diagrams