.dotfiles | devdocs | |
---|---|---|
11 | 239 | |
11 | 33,986 | |
- | 0.9% | |
8.8 | 9.6 | |
5 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Shell | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
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.
.dotfiles
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What video(s) really demonstrates how effective and helpful vim can be?
Here are my dotfiles for reference.
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Syntastic vs ALE vs CoC
If ALE does not already have an integration for a linter or an LSP, I can simply define my own custom integration.
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Clickable URLs?
But, for me, I find a mouse-free workflow to be better suited for tmux. I have this keybinding to capture content of the current pane, grep for URLs, filter them through fzf, then finally pass the results to open:
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[Gtk, Gvim] Dark/light
I have something similar in my ~/.vim/vimrc:
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How to get shellcheck working?
I usually set makeprg and errorformat in ~/.vim/after/compiler/*.vim and set the compiler as well as other file type-specific options in ~/.vim/after/ftplugin/*.vim , like
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Open Local Files and Line Numbers in GitHub and GitLab From Shell or Vim
If you liked this guide, you may find more useful/interesting things in my vimrc and/or in my custom git subcommands.
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Print Git Status in Your Tmux Statusbar
Similar to how you can print any information in a .bash_prompt via custom bash functions, so too can we implement a function that is invoked as a git sub-command via aliases.
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"How to do what 90% of plugins do in vanilla vim" - what are some of the 10% plugins?
Check out my vimrc for more examples of vim-native implementations of some common plugins.
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How To Get Make Target Tab Completion in Vim
For more vim goodies, check out my vimrc.
- Your most frequently used mapping
devdocs
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Show HN: I made a better Perplexity for developers
Hi HN,
I am Jiayuan, and I'm here to introduce a tool we've been building over the past few months: Devv (https://devv.ai). In simple terms, it is an AI-powered search engine specifically designed for developers.
Now, you might ask, with so many AI search engines already available—Perplexity, You.com, Phind, and several open-source projects—why do we need another one?
We all know that Generative Search Engines are built on RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation)[1] combined with Large Language Models (LLMs). Most of the products mentioned above use indexes from general search engines (like Google/Bing APIs), but we've taken a different approach.
We've created a vertical search index focused on the development domain, which includes:
- Documents: These are essentially the single source of truth for programming languages or libraries; I believe many of you are users of Dash (https://kapeli.com/dash) or devdocs (https://devdocs.io/).
- Code: While not natural language, code contains rich contextual information. If you have a question related to the Django framework, nothing is more convincing than code snippets from Django's repository.
- Web Search: We still use data from search engines because these results contain additional contextual information.
Our reasons for doing this include:
- The quality of the index is crucial to the RAG system; its effectiveness determines the output quality of the entire system.
- We focus more on the Index (RAG) rather than LLMs because LLMs evolve rapidly; even models performing well today may be superseded by better ones in a few months, and fine-tuning an LLM now has relatively low costs.
- All players are currently exploring what kind of LLM product works best; we hope to contribute some different insights ourselves (and plan to open source parts of our underlying infrastructure in return for contributions back into open source communities).
Some brief product features:
- Three modes: - Fast mode: Offers quick answers within seconds. - Agent mode: For complex queries where Devv Agent infers your question before selecting appropriate solutions. - GitHub mode(currently in beta): Links directly with your own GitHub repositories allowing inquiries about specific codebases.
- Clean & intuitive UI/UX design.
- Currently only available as web version but Chrome extension & VSCode plugin planned soon!
Technical details regarding how we build our Index:
- Documents section involves crawling most documentation sources using scripts inspired by devdocs project’s crawler logic then slicing them up according function/symbol dimensions before embedding into vector databases;
- Codes require special treatment beyond just embeddings alone hence why custom parsers were developed per language type extracting logical structures within repos such as architectural layouts calling relationships between functions definitions etc., semantically processed via LMM;
- Web searches combine both selfmade indices targeting developer niches alongside traditional API based methods. We crawled relevant sites including blogs forums tech news outlets etc..
For the Agent Mode, we have actually developed a multi-agent framework. It first categorizes the user's query and then selects different agents based on these categories to address the issues. These various agents employ different models and solution steps.
Future Plans:
- Build a more comprehensive index that includes internal context (The Devv for Teams version will support indexing team repositories, documents, issue trackers for Q&A)
- Fully localized: All of the above technologies can be executed locally, ensuring privacy and security through complete localization.
Devv is still in its very early stages and can be used without logging in. We welcome everyone to experience it and provide feedback on any issues; we will continue to iterate on it.
[1]: https://arxiv.org/abs/2005.11401
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Every Dunder Method in Python
> I've started to preface all python searches with 'site:python.org'
You might find DevDocs to be useful: https://devdocs.io/
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The Ultimate Roadmap to a Full-Stack Developer
DevDocs - Aggregates documentation from various sources into a single, easy-to-navigate interface, covering frontend and backend technologies. DevDocs
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Must-have for slacking off! 2024 Efficient Dev Tools for Increasing Productivity
DevDocs, an offline API documentation browser, supports multilingual, offering developers a quick and efficient way to access tech docs. From front-end to back-end and mobile development, it integrates official documentation, providing a sleek, user-friendly interface.
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Concrete.css
Environmental lighting conditions rule the day! I have astigmatism and I prefer bright backgrounds; #000 text on #fff backgrounds works great for me, but that's because I work in a room lit by a 250W 30,000 lumen corn-cob LED bulb[0] that makes my small office as bright on the inside as the shaded ground from a tree on an overcast day (which is quite bright compared to usual indoor lighting). In a room that bright, high contrast text works great and is highly readable, with "dark mode" often looking washed out and muddy. Even small reductions in contrast (such as what https://devdocs.io does with text of #333 in light mode) can make me notice and wish for greater contrast.
[0] - https://www.benkuhn.net/lux/
- SQL for Data Scientists in 100 Queries
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DevDocs
Here's how to add a new scraper: https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/devdocs/blob/main/.github/CO...
Or open an issue and wait for somebody else to implement the scraper.
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19 Handy Websites for Web Developers
Imagine a single, intuitive platform where you can access comprehensive documentation for a vast array of programming languages, frameworks, libraries, and tools. That's the magic of DevDocs. This exceptional resource eliminates the frustration of juggling multiple tabs and websites in your quest for information. DevDocs brings everything together into one easy-to-use interface.
- Q je u potrazi za 30 novih ljudi /s
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How would you work effectively with an extremely slow 56Kbps connection?
Mosh for a stable connection, Offline documentation such as msdn, wikipedia (via kiwi etc), zeal for local access to https://devdocs.io/; Self host tabby for ai autocompletion. For many shell programs check what mulinux was using back then, and what are the modern replacements such as elinks instead of links. Mutt for mail, for irc doesn't matter much, use a desktop one but setup a bouncher on a vps, I used to have one on a raspberry pi 1, you can use rss reader for reddit (not sure if still works) and blogs
What are some alternatives?
gitmux - :computer: Git in your tmux status bar
zeal - Offline documentation browser inspired by Dash
debug - Debugging functionality for Ruby
godot-docs - Godot Engine official documentation
editorconfig-vim - EditorConfig plugin for Vim
github-cheat-sheet - A list of cool features of Git and GitHub.
vim-shellcheck - Vim wrapper for ShellCheck, a static analysis tool for shell scripts.
alfred-search-in-devdocs - Documentation search in devdocs
dotfiles - There is no place like ~/
vim-godot - Use vim and godot engine to make games
vim-fugitive - fugitive.vim: A Git wrapper so awesome, it should be illegal
nvim-rs - A rust library for neovim clients