wenyan
wincompose
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wenyan | wincompose | |
---|---|---|
41 | 134 | |
19,401 | 2,505 | |
0.4% | - | |
0.0 | 6.1 | |
6 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
TypeScript | C# | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
wenyan
- Programming Language for Ancient Chinese
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Birb: Programming with Bird Emojis
You will appreciate this image: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wenyan-lang/wenyan/master/... [1]
[1] https://github.com/wenyan-lang/wenyan
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The English Programming Language
related for those who are interested in DSL design:
- an ancient Chinese programming language: https://wy-lang.org/
- I am also building an synth/audio graph inspired language: https://glicol.org/
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Bros what language is this?
& classical chinese!
- Você programa em inglês ou pt?
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Cantonese Font with Pronunciation
It's written in wenyang-lang, a programming language based on Classical Chinese: https://wy-lang.org/
Previously featured on HN here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22213406
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Can programming languages be created using Spanish or Chinese? (As opposed to english)
Yes. That one already exists. wenyan‑lang for instance is an esoteric language based on classical Chinese.
- Rule
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Just realised how weird it is that programming languages use english as a basis for keywords
Wenyan-lang uses classical Chinese. It's beautiful, take a look at the repo.
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Tô querendo programar qual e a melhor linguagem para começar?
Ótimo!! Pode aprender essa agora
wincompose
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"ç" majuscule
Touche compose. Natif sous linux, et sous windows : https://github.com/samhocevar/wincompose
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Victor Mono Typeface
Julia has made symbol input manageable and lets you define infix operators for many of the Unicode symbols that make sense for that. [1] And JuliaMono was designed to support the symbols that Julia does. [2]
I generally do quite fine with my Compose Key configuration, though (even on Windows, where I use WinCompose). [3]
[1]: https://docs.julialang.org/en/v1/manual/unicode-input/
[2]: https://juliamono.netlify.app/
[3]: https://github.com/samhocevar/wincompose
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Hyphens, minus, and dashes in Debian man pages
On Windows, I use http://wincompose.info/ for all my special-character needs (and use the system compose key on Linux).
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Czysta prawda
na windowsa jest sobie WinCompose
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bach - a tool for searching compose sequences
Credit to wincompose's GUI for inspiration, which provides similar functionality on Windows.
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Writing Prettier Haskell with Unicode Syntax and Vim
I’ve previously used a nice little tool called WinCompose for exactly that. Looks like it’s still going:
http://wincompose.info/
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Stress over words
Malgré to, yo recomanda WinCompose o simil si tu es in Windows.
- What's the difference between perché and perchè???
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How do you write a character not present in unicode?
I use WinCompose which gives me the same compose-key functionality that's built into Linux. I've chosen one key on my keyboard to be the Compose key (I use Right-Alt, but you can pick any key that's convenient). Then I can type
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World’s largest battery maker announces major breakthrough in energy density
Assuming you are on desktop/laptop:
The long-winded way is to use your OS's character map tool: find the glyph you want there and copy+paste. Under Windows 10+ there is the emoji keyboard (hit [win]+;) which also gives access to much more including super-/sub- script characters, which is a little more convenient than character map. Presumably other OSs have similar available too.
Better is to have support for a compose key sequence. Usually build in to Linux & similar, you just might have to find the setting to turn it on and configure what your compose key is. Under Windows I use http://wincompose.info/ and there are a couple of similar tools out there. In any case it is useful for more than super- and sub-scripts: accented characters & similar (áàäæçffñ), some fractions (¼,½,¾), other symbols (°∞™®↑↓←→‽¡¿⸘♥⋘»‱), and configurable too so you can make what you use most easiest to access (and if you are really sad like me you can do something https://xkcd.com/2583/ to type hallelujah too!).
What are some alternatives?
OSTRAJava - Bo neni cas pyco
AutoHotkey - AutoHotkey - macro-creation and automation-oriented scripting utility for Windows.
cashscript - ⚖️ Easily write and interact with Bitcoin Cash smart contracts
sharpkeys - SharpKeys is a utility that manages a Registry key that allows Windows to remap one key to any other key.
guralang - A
qmk_configurator - The QMK Configurator
TailRec.jl - A tail recursion optimization macro for julia.
espanso - Cross-platform Text Expander written in Rust
pakhi-bhasha - Dynamically typed bangla programming language written in rust
9ime - Plan 9's unicode input method ported to windows
rouille - Rust programming, in French.
SylphyHorn - Virtual Desktop Tools for Windows 10.