tools
tinytestlib
tools | tinytestlib | |
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8 | 5 | |
1,370 | 3 | |
0.1% | - | |
9.2 | 0.0 | |
9 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Python | Shell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
tools
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Ask HN: What are the best eBook authoring tools today?
This violates the "One Tool" constraint that OP requested, but the Standard Ebooks tool chain is available on Github for anyone interested: https://github.com/standardebooks/tools
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Standard Ebooks
The code is GPL-3 and the templates are CC0: https://github.com/standardebooks/tools/blob/master/LICENSE....
Feel free to ask on the mailing list if you have any questions, more likely to be picked up there than in a random HN thread :)
- Hobbes: “Leviathan” in Modern English. Introduction
- Fish 3.4.0
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Today I learned ePub is just HTML/CSS
I'll give a shoutout to some other excellent software.
The first is the "Standard Ebooks"[1] toolset, which is a suite of Python scripts to create, process, and build ebooks in all common formats. The results on the Standard Ebooks site speak for themselves. They're impeccable in every way, and far better than many big name, commercially produced efforts.
GitHub: https://github.com/standardebooks/tools
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17-volume Arabian Nights available in its entirety at Project Gutenberg
This question comes up a lot. The source to our production pipeline is GPLed and freely available,[1] but the biggest part of why we produce good work is that we have a high quality manual of style.[2] Unfortunately, that second part is very specific to English, and that’s the difficult part to replicate for other languages.
[1] https://github.com/standardebooks/tools/
[2] https://standardebooks.org/manual/
tinytestlib
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Fhtagn – a tiny CLI programs tester written in Awk
I wrote something like this but in Bash https://github.com/pmarreck/tinytestlib but since this accomplishes my own design goals of being able to assert on all 3 things at once (stdout, stderr, return/exit code), and since I have a thing for Awk, and since you can also embed this in a Markdown, I kind of like this better
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No redirect to variable?
I actually used a variation on that stackoverflow answer to implement a simple as possible bash testing library where you can assert on stdout, stderr and returncodes (which all had to be gathered from 1 command invocation)
- I wrote an MVP testing library in Bash to make it as easy as possible to add test suites for commandline-driven tools
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Ask HN: How do you work on your mental health?
I've been trying to learn Nix, NixOS (incl. writing my own derivations), play with Phoenix's LiveView (which has already been out for a while), play with Elixir's Nx library for machine learning stuff, play with https://livebook.dev/ which now has ML hooks, come up with a use case for GraphQL so I can at least stick it on a resume (I understand it in principle but not in practice), make Bash saner by writing my own testing library for it which still needs polishing so it is incredibly easy to include in another bash script https://github.com/pmarreck/tinytestlib, code a Discord bot to DJ my cross-country gaming sessions with a best friend (I have one working but I need to hack on it more), learn more about ZFS and tuning it (I boot off it), stay on top of Linux developments, stay on top of Postgresql developments (perhaps investigating immutable-data/event-log schemes that play nice with it to maybe work with a security audit requirement in an app I'm responsible for)...
AND THAT'S JUST OFF THE TOP OF MY HEAD. ;)
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Fish 3.4.0
I made the mistake last year of falling in love with xs-shell, talking to its maintainer (who recently put xs out to pasture, as it were) who is now moving all his stuff to es-shell, switching my romance to es-shell, merging in 2 forks of it to my own version https://github.com/pmarreck/es-shell/ aaaand having a kid and basically running out of time.
This shell makes a ton more sense to my brain than the usual bash/zsh/fish rigmarole, it just needs some love.
The last thing I was working on was a way to capture all of stdout, stderr and return code from a single run of a command, for testing purposes, because the OTHER thing es-shell desperately needs is a proper test suite. I figured one out for bash https://github.com/pmarreck/tinytestlib but not one for es yet.
What are some alternatives?
epub3-samples - EPUB 3 Sample Documents
ble.sh - Bash Line Editor―a line editor written in pure Bash with syntax highlighting, auto suggestions, vim modes, etc. for Bash interactive sessions.
syncabook - 📖🎧 A tool for creating ebooks with synchronized text and audio (EPUB3 with Media Overlays)
zoxide - A smarter cd command. Supports all major shells.
leech - Turn a story on certain websites into an ebook for convenient reading
fzf - Ef-🐟-ient fish keybindings for fzf
Sigil - Sigil is a multi-platform EPUB ebook editor
agnoster - Agnoster for Fish :tropical_fish:
ebook-diffuser - An end to end, customizable, ebook automation tool
oh-my-fish - The Fish Shell Framework
PyQtGraph - Fast data visualization and GUI tools for scientific / engineering applications
slightish - Literate testing for command-line tools written in any language