rustpad
mkdocs-material
Our great sponsors
rustpad | mkdocs-material | |
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23 | 93 | |
3,046 | 18,123 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
5 months ago | 8 days ago | |
Rust | HTML | |
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.
rustpad
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Stashpad launches Google Docs alternative you can use without any login
Take a look at https://github.com/ekzhang/rustpad
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Could someone suggest a editable, no-account, password protected paste-bin?
You could try rustpad
- Ask HN: Is there a site that is just a text scratchpad?
- Paste server for local network
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Let's Markdown: A self-hosted, open source collaborative markdown editor
Looks pretty similar to https://rustpad.io/
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Let's Markdown: A real-time collaborative markdown editor built with Rust, WebAssembly, and React!
Awesome! I requested this in rustpad but it was closed with wontfix. I suppose it is out of scope of rustpad but I'm really glad to see that there's this project to add it.
I used rustpad's backend, and documents are transient, meaning that they will be lost between server restarts or after 24 hours of inactivity.
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Have you ever started a project in Rust but switched to a different language? If so, why?
Just adding an example to the other side, I wrote https://rustpad.io/ in Rust, which is a collaborative text editor that uses WebSockets and resolves edit conflicts in real time using an operational transformation algorithm. It's a fairly complex bit of logic. But I actually thought Rust was the best language for this application because of performance, data race-safety, Serde, and the borrow checker. (My second choice would have been Go with stress tests run under `the -race flag.)
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Advise with starting "scratch my own itch" project (screensharing + vscode liveshare clone)
Also check out Rustpad (Github) - it has collaborative editing implemented now.
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Considering Flutter and React as my front ends for Rust - Switching careers
Rust has great support for web backend, but not as easy as something like Node.js due to a less mature ecosystem of libraries. I've done React+Rust as a stack before (see Rustpad), but this was a very particular use case (stateful network WebSocket service). For most full-stack applications I'd use something like Next.js instead.
mkdocs-material
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π Building MVPs You Wonβt Hate
Material Mk-Docs by Martin Donath works well if you prefer python.
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The Open Source Sustainability Crisis
https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/
I'm an 'outsider', but from from the outside the Material For MkDocs Project looks like a very well managed open source project.
Martin Donath's project uses a 'sponsorware' release strategy to generate donations.
From my vantage point it seems to be working pretty well.
- Agora a nossa Megathread possui um novo visual!
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MdBook β Create book from Markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
Wow, what is up with the material mkdocs theme (https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/)? That's an extremely spiffy landing page, especially given that it's for a theme designed for a totally separate piece of software.
- Koji projekat na Githubu vas je odusevio u zadnje vreme?
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MkDocs Publisher as an alternative for official Obsidian publish.
I was considering Pelican at some stage, but MkDocs has a great mobile friendly theme (Material for MkDocs) that is part of the dependencies. This theme and my previous experience in using MkDocs, gave me a clear answer what to use. There were also some other MkDocs plugins, that I was considering to use before I started to develop my bundle, but they were lacking in some elements (like plugin for wikilinks not working correctly for Obsidian links and one for callouts with small problems in embedded callouts, etc.). Finally, I didn't use those plugins, but they were good source to take a look at the code and get some inspiration, etc. (most of those plugins will mentioned in documentation in credits section, that is under construction). If you will ever have some features requests, just create an issue in git repo of the project. I'm open to suggestions how to extend functionality ot this project.
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Site-wide Protest, Introducing leagueoflinux.org, and Poll for What to do Next with r/leagueoflinux
The site is built using MkDocs and themed with MkDocs-Material. Being markdown-based, porting over the webpages from the subreddit wiki was fairly painless, and on some pages I've already been able to extend their capabilities with in-line images, buttons and more modern special formatting tools.
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Anyone know of a free dev docs like confluence?
Maybe something like https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/ or https://www.bookstackapp.com/ ?
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Public API documentation. What to use?
I use a combo of swagger and mkdocks: https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/
What are some alternatives?
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites.
sphinx - The Sphinx documentation generator
MkDocs - Project documentation with Markdown.
mkdocstrings - :blue_book: Automatic documentation from sources, for MkDocs.
Read the Docs - The source code that powers readthedocs.org
mike - Manage multiple versions of your MkDocs-powered documentation via Git
BookStack - A platform to create documentation/wiki content built with PHP & Laravel
furo - A clean customizable documentation theme for Sphinx
river-runner - Uses USGS/MERIT Basin data to visualize the path of a rain droplet to its endpoint.
typedoc - Documentation generator for TypeScript projects.
fastapi - FastAPI framework, high performance, easy to learn, fast to code, ready for production
VuePress - π Minimalistic Vue-powered static site generator