onedrive
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onedrive | til | |
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10 | 1 | |
3,999 | 56 | |
- | - | |
2.7 | 0.0 | |
over 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
D | D | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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onedrive
- Onedrive on deck? please help
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Yes now i have a changed perspective
https://github.com/skilion/onedrive works pretty well!
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Which distro based on requirements
one drive can be accessed through a browser and there is also this project: https://github.com/skilion/onedrive . for email there is thunderbird but it has a bit outdated design. there is also evolution, mailspring, geary and plenty more.
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Cloud Saves with non-steam Emulators?
Just checked, it was https://github.com/skilion/onedrive
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I can't seem to settle on Linux (keep coming back to Windows)
For onedrive, there are several onedrive clients for linux, but I've personally never tried them before yet. Might worth looking into them though: https://github.com/abraunegg/onedrive https://github.com/skilion/onedrive https://github.com/jstaf/onedriver
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I want to switch it Linux but have a few questions
and access OneDrive via the abraunegg client, or this one from skilion
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Connecting to company OneDrive?
For example https://github.com/skilion/onedrive I feel like with a bit of tinkering and config this can be run on the rm2.
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Best distro for creative uses?
You can actually put LibreOffice in tabbed mode and then its similar too. OpenOffice is also a good option. For OneDrive I recommend using this OneDrive cli tho it doesn't have a GUI sadly. It's a fork of this OneDrive client which works ok too.
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OneDrive access in Linux
What distro are you using? Here is some app, maybe you will find it useful
til
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TIL: Tcl-inspired command language on top of D
> Kudos to the TIL's author for trailblazing this idea based on TCL. It will be very beneficial and handy for scripting commands and shell like behaviors.
Thanks! I love the concept of "scripting" (that is a bit different from simply a "dynamic language"). I'm quite aware it's just "yet another programming language" but if I can dream of something is that it serves as some kind of incentive for people to develop more libraries in D.
I mean, if you just want to create a Til module that allows you to serve some Web pages using HTTP/2, it shouldn't be that difficult and, at the same time, it could be the end goal itself: just creating a useful module, not something like "it's a crucial part, besides other five, of this big project X I'm working on" (I believe this kind of situation almost always ends with "nah, I'll just use instead").
> Just wondering is this type based TCL like language similar to Little?
No, it's not. I first heard about Little a couple months ago and it's a very interesting project. But I don't plan, right now, to include any kind of builtin Tcl compatibility layer in Til (although users are free to create its own implementations, of course).
> [2] Will it eventually support compilation similar to Emacs Lisp? [3]
I created the language much more as a tool to learn how to create languages than anything else, but now it's kind of mature enough, I'll confess my dream is to implement JIT compilation, following the steps of LuaJIT (that is an AWESOME project IMHO).
> Personally I'd love to have superset language in D for data science.
That would be nice. Having a autowrap-like way of exposing D code to Til would be even nicer. (https://github.com/atilaneves/autowrap)
> It should be also easily embeddable and support prototyping like Lua.
I believe embedding it is already in a very tolerable state. If you look into the "interpreter" code you'll see it is only 82 lines (actual 69 LOC).
(https://github.com/til-lang/til/blob/master/interpreter/sour...)
And it has a lot of debugging code. Loading a string, parsing it as a "SubProgram" and running it is kind of trivial.
Now, about the prototyping part, I never thought about it, actually...
> On top of that it should have excellent support for array, ndarray and dataframe like R [4].
It's very easy to create new types in Til and they support both "operate" (to apply, you know, operators, like +, -, /, etc) and "extract (to index things or extract information in general from values). I believe it wouldn't be difficult to create a nice module for using these things.
> Since it is based on D, then it can fulfill the requirements for both type A and B data scientists [5].
Maybe. But, I don't know... isn't data scientists all over the world happy and satisfied with Python, already?
What are some alternatives?
onedrive - OneDrive Client for Linux
tilix - A tiling terminal emulator for Linux using GTK+ 3
onedriver - A native Linux filesystem for Microsoft OneDrive
dmd - dmd D Programming Language compiler
rclone - "rsync for cloud storage" - Google Drive, S3, Dropbox, Backblaze B2, One Drive, Swift, Hubic, Wasabi, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob, Azure Files, Yandex Files
tsv-utils - eBay's TSV Utilities: Command line tools for large, tabular data files. Filtering, statistics, sampling, joins and more.
trash-d - A near drop-in replacement for rm that uses the trash bin. Written in D
terminix - A tiling terminal emulator for Linux using GTK+ 3 [Moved to: https://github.com/gnunn1/tilix]
lutris - Lutris desktop client
autowrap - Wrap existing D code for use in other environments such as Python and Excel
dfmt - Dfmt is a formatter for D source code
Drill - Search files without indexing, but clever crawling