jinx
verb
jinx | verb | |
---|---|---|
16 | 15 | |
340 | 453 | |
- | - | |
8.7 | 8.0 | |
about 21 hours ago | 9 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
jinx
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Emacs Advent Calendar 9: devdocs, code-cells, dREPL, etc.
jit-spell: Alternative to Flyspell which operates asynchronously and checks the entire screen (not just words you just typed). Similar to u/minad's jinx (which is in fact a fork of jit-spell); jinx runs the spell-checker synchronously inside Emacs via a C module, while jit-spell uses an asynchronous subprocess.
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How to setup spellchecking in emacs
Just use jinx it's dope
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New package: Auto-Olivetti—automatically turn on olivetti-mode when the window gets wide
Another recent example is my Jinx package, where people suggested that I should rather put the functionality into Ispell or Flyspell. Neither are good places to put the Jinx functionality as a mode. Obviously Jinx is a large enough and self-contained package providing a well-defined feature set. Furthermore its mode of operation is entirely different from both Ispell and Flyspell, so putting it there wouldn't result in much code reuse. It would look more like two packages cramped into one. Sometimes clean alternative implementations are justified.
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Is GNU Aspell the best spell checker for emacs on macOS?
Thank you! I tried to get it working, but unfortunately it isn't compatible with MacOS. https://github.com/minad/jinx/issues/82
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Emacs-written novel on the German bestseller list
One thing that had improved recently for writing is the appearance of several new spell-checking packages, the most recent and popular one being jinx. Grammar/style checking is still sub-optimal. Not sure if authors rely on such tools or that your Grammar knowledge is such that you don't need it and for really proof-reading you have an editor anyway.
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Good Emacs Packages
Jinx is the new kid on the block for spell-checking, and it is the best!
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flyspell with hunspell and multiple dictionaries
I can't help you specifically, but have you looked at Jinx by the formidable Daniel Mendler? Jinx lets you use multiple spell-checking backends (hunspell included) with multiple dictionaries—even in the same file. So, for example, I have used German and English dictionaries simultaneously to edit a mixed-language file.
- Jinx: Enchanted Spell Checker (Package for Emacs)
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Why does elpaca make emacs startup so much faster?
Wow, interesting that my response is getting down voted. It seems not enough that I give away my work for free. Nevertheless I appreciate support from the community, as other Emacs package developers. The support is actually helpful. To clarify, publishing my configuration would translate into quite a bit of work, requiring separation of private and public bits.
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[praise] `jinx` spell checker
Just want to praise a package called jinx, it provides a spell checker for Emacs, which is really fast.
verb
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Emacs Advent Calendar 9: devdocs, code-cells, dREPL, etc.
plz-see: Interactive HTTP client, similar to restclient and verb, but using Elisp instead of a special text-based syntax.
- Beyond OpenAPI
- Emacs as REST API client?
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RESTing with Emacs, or why EDN is better than JSON
Ah, btw. I just realized, verb's verb-send-request-on-point doesn't always properly work with source blocks. So I pushed a fix, PR is here.
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Lama2: Plain-Text Powered REST API Client for Teams
have you checked this https://github.com/federicotdn/verb . Its emacs package and i am able to write and test api's with text files.
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Hurl, run and test HTTP requests with plain text
Not as usable for testing, but verb.el[1] is a great tool for doing something very similar in org-mode
[1] https://github.com/federicotdn/verb
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Has anyone ever tried using Google Sheets or Excel to journal?
I've been a long time user of the org-mode code blocks feature—storing runnable code block inline in the document. Something I've recently started using is verb to include HTTP requests in my documents when I'm testing out web APIs.
- Show HN: Restfox – A web based HTTP client inspired by Insomnia and Postman
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How to use Tiddlywiki via REST API in Emacs
Looks also interesting, but it doesn't fit my use cases: I need custom functions to grab values/data from other sources (e.g. pocket-reader.el).restclient` is more about having pre-defined HTTP requests (path, headers, payload etc.) in a buffer and a major mode for executing the requests. Pretty much the same what verb offers.
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HTTPie/cURL client for Emacs?
There is also verb.el.
What are some alternatives?
languagetool.el - LanguageTool suggestions integrated within Emacs
ob-http - make http request within org-mode babel
esup - ESUP - Emacs Start Up Profiler
restclient.el - HTTP REST client tool for emacs
puni - Structured editing (soft deletion, expression navigating & manipulating) that supports many major modes out of the box.
emacs-request - Request.el -- Easy HTTP request for Emacs Lisp
flymake-vale
httpyac - Command Line Interface for *.http and *.rest files. Connect with http, gRPC, WebSocket and MQTT
emacs-build - Scripts to build a distribution of Emacs from sources, using MSYS2 and Mingw64(32)
stepci - Automated API Testing and Quality Assurance
corfu - :desert_island: corfu.el - COmpletion in Region FUnction
org-fancy-priorities - Display Org Mode priorities as custom strings