cow
w3m
cow | w3m | |
---|---|---|
5 | 17 | |
11 | 781 | |
- | - | |
5.1 | 2.0 | |
5 months ago | 12 days ago | |
C | ||
Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 | 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.
cow
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Reviewing 1 year of my progress from practicing mental calculation (flash anzan)
yikes! do you have javascript blockers? The site is unusable without javascript.
FWIW, it's a custom rerender of https://github.com/whacked/cow/blob/main/learning%20soroban%...
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Braille Is Alive, Well, and Ever-Evolving
Seems like I went down a similar path. Emacs user, brltty, the shebang, but not together :-)
Maybe my experience will be useful to you. Do it for the plasticity.
https://github.com/whacked/cow/blob/main/learning%20braille....
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Ask HN: What was the best software that you used during 2022?
one combination I came to really love this year is babashka (https://github.com/babashka/babashka) + websocat (https://github.com/vi/websocat). I wrote about a method of live web programming with this pair at https://github.com/whacked/cow/blob/main/a%20technique%20for...
babashka isn't strictly necessary; you can also pipe plain text, but pushing hiccup expressions to the browser DOM from the REPL with instant feedback has opened a new world of interactive programming for me.
- A technique for live coding simple web pages (using babashka)
w3m
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Gemini support for w3m
Get the w3m sources: git clone https://github.com/tats/w3m
- MacLynx beta 4: now with scrollbars and dialogue boxes
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Ask HN: What was the best software that you used during 2022?
nvi2 [0]: I got to like the simplicity of nvi when installing Void Linux on my laptop, but it had some annoying bugs that made me switch to nvi2. In general, it feels like `good' software; powerful enough by virtue of being a 1:1 vi clone with a few crucial improvements (multibyte, multi-undo, etc.), but simple enough to hack on if I miss some feature. Though no autocomplete means it's not suitable for more verbose languages, like Java.
QuickJS [1]: qjscalc is my go-to scientific calculator, and qjs my go-to JavaScript implementation for simple programs. The C interface is very nice to use, too. All in all, it feels very much like a "complete" engine, even if not quite as fast as one with JIT.
w3m [2]: Somewhat lacking as a web browser, but a very good pager. Would take it over less any day. Also has the best table display of any text-mode browser, supports inline images, and is rather extensible.
Wine [3]: It's gotten so good that I no longer have to dual boot Windows. Still not perfect, but definitely on my list of "good software".
[0]: https://github.com/lichray/nvi2
[1]: https://bellard.org/quickjs/
[2]: https://github.com/tats/w3m
[3]: https://www.winehq.org/
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Setting up lynx
newer https://github.com/tats/w3m
- Lynx vs Links
- Any modern terminal browser?
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yeah I m not paying for all of that
I liked w3m a lot back when I had a job were rando browsing was discouraged. https://github.com/tats/w3m
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w3m rocks
> I've been noodling about the implementation of adding functionality to w3m and lynx so there is a separate fetch-page func but report a different User-Agent header (eg, "Mozilla"). I've encountered many pages that don't allow access until I change the "lynx-*" header (bastards).
Wouldn't this feature suffice? https://github.com/tats/w3m/blob/master/doc/README.siteconf
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Maintained version of w3m?
The first result, ffs: https://github.com/tats/w3m
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Effectively reading and studying an open source project before using it in my project.
But the problem is that a lot of the code isn't commented to explain what they're doing and there isn't a lot of documentation online to use the software effectively. (In order to not make my question vague, I'm trying to build a front end Gtk GUI to w3m. But I don't need explanation to the code or steps to do this. even though I didn't understand it and I don't know the steps I need. What I'm looking for is a method to effectively study the code of an open source project that didn't take into consideration that you'll study it, therefor they didn't document well the structure of their codebase and how the project was build and the different parts of making it).
What are some alternatives?
excalidraw - Virtual whiteboard for sketching hand-drawn like diagrams
rdrview - Firefox Reader View as a command line tool
Windows Terminal - The new Windows Terminal and the original Windows console host, all in the same place!
nyxt - Nyxt - the hacker's browser.
quickjs - Public repository of the QuickJS Javascript Engine.
vimwiki - Personal Wiki for Vim
Caddy - Fast and extensible multi-platform HTTP/1-2-3 web server with automatic HTTPS
elinks - Fork of elinks
GitUp - The Git interface you've been missing all your life has finally arrived.
browsh - A fully-modern text-based browser, rendering to TTY and browsers
babashka - Native, fast starting Clojure interpreter for scripting
so - A terminal interface for Stack Overflow