tidy-html5
awesome-reMarkable
tidy-html5 | awesome-reMarkable | |
---|---|---|
9 | 146 | |
2,663 | 5,862 | |
0.2% | 0.7% | |
0.0 | 7.3 | |
8 days ago | 2 days ago | |
C | ||
- | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
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.
tidy-html5
- Show HN: I made a tool to clean and convert any webpage to Markdown
- Localize HTML Tidy (README.md)
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libtidy, compilation errors
So I included the tidy libraries in my project.
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Searching for the *old* W3C XHTML/CSS validator or something of equivalent functionality
Maybe look into HTML Tidy. It's job is to clean up HTML and convert legacy code to modern form, so it knows about DTDs. You might be able to pass it some options to get what you want.
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Converting a IETM delivered in HTML to XML S1000D 4.0.
I've always used tidy for HTML/XML formatting jobs.
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Expand one very long HTML line (>30k characters) as multi-line formatted indented HTML?
Personally I use command that switches the file type to html, and then formats it with tidy. It assumes you're pasting into a new buffer.
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Unminify HTML in terminal
I use tidy.
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Inspecting the Clipboard (on Linux)
So I installed HTML tidy.
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The most underused browser feature
Prune instructs the parser to remove any elements within the extracted article block that look superfluous. This can result in false positives, so we tend to disable it when we've gone to the trouble of creating site-specific extraction rules.
Tidy determines if the source HTML should be cleaned up first with HTML Tidy - https://github.com/htacg/tidy-html5. If you're parsing the source HTML with an HTML 5 parser, as we are now, it shouldn't be necessary any more (I think we actually ignore it now). We used it more before when we relied on libxml parsing, which often trips up on modern HTML.
awesome-reMarkable
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E-ink is so Retropunk
> As much as I love the hacker spirit of cracking open hardware and software and bending it to your will (whether or not it was designed towards that end), I enjoy my reMarkable precisely because I can get away from the ubiquity of computing and needing to constantly tinker with and repair software.
Personally I completely agree with you, and could have written almost exactly that paragraph - I too have a ReMarkable (the 2nd / current version), and love using it as it ships for both note taking and especially for reading ebooks/PDFs ("especially" just because it's what I use it for more, not because that's what it's better at - in fact, it's UI for reading documents is among its weaker points and I hope they improve it in future software updates).
However it's worth pointing out that you can SSH into it, and there are a fair few 3rd party tools and hacks for it - so far I've avoided trying any of them as there's nothing that I want enough to have even a 1% risk of bricking it to worry about. But I'm tempted to start playing around with it someday.
This is the best list of stuff for the ReMarkable that I'm aware of, though I don't know how complete it is / how many released tools or guides there might be that aren't included here:
https://github.com/reHackable/awesome-reMarkable
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Just bought a reMarkable - quite UNremarkable
There are options for USB/wifi syncing and lots of other community mods if you're handy with a terminal: https://github.com/reHackable/awesome-reMarkable
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Dumb questions
If you follow the instructions and you are fine to turn automatic updates off, you may have a lool at awesome-remarkable https://github.com/reHackable/awesome-reMarkable
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My First reMarkable will be arriving sometime today! What are some things or tips and tricks I should know?
This sentence doesn't make sense. People apply hacks because they want to make full use of their device. reMarkable has shortcomings, yes, but they can be overcome with the software that others have written. The Awesome reMarkable link the sidebar was basically a founding document of this very subreddit.
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Best E-Ink tablet for self-hosting
More info can be found at awesome-ReMarkable: https://github.com/reHackable/awesome-reMarkable
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created templates disappeared after update
Use a software to manage your templates automatically. See the Awesome reMarkable list, and Ctrl-F "templates".
- Linux friendly eInk tablets
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If I broke or lost my ReMarkable 2, would I be able to download all the old notes onto a new one?
You can also take backups using easy, convenient, community-written software, like RCU (which I'm the author of), reMy, reMarkable HyUtilities, rmExplorer, rmAPI, and many others found in the Awesome reMarkable list.
- What are you doing with community projects?
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Big note files - timeout on usb webserver export
You could try reMy, which has its own renderer. There are more rendering programs in the Awesome reMarkable list, many of which will work with 2.15 and below--just avoid anything saying 'cloud' or 'web UI'.
What are some alternatives?
parser - š Extract meaningful content from the chaos of a web page
zotero-remarkable - Sync papers from Zotero to a reMarkable tablet
readability.php - PHP port of Mozilla's Readability.js
google-drive-remarkable-sync - Apps Script library for synchronising Google Drive folder with Remarkable reader.
readability - Readability is a library written in Go (golang) to parse, analyze and convert HTML pages into readable content. Originally an Arc90 Experiment, it is now incorporated into Safariās Reader View.
remarkable-hacks - additional functionality via binary patching
toltec - Community-maintained repository of free software for the reMarkableĀ tablet.
mendeley-rMsync - Script to sync papers from Mendeley to reMarkable tablet
SponsorBlock - Skip YouTube video sponsors (browser extension)
koreader - An ebook reader application supporting PDF, DjVu, EPUB, FB2 and many more formats, running on Cervantes, Kindle, Kobo, PocketBook and Android devices
ftr-site-config - Site-specific article extraction rules to aid content extractors, feed readers, and 'read later' applications.
reMarkableSync - An OneNote AddIn for importing digitized notes from the reMarkable tablet.