backend
slides
backend | slides | |
---|---|---|
1 | 19 | |
13 | 9,181 | |
- | - | |
8.5 | 6.7 | |
6 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Go | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
backend
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Explaining Code Using ASCII Art
Shameless appeal for code commentary review:
This reminds me of a code comment I wrote about some web crawling code that is intended to maintain a continuous web address "flow graph", matching any origin URL(s) (the 'water table' of a web page) down to the current location of that page on the web (the 'river delta').
This can be complicated because old URLs may be redirected (HTTP 301, 302) to different locations over time, often for SEO reasons or due to change of domain ownership.
Does the code comment linked below make sense? I'd really appreciate any feedback and improvements:
https://github.com/openculinary/backend/blob/5116c4f5d39dae1...
(and yes, I realize the ASCII art here pales in comparison to some of the visually appealing and clear diagrams shared in the article. I'm doing my best :))
slides
- Which software do you use to create presentations using Vim that is superior to existing ones?
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[CppSerbia Meetup] C++ Customisation Points
Combination of: - http://maaslalani.com/slides/ - for slides - figlet/toilet/cowsay/lolcat - for generating titles and ascii art - https://github.com/lewish/asciiflow - for charts and diagrams
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🎥 Neovim 0.9.0 - New Features
For those that are curious, I was using the `slides` CLI app to render the presentation via markdown https://github.com/maaslalani/slides
- Slides in Your Terminal
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Marp: Markdown Presentation Ecosystem
This is pretty neat!
I have playing around with using slides^1 before for doing small demos with my team, but I find that outside of highly technical geeks most people don't want to look at presentations in plain text in a terminal window. I like that this lets you create more graphical slides still using markdown + your favorite editor.
[1]: https://maaslalani.com/slides/
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Week 3 of learning rust - learning resources
Most of the notes about the language are in an interactive readme with runnable code samples. It can be ran in 2 ways: - using nvim to evaluate code snippets inline using neovim with the mdeval plugin. Using FeMaco creates an editing floating window with rust-tools LSP attached and Treesitter attached. - using slides, an interactive terminal presentation tool
- Explaining Code Using ASCII Art
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Draw: a simple drawing tool in your terminal
For presentations definitely check out another project of mine: https://github.com/maaslalani/slides
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Do you guys know any flashcard apps that works in tty?
You could also use a presentation type tool (like tpp or slides) to practice around with?
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Command line tool to view list of files in a slides/presentation format?
https://github.com/maaslalani/slides came close but it only accepts one file, and the slides are split by --- inside of that file
What are some alternatives?
ditaa - ditaa is a small command-line utility that can convert diagrams drawn using ascii art ('drawings' that contain characters that resemble lines like | / - ), into proper bitmap graphics.
lookatme - An interactive, terminal-based markdown presenter
draw - Draw in your terminal
mdp - A command-line based markdown presentation tool.
wtf-tui - Text-based UI tool for configuring the WTF terminal dashboard
patat - Terminal-based presentations using Pandoc
asciiflow - ASCIIFlow
org-tree-slide - A presentation tool for org-mode based on the visibility of outline trees
slidev - Presentation Slides for Developers