markdown-preview-plus
shite
markdown-preview-plus | shite | |
---|---|---|
3 | 24 | |
371 | 181 | |
- | - | |
4.5 | 7.6 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 months ago | |
TypeScript | Shell | |
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.
markdown-preview-plus
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Pandoc [a universal document converter] 3.0
Funny. During my bachelor thesis I added Pandoc as a renderer to an Atom markdown preview extension. (instead of actually writing my thesis)
https://github.com/atom-community/markdown-preview-plus/pull...
Old is new, the editor and the extension are now defunct. What was best about this exercise, I got so well versed with the markdown and Pandoc features at the time, that I didn’t need the preview at all.
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Atom Was Archived Today
I really hope that Visual Studio Code at least ports the Markdown Preview Plus extension, which was amazing:
https://github.com/atom-community/markdown-preview-plus
Unfortunately, VS Code extensions are often poor quality.
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GhostWriter is a distraction free Markdown editor
GhostWriter is more basic than others, which some may consider a good thing. I tried it on Arch for a bit since there is a package in the official repos.
I however prefer just using Atom with Markdown Preview Plus. It has a ton of features built in with sane extensions, or you can integrate it with Pandoc:
https://github.com/atom-community/markdown-preview-plus/blob...
I'm sure VS Code has something similar, but only from non-trusted third parties.
shite
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Ask HN: What's the simplest static website generator?
Pandoc can be your friend. My site maker [1] is built around it.
I think a hundred or so well-chosen lines of your favourite scripting language can do wonders. Mine is ~300 lines of Bash because I over-engineered a thing or two for kicks. The core of it is maybe 50 lines.
[1] https://github.com/adityaathalye/shite
The README documents the architecture and rationale. Maybe it will help you figure out yours. Happy hacking!
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Useful Uses of Cat
[1] https://evalapply.org
[2] https://github.com/adityaathalye/shite?tab=readme-ov-file#te...
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500 Lines or Less – Writing a useful program in fewer than 500 line code – AOSA
Bookmarked! These look like amazing study projects; the kind one can copy and learn from. Quite like how they do it in art school. Each one of them looks like it solves a nontrivial problem, and edifies the reader on the basic contours/tenets of the problem/solution space.
I love this kind of stuff, because it shows one _can_ solve a pretty juicy problem with not that much code, honestly. Also because it suggests that the industrial-strength equivalent has a lot more in for use cases, corner cases, and/or optimisations that are not relevant for one's requirements (at least not yet, maybe not ever).
I aspire to write code like that. Useful, concise, but not obtuse. Some of my code is not as significant as those examples, and maybe falls short of my ideals, but it gets a lot done in well under 500 loc. e.g. my website maker in Bash [1] (hot-builds and hot-refreshes without JS), or the JS that drives text art animations for Hanukkah of Data [2].
[1] https://github.com/adityaathalye/shite is about 350 LoC counted this way (excluding the script containing HTML templates).
$ grep -E -v "^$|\\s?#" bin/{events,metadata,templating,utils,hotreload}.sh | wc -l
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“Make” as a Static Site Generator
I love the code [1]. Mine [2] is a bit over engineered because I wanted hot-reloading (without JS), and it was a delightful yak shave.
But the basic idea is the same --- heredocs for templating, using a plaintext -> html compiler (pandoc in my case), an intermediate CSV for index generation.
Very nice!
[1] https://github.com/karlb/karl.berlin/blob/master/blog.sh
[2] https://github.com/adityaathalye/shite
- FLiP Stack Weekly 28 Jan 2023
- FLiP Stack Weekly 28-Jan-2023
- Show HN: Shite – little hot-reloadin' static site maker from shell
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Show HN: Shite: The little hot-reloadin' static site maker from shell
xdotool emulates user actions under the X Window System (e.g. typing, mouse around, click etc.).
I'm using it to send keypresses to the browser, as you rightly observe.
So if I want to just reload a page, the browser gets F5.
To GOTO some page, it gets a stream of keystrokes for the URL characters and then Enter.
It's really that simple-minded, and it works!
This case statement covers my usage: https://github.com/adityaathalye/shite/blob/master/bin/hotre...
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Pandoc [a universal document converter] 3.0
Pandoc powers my little static site maker:
cf. https://github.com/adityaathalye/shite/blob/master/bin/templ...
__shite_templating_compile_source_to_html() {
What are some alternatives?
SpaceVim - A community-driven modular vim/neovim distribution - The ultimate vimrc
shell-genie - Your wishes are my commands
notekit - A GTK3 hierarchical markdown notetaking application with tablet support.
CameraTraps - PyTorch Wildlife: a Collaborative Deep Learning Framework for Conservation.
ghostwriter - Text editor for Markdown
nitter - Alternative Twitter front-end
pulsar - A Community-led Hyper-Hackable Text Editor
SirTunnel - Minimal, self-hosted, 0-config alternative to ngrok. Caddy+OpenSSH+50 lines of Python.
vs-ghostwriter - ghostwriter is a cross-platform, aesthetic, distraction-free Markdown editor.
imaginAIry - Pythonic AI generation of images and videos
phoenix - Phoenix is a modern open-source Code Editor for the web, built for the browser.
logs-benchmark - Logs performance benchmark repo: Comparing Elastic, Loki and SigNoz