lmt
lit
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lmt
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Literate Programming: Articles
One more tool to accomplish this is lmt [0] which, despite minimal documentation, is quite pleasing to use.
[0] https://github.com/driusan/lmt
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Literate programming: Knuth is doing it wrong
I personally use literate programming to maintain my "dotfiles", mainly NixOS [1], and I _love_ it. I like to describe all possible alternative tools, why I don't use them, possible tools that look nice, random ideas and blog posts that describe parts of my config, add TODOs and screenshots, ... in short everything that is really ugly to do inside source code comments. Also I gain structure; adding headings to a 3000 LOC config is very nice.
For tangling I use lmt [2], as it works with Markdown and also play nice with Emanote [3] (full syntax highlighting inside the code blocks.). That means all my "dotfiles" are inside my Zettelkasten [4] and can be navigated like any other note I have.
[1]: https://nixos.org/
[2]: https://github.com/driusan/lmt
[3]: https://github.com/srid/emanote
[4]: https://zettelkasten.de/
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BSAG ยป NixOS and the Art of OS Configuration
I switched to NixOS half a year ago. The reason? I fell in love with literate programming (I use [1]); being able to write (and read) your whole OS configuration is the dream!
There are few bad sides to NixOS though.
The community consists mostly of programmers, which means I am missing some creative tools (mockups, mindmaps, ..). In the future I will be able to provide/build them myself, but it is not a smooth transition from my previous arch setup.
Also the whole documentation sucks: There are three (!) official manuals + the home-manager manual + Nix pills + YT + random blogs where I have to piece everything together.
Still I find NixOS superior to every other OS (windows, linux) I have tried so far. I just feel free and am not afraid to fuck up anything [2], as I can just go to a previous generation when it doesn't boot.
Lastly, as my config is in git, I am free to try new tools -- If I don't like them, I just remove their line in my config. No more chasing after random install folders!
[1]: https://github.com/driusan/lmt
lit
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Literate Programming: Articles
There are tools to do exactly that, like a simple bash scripts lit.sh: https://github.com/vijithassar/lit
I've heard it referred to as 'semi-literate programming' because it skips the reorganization functionality and just gives you nice prose to code conversion.
What are some alternatives?
emanote - Emanate a structured view of your plain-text notes
udoxy - Guidelines and script (bash) for generic standalone code documentation
notebook-mode - GNU Emacs notebook mode
haskell-dbus - This repository is no longer actively maintained. Please use Andrey Sverdlichenko's fork instead:
Literate - A literate programming tool for any language
geom - 2D/3D geometry toolkit for Clojure/Clojurescript
itypescript - ITypescript is a typescript kernel for the Jupyter notebook (A modified version of IJavascript)
literate-programming - Creating programs from Markdown code blocks
git-crypt - Transparent file encryption in git
GNU Emacs - Mirror of GNU Emacs
HeinrichHartmann