plots2
Gollum
plots2 | Gollum | |
---|---|---|
6 | 40 | |
951 | 13,563 | |
-0.1% | 0.2% | |
0.0 | 7.6 | |
13 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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.
plots2
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Ask HN: Comment here about whatever you're passionate about at the moment
Citizen science! It's great when people realize they can answer their own questions with observation and data, and for activism because data is a powerful story. One friend of mine started https://publiclab.org to feed this, and another is doing data journalism to highlight holes in the government's environmental data. https://www.muckrock.com/project/
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A step-by-step for doing your first open source contribution (and finding where to do it)
My first contribution ever was to PublicLab's plots2 back in 2018. I had no idea what I was doing or what plots2 was. What attracted me was how welcoming they were (and still are) to first time contributors. With them: I opened my first PR, discussed in PR's conversation, and pushed the changes requested. Back then, that was a lot!
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Search function on a website I'm getting built
Hmm so to your first question: That pattern of selecting from a pre-populated list is often used with a tag or chip system where you can select and deselect one or more items from the list, something like this: https://github.com/publiclab/plots2/issues/6026 in this case the search CTA acts as the final decision to search while the selections are populating the search criteria. It sounds your system design is a bit different though. Sounds to me like an issue of heuristics of UI https://www.nngroup.com/articles/ten-usability-heuristics/ the third heuristic states:
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Are there places for amateur researcher to post their work?
Maybe public lab would be a good home? https://publiclab.org/
- what ruby or rails open source projects a beginner-to-intermediate developer can easily contribute to?
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Hacktoberfest: 69 Beginner-Friendly Projects You Can Contribute To
https://github.com/publiclab/plots2 A collaborative knowledge-exchange platform in Rails; we welcome first-time contributors! balloon
Gollum
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Can Git or any other VCS be used as a database instead of SQL/NoSQL ones? Have you ever seen such a thing?
Arguably something like ikiwiki or gollum is doing this. These are both wikis that use git as their backend 'database'. I happen to like wikis like this a lot better over wikis that store their data in mysql or some other traditional SQL backend.
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Looking for notion/jira alternatives (self-hosted) (JavaScript free)
Gollum is self-hosted and uses git for version control https://github.com/gollum/gollum
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How do you host documentation for your spouse or other users?
https://github.com/gollum/gollum ?
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Atlassian prepares to abandon on-prem server products
For something quick and easy consider https://github.com/gollum/gollum#markups which powers Github Wikis.
Note that multi-user auth is NOT supported out of the box however.
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Hermes, an Open Source Document Management System
That seems something in the ballpark of my favorite wiki software:
https://github.com/gollum/gollum
Edit and view pages as a normal markdown wiki. But the backend is just a git repository of markdown files so you can also just use your text editor and git pull/push. Usable by any novice but with the ideal power user interface.
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Simple personal knowledgebase
I'm currently using Gollum Wiki in this way. It reads from a git repository, formats the markdown files nicely, and has a limited editor that is useful in a pinch.
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What’s the prettiest yet most lightweight self-hosted wiki service out there?
I use Gollum, it's very simple but fits my needs.
- Kreiranje online wiki sto bi sacuvali
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Looking for the best self-hosted Markdown notes setup with web acces
Gollum would be an excellent solution. It's a web interface to a directory of markdown (or other formats), backed by git. Easy to sync the plain text files on your own devices (e.g. Syncthing) while still having a public web interface for school/work computers.
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Any zk like app that can run on a web server?
Gollum could meet the need. Logseq might work as well; here's a potential guide to self-hosting.
What are some alternatives?
ArchivesSpace - The ArchivesSpace archives management tool
Wiki.js - Wiki.js | A modern and powerful wiki app built on Node.js
matplotlib - matplotlib: plotting with Python
Dokuwiki - The DokuWiki Open Source Wiki Engine
WebsiteOne - A website for Agile Ventures
Gitit - A wiki using HAppS, pandoc, and git
textbook-curriculum - Ada Developers Academy Online Curriculum
Mediawiki - 🌻 The collaborative editing software that runs Wikipedia. Mirror from https://gerrit.wikimedia.org/g/mediawiki/core. See https://mediawiki.org/wiki/Developer_access for contributing.
export-pull-requests - Export pull requests and/or issues to a CSV file. Supports GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket
TiddlyWiki - A self-contained JavaScript wiki for the browser, Node.js, AWS Lambda etc.
Rubocop - A Ruby static code analyzer and formatter, based on the community Ruby style guide. [Moved to: https://github.com/rubocop/rubocop]
BookStack - A platform to create documentation/wiki content built with PHP & Laravel