writing VS specifications

Compare writing vs specifications and see what are their differences.

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writing specifications
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8.0 4.1
about 1 month ago 4 months ago
HTML HTML
- MIT License
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.

writing

Posts with mentions or reviews of writing. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-10-25.
  • Jevko: a minimal general-purpose syntax
    30 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 25 Oct 2022
    I had the same idea. Simple enough, but still. Brackets are simpler to formalize and implement and not harder to explain.

    > They also put some thought into designing a query language for their rose-tree-like data model, which might be adaptable to Jevko — though they label only nodes, and Jevko labels both nodes (with suffixes) and arcs (with prefixes).

    Yes, that might be interesting to look at, thanks for pointing it out. I have thought about this and came up with some ideas, but haven't decided on anything. I was thinking more along the lines of having the path DSL be simply implemented on top of Jevko, not as a completely separate grammar.

    > Maybe that's the subtitle for Jevko? "A minimal Unicode syntax for ordered trees with labeled nodes and labeled arcs." If that's the intended semantics it would be pretty easy to whip up a diagram in Dot to illustrate it.

    It's a nice description, but I think a little to detailed and technical to fit into a tagline. Maybe a little explanatory article with the diagram included. Would probably look something like this:

    https://github.com/jevko/writing/blob/main/2022-01-10-jevko-...

    Although I'd gladly see your take on it. ;)

specifications

Posts with mentions or reviews of specifications. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-11-03.
  • SVGs as Elm Code
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 3 Nov 2022
    Notice that here I used a convention where names which end with "=" become XML attributes, whereas names which don't become children.

    I have used the same convention here (except I don't bother with transforming names with spaces into camelCase): https://github.com/jevko/specifications/blob/master/easyjevk... to generate this HTML file: https://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/jevko/spec...

    Now I intend to write specifications that codify conventions like this into different formats based on this fundamental syntax of square brackets.

    It can be useful for all kinds of things. Its advantage is extreme simplicity and flexibility.

    BTW, for clarity I have to say that the format that I used here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32995047 does a bit more transformations -- it actually sometimes treats whitespace as a separator (e.g. in `svg width[391]` space is a separator). That allows for extreme conciseness, but is not necessary and introduces complexity.

  • Jc – JSONifies the output of many CLI tools
    16 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 3 Nov 2022
    A plain Jevko parser simply turns your unicode sequence into a tree which has its fragments as leaves/labels.

    No data types on that level, much like in XML.

    Now above that level there is several ways to differentiate between them.

    The simplest pragmatic way is a kind of type inference: if a text parses as a number, it's a number, if it's "true" or "false", it's a boolean. Otherwise it's a string. If you know the implicit schema of your data then this will be sufficient to get the job done.

    Otherwise you employ a separate schema -- JC in particular has per-parser schemas anyway, so that's covered in this case.

    Or you do "syntax-driven" data types, similar to JSON, e.g. strings start w/ "'".

    Here is a shitty demo: https://jevko.github.io/interjevko.bundle.html

    It shows schema inference from JSON and the schemaless (syntax-driven) flavor.

    Jevko itself is stable and formally specified: https://github.com/jevko/specifications/blob/master/spec-sta...

    It's very easy to write a parser in any language (I've written one in several) and from there start using it.

    However, I am still very much working on specifications for formats above Jevko. I have some recent implementations of the simplest possible format which converts Jevko to arrays/objects/strings:

    * https://github.com/jevko/easyjevko.lua

  • Jevko: a minimal general-purpose syntax
    30 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 25 Oct 2022
    Thank you for your feedback. Can you clarify?

    What is the "first page" that you are referring to?

    Can you paste a link to it along with the broken examples link?

    This Hacker News submission features the blog post under this URL:

    https://djedr.github.io/posts/jevko-2022-02-22.html

    Clearly, you are not talking about this page, as that contains multiple links rather than a singular link.

    Perhaps you are talking about the specification which is here:

    https://github.com/jevko/specifications/blob/master/spec-sta...

    (linked from the blog post)

    and here:

    https://jevko.org/spec.html

    (linked from jevko.org)

    All three link to Jevko examples here:

    https://github.com/jevko/examples

    but all these examples links seem to be correct on my end.

    I agree about the importance of examples, and I try to lead with them on jevko.org and jevko.github.io (which are the front pages of Jevko -- possibly I should merge them into one).

    However a formal specification is not necessarily the place to put the leading examples.

    This is also where the Subjevko rule is defined. It isn't quite introduced as "known knowledge" -- the purpose of a specification is to define the unknown, more or less from the ground up. This is also why specifications tend to get a little abstract. Jevko's spec is no exception. This should be in line with expectations of authors of tools such as parsers, validators, generators, or other kinds of processors, for which the spec is the authoritative reference.

    It is not necessarily the best first place to look for explanation, if you are approaching from a more casual side.

    I agree that from that side a clear picture of what Jevko is and how it can be used is still lacking. I certainly should add more examples and explain the concepts with analogies.

    So I appreciate the essence of your advice and hope I'll manage to improve on that.

  • Syntax Design
    9 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 18 Oct 2022

What are some alternatives?

When comparing writing and specifications you can also consider the following projects:

binary-experiments - Experiments with various binary formats based on Jevko.

easyjevko.lua - An Easy Jevko library for Lua.

mint-lang - :leaves: A refreshing programming language for the front-end web

yapl - YAml Programming Language

moiva - A Universal tool to Evaluate, Discover alternatives and Compare Software projects.

algebralang - at this time this is some example code of a language I want to build

techscriptor - Markdown editor for technical writing.

tree - A Data Modeling Programming Language