org-html-themes
deft
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org-html-themes | deft | |
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15 | 20 | |
2,161 | 703 | |
- | - | |
5.3 | 0.0 | |
about 1 month ago | 23 days ago | |
CSS | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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org-html-themes
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Org-html-theme like https://docs.doomemacs.org/latest/
Closets I came to that is with https://github.com/fniessen/org-html-themes
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Blogging: org-publish vs ox-hugo? What's your opinion/experience on these 2?
Theming HTML can be very easy if you're not super picky. I find both the ReadTheOrg and Bigblow themes from Fabrice Niessen great. They both require just a simple "#+SETUPFILE" directive to use.
- Simplest HTML export with "drill-down" on 26.1
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Packages for taking notes in a computing class
Second spot to check would be Emacs' org-mode which may be understood as a mark-up language with a syntax of similar ease to remember, or/and as an operating environment/task management within Emacs (and to some degree, ported to vim). It can offer you much more than a format converter (e.g., demo video by John Kitchin), including the compilation/execution of snippets of code. Like Pandoc, export/publication to other formats may be adjusted to your preferences (e.g., readtheorg), but (in comparison to markdown) this is more suitable if you use your device/are allowed to adjust the computer to your preferences. (In Pandoc's case, you may name a portable style file to adjust the output.) Your mileage of needs may vary, but the interaction with tables (demo Mike Zamansky to move rows/columns/cells around, to quickly evaluate (compute) e.g., sums/standard deviations of a few entries is something the Emacs ecosystem may offer, and Pandoc intended as a format converter can not. (However, Pandoc accepts both .md and .org as either input/output format.)
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[org] What is the best way to have a public wiki that I can write from Org?
I'm using a customized version of org-html-themes, really easy to setup and host on github pages for my projects
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orgmode and everything else
I have an org file with lots of bookmarks clustered e.g. by project, process („how to book traveling“, „how to sick leave“,..) and other documentation (architecture diagrams, …). I export it using the readthedoc theme and serve via local Webserver to n localhost
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License terms for ReadTheOrg
I recently discovered exporting your org files to html. Someone developed a very helpful theme package [here](https://github.com/fniessen/org-html-themes] which renders just like ReadTheDocs.
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Publish a book as HTML/website with org-mode.
org-html-themes
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Taking notes in org mode has made me popular with my classmates
So I have been taking notes in org mode for about a year, and after several people asking me for my notes, I learned how to export them to HTML with ReadTheOrg. I then hosted them on my github pages site, now I can share with my class before finals. Org never ceases to amaze me!
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Any static site generators for org-mode suitable for manuals/documentation?
Yes, you can use org built-in html export C-c C-e in combination with an org html theme. In fact, this ReadTheOrg is a fork of the official Sphinx Read The Docs theme.
deft
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Using emacs as a study environment
If, like me, OP is a little slap-dash, happy-go-lucky, can't-decide-what-to-use, lazy, or uncoordinated, https://github.com/jrblevin/deft is a pretty handy package.
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nvALT 2
For (neo)vim users, there's notational fzf [1], which also requires fzf to be installed [2]. For Emacs, there's Deft [3]. They all what to me are nvalt's core functionality which is fuzzy search into quick note creation/editing. They can also be used in conjunction with nvalt or other markdown based applications since all of them use plaintext. For Deft, you can also choose to create .org files.
[1] https://github.com/Alok/notational-fzf-vim
[2] https://github.com/junegunn/fzf
[3] https://jblevins.org/projects/deft/
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All files in one directory: How do you manage that?
Check out Deft.
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Finding notes with no links/backlinks
Take a look at Deft, this is what I use.
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How do people search their org roam notes?
You may be looking for deft: https://jblevins.org/projects/deft/
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Creating a summary for org files
I like deft for this.
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Zettelkasten Options
Honestly I've been in the same boat as you for ages and have even tried writing my own zettelkasten packages here and there on top of things like deft (I started with zetteldeft, which shows).
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Question: How to move lots of org-files into org-roam?
Is there an easy way to move a ton of org files into org-roam? I've used just a flat directory of org files that I've searched with the excellent Deft package for years, and I'd like to give org-roam a whirl. Is there an easy way to import all those notes in bulk? (Don't all notes need an ID?)
- Remembrance Agent (1996)
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Alternative to notational velocity/nvALT but with image support
‘Course, there’s an Emacs command to do that: Deft mode.
What are some alternatives?
github-markdown-css - The minimal amount of CSS to replicate the GitHub Markdown style
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode [Moved to: https://github.com/org-roam/org-roam]
readtheorg - Org Mode theme like Read The Docs
markdown-mode - Emacs Markdown Mode
org-superstar-mode - Make org-mode stars a little more super
emacs-solidity - The official solidity-mode for EMACS
org-themes
notdeft - NotDeft note manager for Emacs
org-html-theme-darksun - A Solarized Dark version of the Bigblow Org HTML export theme
zetteldeft - A Zettelkasten system! Or rather, some functions on top of the emacs deft package.
sphinx - The Sphinx documentation generator
zettelkasten-mode - Zettelkasten note-taking for org-mode