ML-Workspace
ace
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ML-Workspace | ace | |
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7 | 34 | |
3,317 | 26,385 | |
0.8% | 0.4% | |
2.7 | 9.4 | |
5 months ago | 2 days ago | |
Jupyter Notebook | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
ML-Workspace
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[D] I recently quit my job to start a ML company. Would really appreciate feedback on what we're working on.
Also check out: https://github.com/ml-tooling/ml-workspace, it a nice open source project with lots of packages ready to use.
- ML-Workspace
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Coding for machine learning on Tab S8?
The other option - no reason why you couldn't host something on the desktop machine - web based IDE like R-Studio or Python - have a look at ml-workspace - https://github.com/ml-tooling/ml-workspace that runs in Docker and would provide interfaces for both Python and R, VSCode as well as a GPU accelerated variant for doing Tensorflow etc - either Windows or Linux can support Docker containers (Linux is less trouble apparently - I only have played with it in Linux personally)
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Dynamically spin up VM (based on specific HTTPS request) and stop it once session is over?
It will be a web based IDE dev kit (like Jupyter Hub, or JupyterLab) if you are familiar with them)
- All-in-One Docker Based IDE for Data Science and ML
- Visual Studio Code now available as Web based editor for GitHub repos
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[P] Install or update CUDA, NVIDIA Drivers, Pytorch, Tensorflow, and CuDNN with a single command: Lambda Stack
I'll stick with https://github.com/ml-tooling/ml-workspace, is a docker with all tools installed, also the option of using GPU, so I think is better than only for debian. This way anyone can use it.
ace
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Show HN: A note-keeping system on top of Fossil SCM
I used a note system built on top of Fossil as my primary system for quite a while. Here are the details in case anyone is interested.
Fossil allows CGI extensions[1]. There's a database for tickets, but that's just a regular SQLite table that you can use to store anything you want, and it's version controlled and queryable. I stored the notes plus metadata in the tickets database. The CGI returned HTML with the Ace editor for creating/editing notes.[2] Notes were stored using the command line.[3] I needed to add the web server user to the sudoers file to access the Fossil binary.
There were two reasons to use Fossil for this. The biggest was that it handled authentication. The second is that I had a version controlled database to do all the work for me.
I think I eventually moved away from it because I prefer working locally. The "transition" was dumping the data out of the database and into markdown files.
[1] https://fossil-scm.org/home/doc/trunk/www/serverext.wiki
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browser based editor?
Ace editor -> https://ace.c9.io/
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Writing a (simple) code editor for the web?
Hey there! Thanks for reaching out. Writing a code editor with syntax highlighting in a browser can be a little tricky, but it's definitely doable. One resource that might be helpful is the Ace Editor library (https://ace.c9.io/). It's a lightweight but powerful editor that includes syntax highlighting for a huge range of languages. You could also check out CodeMirror (https://codemirror.net/), which is another popular library for building web-based code editors. Good luck, and let us know how it goes!
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Keyboard shortcuts for the editor?
neocities seems to use the ace editor, and you can view its default keybinds here: https://github.com/ajaxorg/ace/wiki/Default-Keyboard-Shortcuts
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The ShnooTalk programming language
The frontend uses the ace editor for syntax highlighting and then sends all the "text" you have typed to a python backend. The backend then writes all the text to a temporary directory and calls the compiler using subprocess (something similar to os.system).
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MDSlides - Simple markdown presentation tool
It is built using Reveal.js and Ace, and is a simple markdown presentation tool right in the browser.
- Ace – The High Performance Code Editor for the Web
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Enhance
https://github.com/ajaxorg/ace
It's a pretty complex JavaScript application but you can development and even run tests locally without ever needing to "build". I'm building a JavaScript-based text editor, too, and it also uses Makefile and you can just run a static file server such as Python SimpleHTTPServer to host all the files in the directory. I still have and componentized HTML/CSS, separated JS files.
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Frontend library for syntax highlighting / validation of uBlock rules
Thanks for the suggestion! Although Ace is not the most popular kid in the block, it is still maintained. It does support tmLanguage and could be used for a proof-of-concept editor!
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Edit code from browser
For the code editing you can use Ace.
What are some alternatives?
JupyterLab - JupyterLab computational environment.
Monaco Editor - A browser based code editor
Gitpod - DEPRECATED since Gitpod 0.5.0; use https://github.com/gitpod-io/gitpod/tree/master/chart and https://github.com/gitpod-io/gitpod/tree/master/install/helm
CodeMirror - In-browser code editor (version 5, legacy)
keytotext - Keywords to Sentences
TinyMCE - The world's #1 JavaScript library for rich text editing. Available for React, Vue and Angular
self-hosted - Sentry, feature-complete and packaged up for low-volume deployments and proofs-of-concept
quill - Quill is a modern WYSIWYG editor built for compatibility and extensibility.
Code-Server - VS Code in the browser
PrismJS - Lightweight, robust, elegant syntax highlighting.
cocalc-docker - DEPRECATED (was -- Docker setup for running CoCalc as downloadable software on your own computer)
Draft.js - A React framework for building text editors.