lucerne
gazpacho
lucerne | gazpacho | |
---|---|---|
5 | 1 | |
113 | 730 | |
- | - | |
1.8 | 3.2 | |
over 2 years ago | 5 months ago | |
JavaScript | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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lucerne
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
At this point I've made a habit out of building homebrew tools and languages. Very few of these are purely because I was dissatisfied with off-the-shelf solutions; many of these just exist because I thought it would be fun/educational/challenging to build an X for myself from scratch.
I've made
- A dynamic programming language, Ink (https://dotink.co), which runs in "production" (for whatever that means for side projects) for around a dozen projects written in it.
- A compiler to compile that to JavaScript (https://github.com/thesephist/september)
- A bunch of language tooling around that language, like syntax highlighters, editor plugins, code formatters (for example, the code formatter https://github.com/thesephist/inkfmt)
- A small UI library (https://github.com/thesephist/torus)
- A suite of productivity tools (https://thesephist.com/posts/tools/) like notes, todos, shared whiteboard, contacts/CRM
- Twitter client (https://github.com/thesephist/lucerne/)
- Theres a few dozen more at (https://thesephist.com/projects/) :)
Many of these end up building on top of each other, so across the few dozen projects built on top of these tools they form a nice dependency graph -> https://twitter.com/thesephist/status/1367675987354251265
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Quitting Twitter
People might be interested in a project Linus Lee (https://thesephist.com/) started to create a more personal adaption of using Twitter: https://thesephist.com/posts/lucerne/
It seems to tackle the main concerns people have and really focus on the aspect of reaching hard to find niches.
- Show HN: I built a Twitter client tailored to my workflows
- Lucerne - A Twitter reader designed for learning from the Twittersphere
- Lucerne: A Twitter client designed for learning from Twitter
gazpacho
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
I've been working on gazpacho [1] for last two years.
It's a general purpose web scraping library for Python that replaces BeautifulSoup + requests for most projects.
Just surpassed ~2K downloads every week!
[1] https://github.com/maxhumber/gazpacho
What are some alternatives?
nitter - Alternative Twitter front-end
selectolax - Python binding to Modest and Lexbor engines (fast HTML5 parser with CSS selectors).
smuxi - Smuxi is an user-friendly and free IRC client for Linux, Windows and Mac OS X based on GNOME / GTK+
lxml - The lxml XML toolkit for Python
yadm - Yet Another Dotfiles Manager
html5lib - Standards-compliant library for parsing and serializing HTML documents and fragments in Python
Shynet - Modern, privacy-friendly, and detailed web analytics that works without cookies or JS.
xmltodict - Python module that makes working with XML feel like you are working with JSON
lowdefy - The config web stack for business apps - build internal tools, client portals, web apps, admin panels, dashboards, web sites, and CRUD apps with YAML or JSON.
xhtml2pdf - A library for converting HTML into PDFs using ReportLab
rupy - HTTP App. Server and JSON DB - Shared Parallel (Atomic) & Distributed
untangle - Converts XML to Python objects