glitter
Prawn
glitter | Prawn | |
---|---|---|
2 | 10 | |
3 | 4,611 | |
- | 0.4% | |
9.7 | 7.8 | |
6 days ago | 18 days ago | |
TypeScript | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | CERN Open Hardware Licence Version 2 - Strongly Reciprocal |
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.
glitter
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Show HN: Dropflow, a CSS layout engine for node or <canvas>
I've used satori [0] on the backend with TypeScript/Deno to render JSX as an SVG (which is then rendered to a PNG).
Satori is meant for rendering Open Graph images (e.g. the little images that come up when you post a link on Twitter/Slack/Facebook), but I found that it works well for rendering arbitrary images. It supports a subset of modern CSS, including flexbox.
My use case is posting match reports for League of Legends into a Discord text channel, e.g. person X just played a match, here are their stats.
It's quite nice because there are almost zero server-side native dependencies (the one exception is the library to convert svg -> png requires some native libraries).
Here's what a match report looks like: [1]
Here's an example of what the JSX looks like: [2]
[0]: https://github.com/vercel/satori
[1]: https://github.com/shepherdjerred/glitter/blob/main/assets/p...
[2]: https://github.com/shepherdjerred/glitter/blob/main/packages...
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Learn SVG with 25 examples – How to code images in HTML
Another way is to write HTML/CSS and use satori [0] to convert that to SVG. It's meant for Open Graph images (the images that show up when you link a site in Discord, Slack, Twitter, etc.), but it works quite well for anything.
This is obviously not as flexible as true SVG, but it is familiar to author for anyone who's written a React application. I've used it on the backend to generate match reports for League of Legends [1]
[0]: https://github.com/vercel/satori
[1]: https://github.com/shepherdjerred/glitter-boys
Prawn
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Show HN: Dropflow, a CSS layout engine for node or <canvas>
I'm a little confused by your comment. I've been using the Prawn library to generate PDFs on the backend for a side project I am working on for quite sometime https://github.com/prawnpdf/prawn
(Admittedly, the PDFs I generate are most certainly not beautiful, so maybe that's the difference)
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Working with PDFs in Ruby
to view the email preview (note the PDF attachment included in the email): ![Email preview with attachment](https://www.honeybadger.io/images/blog/posts/ruby-pdfs/email-preview.png) ## Prawn PDF [Prawn PDF](https://github.com/prawnpdf/prawn) is a pure Ruby PDF- generation library that comes packed with features, such as PNG and JPG image embeds, generated file encryption, right-to-left text rendering, a way to incorporate outlines for easy document navigation, and a lot more. Prawn comes with its own DSL, which drives its powerful PDF generation abilities. ### When to Use Prawn Although it's not a fully featured report generation library like the well-known [Jasper Reports](https://community.jaspersoft.com/), with a bit of work using it's powerful DSL, you can generate some really cool and rather complex PDF documents with Prawn. Even so, it's important to note that Prawn isn't everything. If you want to generate PDFs from HTML, then you should look elsewhere, as the gem provides very limited support for inline styling, something of a hurdle if you're working with rich HTML documents. ### Installing and Using Prawn To get started with Prawn, install it with this command: ```bash gem install prawn
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Need help
Is the Prawn gem something you can utilize?
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Invoicing gem implementation
Prawn pdf: https://github.com/prawnpdf/prawn
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Working on Script to auto-generate templates, help needed
Javascript isn't really my thing, so first I had a go with the Prawn library in ruby, but now I'm hacking LuaTex via Fennel and having a blast.
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Creating PDFs in a Ruby on Rails application
You have a few options when trying to create a PDF in a Rails environment. Prawn and Wicked PDF have been around for quite a while. I have been using both gems and they work fine. However, they have a few limitations that can make it difficult to handle more complex PDFs. I recently discovered Grover, which can remediate some of this inflexibility in creating PDFs.
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What libraries do you miss from other languages?
On this note, Ruby’s Prawn is great at the writing half and I miss it in pretty much every other language.
- Status Update 2021 (Prawn PDF Ruby Gem)
- Status Update 2021 (PrawnPDF OSS)
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2021 PDF planner template for goodnotes etc. (Sadly the last one)
are you using keynote to make the file and then export to pdf? I wonder if it could be possible to do this programatically, using ruby and prawn (https://github.com/prawnpdf/prawn) 🤔. I have zero time to try it today, but this could be a fun weekend project for sure.
What are some alternatives?
Frappe Charts - Simple, responsive, modern SVG Charts with zero dependencies
Wicked Pdf - PDF generator (from HTML) plugin for Ruby on Rails
html5spec - The WHATWG HTML5 spec as machine-readable JSON
HexaPDF - Versatile PDF creation and manipulation for Ruby
Pdfkit - A Ruby gem to transform HTML + CSS into PDFs using the command-line utility wkhtmltopdf
Grover - A Ruby gem to transform HTML into PDFs, PNGs or JPEGs using Google Puppeteer/Chromium
CombinePDF - A Pure ruby library to merge PDF files, number pages and maybe more...
Squid - A Ruby library to plot charts in PDF files
Shrimp - a phantomjs based pdf renderer
Kitabu - A framework for creating e-books from Markdown using Ruby. Using the Prince PDF generator, you'll be able to get high quality PDFs. Also supports EPUB, Mobi, Text and HTML generation.
RGhost - RGhost is a document creation and conversion API. It uses the Ghostscript framework for the format conversion, utilizes EPS templates and is optimized to work with larger documents. Support(PDF,PS,GIF,TIF,PNG,JPG,etc)
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.