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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.
rosie
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I created a library for parsing text in Kotlin. Better than regular expressions. What do you think?
I think you'd be better served to try to port Rosie Pattern Language (https://gitlab.com/rosie-pattern-language/rosie) to Kotlin than to try to roll your own. There are definite corner cases in RegEx (sounds like you've already hit some) where the asympototic performance is so large that the code is practically unrunnable. Rosie addresses several of those cases.
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Is the regex crate a bottleneck in your program? If so, can you share the details?
I had to spend a lot of time clicking through links to finally find an example: https://gitlab.com/rosie-pattern-language/rosie/blob/master/rpl/date.rpl
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Ask HN: What small library or tool do you want that doesn’t exist?
Something could be based on the "Rosie Pattern Language"[0]. There is already a parser for en_US/en_EU dates[1], which should be simple to extend to date ranges.
[0]: https://gitlab.com/rosie-pattern-language/rosie/-/blob/maste...
[1]: https://gitlab.com/rosie-pattern-language/rosie/blob/master/...
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Parsing Tools
Maybe something like Rosie?
cheat.sh
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Ask HN: What are your go to shell one-liners?
curl https://cheat.sh/$1
- Show HN: Cheat.sh Client
- Cheatsheets over Curl
- Cheat.sh – Community Driven Documentation
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Should you add screenshots to documentation?
cheat.sh [0] has been a godsend when the man pages are too dense and I just want to use the tool and move on with my life.
[0] http://cheat.sh/
- Making Hard Things Easy
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Free Tech Tools and Resources - WinPE Build, Cheatsheet Tool, PW Recovery & More
Cheat.sh provides unified access to the world's best community-driven documentation repositories. Its simple interface gives access to an impressive range of 56 programming languages, several DBMSes, and over 1000 essential UNIX/Linux commands. Offering StackOverflow-level cheat sheets, it requires no installation and boasts lightning-fast response times. The optional CLI client seamlessly integrates with code editors to eliminate the need for a browser, and the unique 'stealth mode' allows for entirely invisible and silent use. Our appreciation for this recommendation goes to Hoolies.
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? - The only cheat sheet you need
I like what you're doing with this, never used cheat.sh before but had a little look around and great idea :) I've not tested everything, i seen something about find and thought i could help.
- Show HN: Trogon – An automatic TUI for command line apps
- Cheat.sh
What are some alternatives?
alass - "Automatic Language-Agnostic Subtitle Synchronization"
tldr - 📚 Collaborative cheatsheets for console commands
instaparse
navi - An interactive cheatsheet tool for the command-line
langs
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
elder_launcher - A Launcher focused on simplicity and legibility.
cheat - cheat allows you to create and view interactive cheatsheets on the command-line. It was designed to help remind *nix system administrators of options for commands that they use frequently, but not frequently enough to remember.
snapdrop - A Progressive Web App for local file sharing
inxi - inxi is a full featured CLI system information tool. It is available in most Linux distribution repositories, and does its best to support the BSDs.
once - Collect and deduplicate stories (RSS, Hacker News, Lobsters or Reddit) and look at them once.
updog - Updog is a replacement for Python's SimpleHTTPServer. It allows uploading and downloading via HTTP/S, can set ad hoc SSL certificates and use http basic auth.