markdown-rs
walkdir
markdown-rs | walkdir | |
---|---|---|
5 | 5 | |
791 | 1,184 | |
- | - | |
7.1 | 4.3 | |
28 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | The Unlicense |
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-rs
-
Ubiquity (v0.3.0) - I made a cross-platform markdown editor to learn some Rust. It uses Yew, Tauri, Tailwind and DaisyUI. Currently available on Windows, Linux and the web.
I used the markdown-rs crate for Ubiquity.
-
Project idea: port markdownlint to Rust
https://github.com/wooorm/markdown-rs for parsing markdown
-
Looking for an extensible markup language (aka Markdown, Asciidoc, ...) implemented in Rust.
Have you considered markdown-rs?
- New CommonMark compliant Markdown parser in Rust with ASTs and extensions
walkdir
-
Project idea: port markdownlint to Rust
https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir for discovering markdown files
-
Blazingly fast file search library built in Rust 🔥
The API looks really nice! What is your vision for the project? How is it going to compare to (walkdir)[https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir] performance and feature-wise?
-
Git ls-files is Faster Than Fd and Find
> I believe that GNU find is slow because it is specifically written to allow arbitrary filesystem depth as opposed to "open file descriptor limit-limited depth".
I haven't benchmarked find specifically, but I believe the most common Rust library for the purpose, walkdir[1], also allows arbitrary file system recursion depth, and is extremely fast. It was fairly close to some "naive" limited depth code I wrote in C for the same purpose.
I'd be curious to see benchmarks of whether this actually makes a difference.
[1] https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir
-
Your favorite Rust CLI utility? I have my top 10 below.
It relies pretty heavily on the walkdir library from burntsushi so kudos to them!
-
Rust, musl and glibc in 2021
Although, I don't think FileType is the only problem. There's also Metadata, which I also had to re-roll: https://github.com/BurntSushi/walkdir/blob/1d7293a5a1ef548ce587a0b08abce5f21571a100/src/os/unix/stat.rs
What are some alternatives?
tauri-sys - Bindings to the Tauri API for projects using wasm-bindgen
parallel-disk-usage - Highly parallelized, blazing fast directory tree analyzer
comrak - CommonMark + GFM compatible Markdown parser and renderer
zenith - Zenith - sort of like top or htop but with zoom-able charts, CPU, GPU, network, and disk usage
clap-rs - A full featured, fast Command Line Argument Parser for Rust
cligen - Nim library to infer/generate command-line-interfaces / option / argument parsing; Docs at
yaml-rust - A pure rust YAML implementation.
loggedfs - LoggedFS - Filesystem monitoring with Fuse
md.rs - A Markdown parser library in Rust
tools
markdownlint - A Node.js style checker and lint tool for Markdown/CommonMark files.
hexyl - A command-line hex viewer