oxen-release
awesome-structure-editors
Our great sponsors
oxen-release | awesome-structure-editors | |
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22 | 10 | |
831 | 303 | |
9.9% | - | |
9.0 | 4.8 | |
29 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Python | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
oxen-release
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Ask HN: Can we do better than Git for version control?
We've been working on a data version control system called "oxen" optimized for large unstructured datasets that we are seeing more and more with the advent of many of the generative AI techniques.
Many of these datasets have many many images, videos, audio files, text as well as structured tabular datasets that git or git-lfs just falls flat on.
Would love anyone to kick the tires on it and let us know what you think:
https://github.com/Oxen-AI/oxen-release
The commands are mirrored after git so it is easy to learn, but optimized under the hood for larger datasets.
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Snakemake – A framework for reproducible data analysis
Super cool! Would love to see an integration with Oxen and their data version control https://github.com/Oxen-AI/oxen-release
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Ask HN: Data Management for AI Training
We have been working on a data version control tool called Oxen that is tackling many of your needs. Feel free to check it out here:
https://github.com/Oxen-AI/oxen-release#-oxen
Going down your list of requirements, Oxen has:
* Data versioning, similar paradigm to git, but built from the ground up for large ML datasets
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A tale of Phobos – how we almost cracked a ransomware using CUDA
We've been working on some open source tooling called "oxen" that was built for large datasets of images, video, audio, text etc. We wanted to solve the exact problem you're flagging here with git.
Feel free to check it out here https://github.com/Oxen-AI/oxen-release#-oxen would love any feedback!
- Oxen.ai: Fast Unstructured Data Version Control
- A versioning system for ML data sets
- Oxen - Version control for your machine learning datasets
awesome-structure-editors
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Ask HN: Can we do better than Git for version control?
Yes, I think that we can do better than plain text as the source of truth, and thus git would probably need to change.
There's work around a bunch of languages that are not based on text, some have their own editor or a tool to manage a canonical representation in text for you that would make them friendlier to git.
- https://github.com/yairchu/awesome-structure-editors/blob/main/README.md
- Structure Editors: A list of projectional code editor projects
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Pijul: Version-Control Post-Git • Goto 2023
There's many more akin projects listed in https://github.com/yairchu/awesome-structure-editors/blob/ma...
I can't wait fast enough for these ideas to reshape how we deal with programs and build stuff.
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Is Haskell gaining or losing popularity?
Haskell seems to be pretty big. For example in this list of projects it appears to be the second most popular language (after TypeScript) :)
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Ask HN: Any IDEs or text editor plugins with AST-driven navigation?
See https://github.com/yairchu/awesome-structure-editors
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A Block-Based Functional Programming Language
You could submit a pull request to get it added to awesome-structure-editors by /u/yairchu
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Emacs Is Not Enough
It would be interesting to have such a general project go somewhere.
While in principle structural editing sounds like an incredible advance, there are 'good enough' advantages to plain-text tools that make it a much more practical solution. The other issue is of course integration with existing tooling, which you either skip entirely or compromise on the design.
What I feel is missing, between the description of "old, bad state of things" and "utopian vision" is a review of some of the projects that already tried to achieve this ideal state. It turns out there are a number of them, and most of them failed to achieve any traction or impact [0].
The rants are very long, so I skimmed quickly the one about git; I understand the complaints, although git is only bringing me joy and no pain --interactive rebase, absorb and a few aliases made it a breeze. But in a similar fashion there are projects trying to solve its fundamental issues, like pijul(.org); what are they missing?
[0] https://github.com/yairchu/awesome-structure-editors/blob/ma...
- Ask HN: Is Vim still worth learning?
- Structure Editors
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Ask HN: More “experimental“ UIs for editing/writing code?
Some good ones pops up in Projectional Programming [1] once in a while. The pinned thread links to the structure-editors github list [2] too.
[1] https://www.reddit.com/r/nosyntax/
[2] https://github.com/yairchu/awesome-structure-editors
What are some alternatives?
VFSForGit - Virtual File System for Git: Enable Git at Enterprise Scale
lisperanto - Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for programming; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for knowledge; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for ideas;
gpt-2-output-dataset - Dataset of GPT-2 outputs for research in detection, biases, and more
unit - Next Generation Visual Programming System
dvc - 🦉 ML Experiments and Data Management with Git
metadesk
dud - A lightweight CLI tool for versioning data alongside source code and building data pipelines.
git-stack - Stacked branch management for Git
mandala - A powerful and easy to use Python framework for experiment tracking and incremental computing
gtoolkit - Glamorous Toolkit is the Moldable Development environment. It empowers you to make systems explainable through experiences tailored for each problem.
dolt - Dolt – Git for Data
git-machete - Probably the sharpest git repository organizer & rebase/merge workflow automation tool you've ever seen