Wiki.js
Flarum
Wiki.js | Flarum | |
---|---|---|
122 | 59 | |
23,523 | 14,917 | |
1.2% | 0.6% | |
7.1 | 2.8 | |
5 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Vue | PHP | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | 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.
Wiki.js
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Adding a simple light box in wiki.js
Wiki.js is a self hosted, open source Wiki that has a lot of awesome functionality. Unfortunately it's lacking some small, but important UI features, like a light box, to enlarge downsized images to it's full size. And unless you want to add a link to each image, to open it in a new tab, you would probably go for a modal view here.
- Ask HN: What are some good documentation OSS offerings
- Wiki.js
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How do you host documentation for your spouse or other users?
Can't think of anything that meets all the criteria, there's always some compromise, which might just be the way it is. For example I could 'self-host' otterwiki or wiki.js on a VPS for a pretty small monthly fee, which I could also use for other stuff that doesn't make sense for a home lab, but then I also need to deal with security since it's hosted on the internet. Or I could self-host and just accept that there's risk of it not being available when my wife needs it or if I die suddenly.
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List of your reverse proxied services
WikiJS as Homepage (a bit unusual, I know...)
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Documentation as Code for Cloud Using PlantUML
I love PlantUML. I was always fond of it in my early days as a software engineer and still use it today, along with all the various ways to draw diagrams out there, whether it's through a web tool like draw.io or Miro or through markup like PlantUML and Mermaid.
Some stuff I'd like to share with the rest:
- PlantUML's default style has improved since the days of red/brown borders, pale yellow boxes, drop shadows and such but I've attempted fixing it before through a preset style [I've made before here](https://gist.github.com/jerieljan/4c82515ff5f2b2e4dd5122d354...). It's obsolete nowadays, since I'm sure someone has made a style generator somewhere, and last I checked, PlantUML allows a monochrome style out of the box.
- [Eraser](https://app.eraser.io) is promising, considering that it's trying to blend both diagram-as-code markup along with the usual visual diagram editor. I'm still seeing if it's worth picking up since Miro's hard to beat.
- On an unrelated note, [WikiJS](https://js.wiki/) is a self-hosted wiki that happens to support draw.io, PlantUML and MermaidJS diagrams out of the box. Quite handy to have for your own docs.
- I use Miro nowadays since it's significantly quicker to draw things freeform and to collaborate live with folks on a whiteboard at the cost of having your diagrams in markup, but it's easy to miss the integration that [you can actually import PlantUML](https://help.miro.com/hc/en-us/articles/7004940386578) and Mermaid diagrams in a Miro board too. You can also do edits too, but it's on its own PlantUML section, of course.
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wiki.js on YugabyteDB
I've asked on LinkedIn which PostgreSQL application you use so that I can check that it works on Yugabyte. Please, continue to answer. To start let's try with Wiki.js, open source wiki software storing into a PostgreSQL database.
- Tiddlywiki for note taking
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Anyone know of a free dev docs like confluence?
I like https://js.wiki/
Flarum
- Posthog is closing their Slack community in favor of forum
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Introducing the new Godot Forum
Nice! I kinda wish they went with https://flarum.org/ instead of discourse, though. I think Flarum is the better forum software and it is also open source.
- Best way to host a small forum?
- Don't Use Discord as a Forum
- Ask HN: What forum software do you recommend?
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Simple WYSIWYG html editor? Open source or cheap.
I've been playing around with a new open source forum called Flarum for my blog. It's a forum by nature but it has a blog extension and with some work you can get it to be just a blog that looks pretty nice. I just recently finished getting mine moved over (I rarely blog but here it is) - I'm not too sold on it yet either though so there's that.
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I'm curious to know what are the main applications that people deploy and use frequently on a daily basis?
Have you looked at Flarum?
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Ask HN: Is the internet as we knew it, dead?
I'm currently investigating Flarum for my forum. Have you seen it?
https://flarum.org/
- Twitter now requires an account to view tweets
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After the Dark - Beyond the Blackout and Next Steps
Forum such as Flarum. Flarum has a bit the look and feel as Reddit...
What are some alternatives?
Outline - The fastest knowledge base for growing teams. Beautiful, realtime collaborative, feature packed, and markdown compatible.
Discourse - A platform for community discussion. Free, open, simple.
Dokuwiki - The DokuWiki Open Source Wiki Engine
MyBB - MyBB is a free and open source forum software.
BookStack - A platform to create documentation/wiki content built with PHP & Laravel
nodeBB - Node.js based forum software built for the modern web
Gollum - A simple, Git-powered wiki with a local frontend and support for many kinds of markup and content.
phpBB - phpBB Development: phpBB is a popular open-source bulletin board written in PHP. This repository also contains the history of version 2.
Mediawiki - 🌻 The collaborative editing software that runs Wikipedia. Mirror from https://gerrit.wikimedia.org/g/mediawiki/core. See https://mediawiki.org/wiki/Developer_access for contributing.
Vanilla Forums - Vanilla is a powerfully simple discussion forum you can easily customize to make as unique as your community.
XWiki - The XWiki platform
laravel-forum - A slim, lean forum package designed for quick and easy integration in Laravel projects