wenyan
wincompose
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wenyan | wincompose | |
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41 | 134 | |
19,367 | 2,478 | |
0.5% | - | |
0.0 | 6.1 | |
5 months ago | 13 days 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
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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!
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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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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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The Wa Programming Language
Since Classical Chinese is ancestral to kanji, you might be interested in https://wy-lang.org/
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Versepad – A Text Editor for Poets
For ridiculously-specialist poetry-writing software, the maker of that pretty Classical Chinese programming language ( https://wy-lang.org/ ) people were talking about had also previously made an editor for Tang-era Chinese poetry - https://github.com/LingDong-/cope , which keeps track of tone patterns and rhymes.
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What is the hardest language to learn?
I hear the Wenyan dialect is pretty interesting. Check out this example of Fizzbuzz.
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JavaScript, like HTML, is not a programming language.
Why use mandarin when you can use the programming language of ancient scholars: https://wy-lang.org/
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PyTorch: Where we are headed and why it looks a lot like Julia (but not exactly)
well, you can always program in wenyan: https://github.com/wenyan-lang/wenyan
But seriously, it's 2021. We are no longer slave to ASCII, or even English.
Most of the newer math oriented langs have heavy use of unicode (julia, agda, lean, etc).
- How do people code in different (human) languages besides English?
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/
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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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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:
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My setup for conlanging. Vim, XeLaTex and Zathura. What do you guys use?
An essentially equivalent program for Windows is the WinCompose tool, which I used before making the switch to Linux.
- Scusate l’ignoranza, ma non ci sono ancora arrivato da solo…
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GitHub Is Sued, and We May Learn Something About Creative Commons Licensing
They are available in most fonts with reasonable-or-better Unicode coverage (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_subscripts_and_supersc...). 1, 2 and 3 are available in ISO-8859-1 so can sometimes be used in 8-bit-only text, but I'd use them with care in that context.
To type them easily you'll usually need composition (sometimes called chording) support. Some Linux (and other Unix) distributions still have this built in by default, though last time I used Linux for much desktop use it seemed to be fading from common availability, otherwise you'll have to hunt for another method. On Windows I use http://wincompose.info/ (here [atlgr][^][1] produces “¹”, for instance, in the default settings) which is useful for a number of other things (I first started using it for accented characters like á on a UK keyboard). If you have a keyboard with programmable function keys then you could use its customisation tool to map some of them to produce the super-script (or sub-script) characters you commonly want.
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Does anyone here speak ¼òÌåÖĐÎÄ?
Anyone on Windows needing to type accented/special characters, I recommend WinCompose.
Not a text extractor, but I use WinCompose (a Compose key implementation for Windows users). With that you can press something like Compose + 1 + 4 for ¼, or Compose + O + " for Ö (Right Alt serves as Compose). (Posting this in case someone may like it as well)
What are some alternatives?
AutoHotkey - AutoHotkey - macro-creation and automation-oriented scripting utility for Windows.
sharpkeys - SharpKeys is a utility that manages a Registry key that allows Windows to remap one key to any other key.
qmk_configurator - The QMK Configurator
espanso - Cross-platform Text Expander written in Rust
9ime - Plan 9's unicode input method ported to windows
SylphyHorn - Virtual Desktop Tools for Windows 10.
mdbook-katex - A preprocessor for mdBook, rendering LaTex equations to HTML at build time.
fut - Fusion programming language. Transpiling to C, C++, C#, D, Java, JavaScript, Python, Swift, TypeScript and OpenCL C.
wsltty - Mintty as a terminal for Bash on Ubuntu on Windows / WSL
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
AutoDash - Want to type an Em Dash—now you can. Just type "--".
qwerty-fr - Qwerty keyboard layout with French accents