remark-lint
vale
Our great sponsors
remark-lint | vale | |
---|---|---|
3 | 46 | |
915 | 4,178 | |
2.0% | 3.1% | |
7.7 | 9.3 | |
2 days ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
remark-lint
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How do you use a Style Guide?
we first looked into Vale but are moving to Remark Lint. Both have VS Code extensions so you can have it prompt you as you work.
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Why I'm writing a blog every week this year and why you should write more too!
I want to just give a shout out to Remark which is a linter for your READMEs which makes so much sense to me. Our code should be of a consistent standard, so why not the READMEs too!
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How to create a custom lint rule for Markdown and MDX using remark and ESLint
With our dependencies all installed, we can start creating a .remarkrc.js, which will contain all the plugins that will be consumed by the remark processor. For details about alternative or advanced configurations, please refer to Configuring remark-lint.
vale
- Software Technical Writing: A Guidebook [pdf]
- Grammarly editor writing service are malfunctioning
- Vale.sh – A Linter for Prose
- Ask HN: Best tool to proof-read technical documentation?
- Val, a high-level systems programming language
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Common Bugs in Writing
Vale is an OSS tool that you can use as a "prose linter" with many of these rules. You can also write your own rules. Together with a spellchecker its a good replacement for proprietary tools like grammarly.
- https://github.com/errata-ai/vale
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Just Simply – Stop saying how simple things are in our docs
> Write in US English with US grammar. (Tested in British.yml.)
heh, that was funny but it turns out the file is a list of British words checked using Vale, which I just learned existed: https://github.com/errata-ai/vale#readme (MIT)
Also, another TIL is that the "e" version of gray is British https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/.vale... I had previously erroneously assumed they were just one of those quirks of English (which, I guess is still true but it is less random than I thought)
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Tools that enforce/promote corporate standards?
Off the top of my head, Vale and Acrolinx.
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Over 60% of Writers Already Use AI in Their Writing Workflow
I have recently thought of feeding the suggestions from Vale (https://vale.sh/) into an LLM along with your writing. Currently I just simply ask an LLM to take what I wrote and put it into a more "active voice". I then manually edit my writing to make it more "active" if I choose -- I do not just publish LLM generated content unaltered.
Note: I did not ask an LLM for this comment.
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What terminal apps are you using?
vale to spell check and enforce writing style on my articles
What are some alternatives?
eslint-mdx - ESLint Parser/Plugin for MDX
proselint - A linter for prose.
vscode-markdownlint - Markdown linting and style checking for Visual Studio Code
lsp-grammarly - lsp-mode ❤️ grammarly
markdownlint - A Node.js style checker and lint tool for Markdown/CommonMark files.
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
vfile - Virtual file format for text processing used in @unifiedjs
write-good - Naive linter for English prose
remark-react - Legacy plugin to transform to React — please use `remark-rehype` and `rehype-react` instead
markdownlint - Repository for the markdownlint-mdl-action Github Action
Gatsby - The best React-based framework with performance, scalability and security built in.
markdownlint - Markdown lint tool