sunburn.nvim
srgn
sunburn.nvim | srgn | |
---|---|---|
1 | 5 | |
11 | 397 | |
- | - | |
5.6 | 9.4 | |
about 1 month ago | about 2 months ago | |
Lua | Rust | |
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.
sunburn.nvim
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Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
A while back I read about the Oklab color space, and long story short I decided I wanted to create my own Neovim coloscheme. That led to sunburn.nvim[1], which aims to take advantage of the hue and brightness uniformity that Oklab provides.
At first I was using lush.nvim to build sunburn.nvim, but quickly it became a hassle to only be able to specify colors via RGB or HSL. My initial thought was a PR to add Oklab support to lush, but that framework does so much that it was hard to see where to start. So I ended up writing polychrome.nvim[2], which is a dead simple micro framework in comparison to lush.nvim, but does enough to take care of all the boilerplate, and supports a bunch of color spaces (which are converted to RGB on the fly).
I also wanted push notifications for when certain RSS feeds I follow were updated, because I suck at remembering to check in on things or check an RSS feed app. But I didn't want to pay for IFTTT or other bespoke solutions, so I wrote notifeed[3]. It's designed to run as a service on a server, and then check all your feeds at predetermined intervals and send the necessary webhooks based on your configuration. Feeds and clients are configured via the CLI and stored in a SQLite DB for simplicity.
[1] https://github.com/loganswartz/sunburn.nvim
srgn
- Show HN: Srgn, AST-aware text manipulation
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Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
It's currently whitelist-based [0]. The downside is larger (code) size. The upside is simplicity. I imagine a blacklist could also work well, at smaller size but with more preprocessing needed.
[0]: https://github.com/alexpovel/srgn/blob/0008cce1c71f0d83f6a31...
- srgn: precise text and code transplantation; think tr/sed + regex + tree-sitter
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AST-grep(sg) is a CLI tool for code structural search, lint, and rewriting
Wow! What a coincidence. Just the other day I finished "v1" of a similar tool: https://github.com/alexpovel/srgn , calling it a combination of tr/sed, ripgrep and tree-sitter.
I've spent a lot of time trying to find similar tools, and even list them in the README, but `AST-grep` did not come up! I was a bit confused, as I was sure such a thing must exist already. AST-grep looks much more capable and dynamic, great work.
What are some alternatives?
full-text-tabs-forever - Full text search all your browsing history
lsd - LSD - line-square-dot: an addicting game
Internet-Places-Database - Database of Internet places. Mostly domains
oatmeal - Terminal UI to chat with large language models (LLM) using different model backends, and integrations with your favourite editors!
simplecd - Simple Continuous Delivery system running in your bash shell
clipzoomfx - Side-project for extracting highlights from (mostly sports) videos
company-org-block
dhcptool - Tool for testing/debugging DHCP servers
Filestash - 🦄 A modern web client for SFTP, S3, FTP, WebDAV, Git, Minio, LDAP, CalDAV, CardDAV, Mysql, Backblaze, ...
syntax-searcher - Language-independent command-line utility for syntax-aware pattern matching.
motion - Motion, a software motion detector. Home page: https://motion-project.github.io/
webpub - Give me a website, I'll make you an epub.