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docs | SVG++ | |
---|---|---|
17 | 2 | |
119 | 524 | |
5.0% | - | |
8.2 | 5.4 | |
29 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
Clojure | C++ | |
MIT License | Boost Software License 1.0 |
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.
docs
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Obsidian 1.5 Desktop (Public)
Looks cool! I couldn’t tell from the homepage, but it looks like they support cross-device syncing [1]. The big gap left is the rich plugin environment that Obsidian has.
1: https://docs.logseq.com/#/page/how%20to%20sync%20your%20logs...
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Reconstructing Obsidian Features in Vim and Bash
I've become a big fan of LogSeq for these reasons. In LogSeq, you have pages and trees of data (aka blocks[1]. All can be cross-referenced or embeded between each context. It's quite nice.
1: https://docs.logseq.com/#/page/the%20basics%20of%20block%20r...
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Any public vaults to download?
https://github.com/logseq/docs > Code > local > Download zip
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The editing experience of logseq is awful, did i miss something?
You clearly didn't use it much or maybe you didn't take a look at the documentation: https://docs.logseq.com
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Why don't we share our useful resources, tools, snippets etc for Logseq?
Official Docs Official Plugin Dev Doc
- Show HN: Obsidian Canvas – An infinite space for your ideas
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Show HN: A Highly Opinionated, Fully Functional Obsidian Vault
Would you be so kind and give an example of such a tagged block? I had a look at the documentation and only found https://docs.logseq.com/#/page/how%20to%20create%20pages%20i... that does not addresses blocks.
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Should there be more examples in the arch wiki?
Also another use for logseq is that you can deploy your notes or some of them as static HTML. the documentation website above is an example. Its hosted on GitHub pages: https://github.com/logseq/docs
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Logseq: Privacy-First, Joyful Platform for Knowledge Management
Yep. There's a plugin API, https://docs.logseq.com/#/page/Plugins, used by 180+ plugins. Logseq can also be scripted from the commandline in node.js with https://github.com/logseq/nbb-logseq#projects-using-nbb-logs.... There are examples for creating a github action, a CLI or creating custom web apps
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Show HN: Obsidian 1.0
Cmd-K to find any line in your notes and Cmd-shift-K to find any line in your page. Starting with 0.8.3 there is also a native find-in-page feature, https://docs.logseq.com/#/page/Find%20in%20page, which can search anything that is visible including results of queries
SVG++
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Realtime rasterization of vector graphics
Maybe SVG++, if you're looking for an industrial-grade solution?
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Plain Text. With Lines
Congratulations, now you replaced a trivial file format that (from a quick glance at the code) needed about ~35 of easily readable and self-contained Lua code to parse with an external dependency that would be much larger and harder to follow and either having (at least) an XML parser as its own dependency or implementing its own XML parsing, as well as being at the mercy of their developers. Also unless you are using some highly popular library, you may end up with some abandoned dependency.
Examples of both are at [0] (C++ based parser, you'd also need to write some bindings for lua) and [1] (Lua based parser for a subset of the format, abandoned for almost a decade).
There are times when using an external dependency might be a good idea, but a text-based file format that describes lines and can be implemented in a few lines of code is not one.
[0] https://github.com/svgpp/svgpp
[1] https://github.com/luapower/svg_parser
What are some alternatives?
logseq-query
tesseract-ocr - Tesseract Open Source OCR Engine (main repository)
orger - Tool to convert data into searchable and interactive org-mode views
VTK - Mirror of Visualization Toolkit repository
logseq - A local-first, non-linear, outliner notebook for organizing and sharing your personal knowledge base. Use it to organize your todo list, to write your journals, or to record your unique life.
CxImage
emoji-cheat-sheet - A markdown version emoji cheat sheet
OpenCV - Open Source Computer Vision Library
DrawIt - Ascii drawing plugin: lines, ellipses, arrows, fills, and more!
OpenImageIO - Reading, writing, and processing images in a wide variety of file formats, using a format-agnostic API, aimed at VFX applications.
eastend-notebook-syntax - Atom syntax theme - East End Notebook
CImg - The CImg Library is a small and open-source C++ toolkit for image processing