Python-Markdown
rpi4-osdev
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Python-Markdown | rpi4-osdev | |
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15 | 17 | |
3,578 | 3,318 | |
1.6% | - | |
8.0 | 6.7 | |
about 1 month ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | C | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
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.
Python-Markdown
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Introducing AutoPyTabs: Automatically generate code examples for different Python versions in MkDocs or Sphinx based documentations
AutoPyTabs allows you to write code examples in your documentation targeting a single version of Python and then generates examples targeting higher Python versions on the fly, presenting them in tabs, using popular tabs extensions. This all comes packaged as a markdown extension, MkDocs plugin and a Sphinx, so it can easily be integrated with your documentation workflow.
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Creating a Python Wiki application
As a starting point, take a look at the Python-Markdown library. It's available from the Pypi repository, so is easy to install with pip / pipenv / ...
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Learning about SSG features with Docusarus
Issue Markdown Full Markdown Support Complete Markdown Support with the Help of Python-Markdown/markdown I wanted to finally Add full markdown support.
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Show HN: Weejur – micro-blog from your email account
I like the simplicity of your platform!
Thanks for the bug report. I've used python-markdown [0] for the markdown parsing–I'll have to double-check the implementation.
[0]: https://python-markdown.github.io/
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Help with understanding & breaking down a library
I believe a lot of the actual replacements (or at least mappings to replacements) are happening in inlinepatterns.py - you can see on lines 106-172 all of the regex patterns that are used for various matches. Line 442 you can see the Processor that was created to handle Asterisks, working with and .
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Breaking down a python package library
I see the https://github.com/Python-Markdown/markdown , but I am troubling identifying the supporting code that really is doing the leg work ie the core functions and logic supporting it to take markdown and turn it in to html.
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Is it a good practice to use /admin to create manage the blog in production?
Interesting, I also use markdown, but hadn't heard of Django-Markdownx before your today. What I do is create two fields: body_md and body_html, and on save use Python Markdown to turn my markdown in html.
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Spell checking Markdown documents using a Github action
Now we have to add a configuration file for the spelling checker. It uses PySpelling under the hood. When checking Markdown files, it first converts a Markdown text file's buffer using Python Markdown and returns a single SourceText object containing the text as HTML. Then it captures the HTML content, comments, and even attributes and performs the check. It has a lot of configuration options, but here we are going to see only an example with some basics. For further info you can read the docs of the rojopolis/spellcheck-github-actions Github action.
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What library/how to write nice documentation of experiments directly from python
Otherwise, I would use markdown with Python Markdown.
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How I Refactored my Code
To resolve the above issue, I thought the best approach was to avoid reinventing the wheel and save myself hours of debugging: use a third-party library. After implementing a Python implementation of John Gruber’s Markdown, 36 lines of code were cut down to a single function call. I've not benchmarked my SSG after the change, but in terms of code readability, it's certainly worth the overhead caused by the library.
rpi4-osdev
- Tutorial: Writing a bare metal operating system for Raspberry Pi 4
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Assembly coding without OS
GitHub - isometimes/rpi4-osdev: Tutorial: Writing a "bare metal" operating system for Raspberry Pi 4
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[RPI4B] Error allocating framebuffer with mailbox
Basically i can compile and run this -> https://github.com/isometimes/rpi4-osdev/tree/master/part5-framebuffer (and i'm sure every other implementation) just fine but only if i load it with gdb through jtags and then hit continue (c). If i put the exact same kernel (kernel8.img) on the sd and disconnect any hw debugger, it gets stuck at the rainbow spash screen and won't continue. This is wheter enable_jtag_gpio is set to 0 or 1. This makes absolutely no sense to me and i'd love to get an opinion on why it behaves this way and if it underlines a bigger problem.
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What projects can an individual do that you would like seeing on a resume?
Something like this would be probably in the top 1% of hobby projects and as far as I can tell, it involves zero EE work: Writing a "bare metal" operating system for Raspberry Pi 4.
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How do I work towards interacting with Raspberry Pi peripherals directly?
This might be of help: https://github.com/isometimes/rpi4-osdev (it’s for the RPi4, but I imagine most of it being applicable to the RPi1).
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Writing an open source GPU driver – without the hardware
IMO the best way to get into this type of low-level tinkering is by writing a simple operating system.
https://github.com/isometimes/rpi4-osdev
There are other courses/projects for other boards. The keyword is usually “baremetal”.
For Linux drivers specifically there are training material from Bootlin for instance.
- Writing a “bare metal” operating system for Raspberry Pi 4
- Tutorial: Writing a “bare metal” operating system for Raspberry Pi 4
What are some alternatives?
markdown2 - markdown2: A fast and complete implementation of Markdown in Python
rust-raspberrypi-OS-tutorials - :books: Learn to write an embedded OS in Rust :crab:
Mistune - A fast yet powerful Python Markdown parser with renderers and plugins.
linux - Linux kernel source tree
mistletoe - A fast, extensible and spec-compliant Markdown parser in pure Python.
circle - A C++ bare metal environment for Raspberry Pi with USB (32 and 64 bit)
Jinja2 - A very fast and expressive template engine.
cs140e-20win - cs140e course materials.
pymorphy2 - Morphological analyzer / inflection engine for Russian and Ukrainian languages.
rust-raspberrypi-OS-tutoria
MyST-Parser - An extended commonmark compliant parser, with bridges to docutils/sphinx
duckduckgo-locales - Translation files for <a href="https://duckduckgo.com"> </a>