SnapKit
bangle-io
Our great sponsors
SnapKit | bangle-io | |
---|---|---|
10 | 20 | |
189 | 989 | |
- | 3.2% | |
9.4 | 6.3 | |
8 days ago | 5 months ago | |
Java | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
SnapKit
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Show HN: SnapCode – a real Java IDE in the browser
SnapCode is actually using SnapKit (https://github.com/reportmill/SnapKit) which can run on either WebAPI/DOM (in browser) or Swing (desktop). In the browser this helps slim the download and improve performance by using more browser native code.
For pricing, SnapCode is free for individual use and will remain so. Perhaps there will be funding opportunities from large organizations or for embedding use cases to help provide for the continued health of the product and community.
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What do you use for building Desktop apps these days?
The new kid on the block is SnapKit: https://github.com/reportmill/SnapKit
- What’s the cool app framework and UI i should be using ?
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Ask HN: Tips for modern Java Swing development?
Theres a bit more to it than that, since you want resetUI to update all of your components without triggering respondUI(). And you want all your components to be automatically configured to call respondUI() when there is user interaction.
I’ve written one of these before, but I don’t have access to a public version anymore. I do all my current UI dev in a UI kit built on top of Swing. But here is what I use there that solves this problem:
https://github.com/reportmill/SnapKit/blob/master/src/snap/v...
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Ask HN: Why isn't GWT or Vaadin more popular among Java developers?
I use SnapKit to do Java desktop development which compiles easily to JavaScript using TeaVM. SnapKit is both modern and conventional, a good middle ground between Swing and JavaFX. But most importantly, it combines the traditional win of desktop Java UI dev with the ease of web deployment.
SnapKit:
- Ask HN: Does Java need a modern Java UI toolkit for desktop/web?
- Why did Java lose UIs to HTML/JS?
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Ask HN: Who Wants to Collaborate?
Repo: https://github.com/reportmill/SnapKit
- What's the future of Java UI development?
bangle-io
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Silver Bullet: Markdown-based extensible open source personal knowledge platform
Another similar tool that is open sourced and allows you to sync with GitHub [1] .
It differs by providing a WYSIWYG interface while saving content in Markdown.
[1] https://github.com/bangle-io/bangle-io
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Hello
Hello other text based beings!
I am very passionate about journaling/collecting one’s thoughts. In a typical HN fashion, I decided to make a tool that scratches my itch [1].
Having spent majority of my life with portable computers around, I feel we as humans are losing the joy of writing one’s thoughts out. Sometimes the best thing is to write your thought and establish this one way temporal connection to your future self. This is so beautiful because it crosses the barriers of time, culture and location. An alien human descendant billions of years in future might be able to connect with me by reading my thoughts. Writing is an intellectual marvel that has no other equivalent
[1] https://bangle.io
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Ask HN: How do you use Notion?
What is the pain you are looking to alleviate? YMMV with notion. I think your personal reflections are probably the most important part of this because personal productivity and organization are so personal.
Single app has worked better for me. I am at 4 months of journaling and planning every day (I have used notion for a few years). When I was using desecrate apps I would go 1-3 weeks before system would fall apart.
For me the main pros are: Ability to move and copy elements from tickler to daily plan so easily. Ability to link todo's to documentation. Ability to take notes in a way that works with how I think, and ability to take handle incoming thoughts as fast as they need to be documented.
Main cons are: only "date time" construct in databases, I would prefer a "time" construct. Offline. Data portability.
> I feel like maybe this is the heart of it, having a personal cache to make a temporary mess in until you have time to clean it up later. I could see that being useful - though id want to move everything out of that place and not organize things within it
Cal Newport has a `working_memory.txt` file on every one of his desktops that he chucks random information into and then processes it at the end of the day. Maybe a system like that could be more your jam.
I might one day work up the courage to use [https://bangle.io/](https://bangle.io/) + github. Feels like owning my data + a bit more flexibility could be nice, but that seems like a lot of work.
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GitNoter – An open source alternative to Evernote (Self Hosted)
I would suggest trying out bangle.io [1] - an opens source markdown web app that is completely local and will support GitHub based syncing.
[1] https://bangle.io
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Inkdrop: Organizing your Markdown notes made simple
There is also https://bangle.io - an open source web app for taking markdown notes and saving them in your computer.
Note: I’m the author of the project.
- Ask HN: Open-source self hosted task manager with reminders
- Bangle.io – Note taking for the next decade
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Getting Started with the File System Access API
I have been using it to provide ability to read existing markdown notes in a users directory see [1]. So far it works great but browser support is limited to chrome and edge.
[1] https://bangle.io
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Show HN: Windi – knowledge management and sharing platform based on short notes
I have to say, this is a very well designed app.
Since you talk about local only app , I can suggest bangle.io [1] - a local only operative note taking app.
[1] https://github.com/bangle-io/bangle-io
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logseq VS bangle-io - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 2 Feb 2022
What are some alternatives?
teavm - Compiles Java bytecode to JavaScript, WebAssembly and C
rsyscall - Process-independent interface to Linux system calls
ubikom - Free, secure communications for everyone, powered by decentralized private identity.
awesome-selfhosted - A list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted on your own servers
compose-multiplatform - Compose Multiplatform, a modern UI framework for Kotlin that makes building performant and beautiful user interfaces easy and enjoyable.
futurecoder - 100% free and interactive Python course for beginners
cljfx - Declarative, functional and extensible wrapper of JavaFX inspired by better parts of react and re-frame
DevUtils-app - All-in-one Toolbox for Developers. Native macOS app.
Tokamak - SwiftUI-compatible framework for building browser apps with WebAssembly and native apps for other platforms
notekit - A GTK3 hierarchical markdown notetaking application with tablet support.
tornadofx2 - TornadoFX 2.0
go-littr - Link aggregator inspired by (old)reddit using ActivityPub federation. (mirror repository) [Moved to: https://github.com/mariusor/brutalinks]