maddy
argumentum
maddy | argumentum | |
---|---|---|
3 | 1 | |
186 | 192 | |
- | - | |
7.0 | 6.6 | |
4 months ago | 8 months ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
MIT License | 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.
maddy
-
OSD600 Lab 8
Since I offloaded my markdown parsing to maddy, I did not test for it because it was not my own code. As a result, it was difficult to find parts that I could test. I mostly created my test cases for end to end testing. Since the number of things to test for is always numerous, I ended up finding a few things I could test for. But, I definitely am not satisfied with the number of tests I currently have and will be adding more in the future.
-
A good code thief
Across all the JavaScript-based SSGs, palpatine is developed from the ground up using C++ and CMake as the build system. As the developer and maintainer of palpatine my main concern is to make it lightning fast compared to others. Currently, palpatine1.5 can generate a static site in less than 1 second. I've also made sure that it is easy to use, with a simple command line interface. The documentation is also precise and easy to follow. However, it is lacking one of the core features, supporting markdown files fully. I've been working on this feature for the past few days and I found a header-only Markdown parser library maddy. But it seems that it has been more than a year since the last commit was made to the library. I'm not sure if it is still being maintained. CMake was quite upset about how outdated it was.
-
OSD600 Lab 6
Taking inspiration from Docusaurus, I added full markdown parsing support to my SSG. I chose to add this because it was a core component of my SSG that remained incomplete. Instead of adding a nice-to-have feature, I figured it would be best to complete the core functionality of my SSG first. Instead of coding my own markdown parsing, it was much easier to simply use a markdown parsing library which already existed. I did this by using a maddy, a C++ markdown parsing library. The process of using the library was very straightforward, although calling its methods did noticeably slow down the html generation. After verifying that it worked with my SSG, I removed my initial implementation of markdown parsing.
argumentum
-
3 Ways To Parse Command Line Arguments in C++: Quick, Do-It-Yourself, Or Comprehensive
There is also argumentum https://github.com/mmahnic/argumentum which is for C++ 17 and supports std::optional and sub-commands.
What are some alternatives?
tree-sitter-html - HTML grammar for Tree-sitter
CLI11 - CLI11 is a command line parser for C++11 and beyond that provides a rich feature set with a simple and intuitive interface.
forkleft - Fegeya Forkleft, C++ implementation of ~new generation~ mark-up language.
tclap - Templatized C++ Command Line Parser mirror
HMT - HMT is a multi-text editor which provides you to interact with HMTL, Markdown, Inline and Internal CSS with a one-click preview system...😲😲😲
jarro2783/cxxopts - Lightweight C++ command line option parser
scope_guard - A modern C++ scope guard that is easy to use but hard to misuse.
BazPO - Easy to use program options argument parser
yaal - Yet another abstraction layer - a general purpose C++ library.
args - A simple header-only C++ argument parser library. Supposed to be flexible and powerful, and attempts to be compatible with the functionality of the Python standard argparse library (though not necessarily the API).
FunctionalPlus - Functional Programming Library for C++. Write concise and readable C++ code.
Lyra - A simple to use, composable, command line parser for C++ 11 and beyond