wl-pprint-annotated
pandoc
wl-pprint-annotated | pandoc | |
---|---|---|
- | 444 | |
7 | 37,036 | |
- | 2.7% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
over 1 year ago | 6 days ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v2.0 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.
wl-pprint-annotated
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Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
pandoc
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How to Automate Document Workflows for Developers
Pandoc Documentation - Universal
- Open source and self hostable/private file converter
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Why Is This Site Built with C
I think TFA is unfair wrt pandoc's dependencies. I'm not sure if the listed "ecosystem" is what you need to build pandoc from source, or just the result of shitty packaging of pandoc from the OS package maintainers.
For the record, the .deb download from [1] gives you a 146MB statically linked pandoc executable that depends only on libc6 (>= 2.13), libgmp10, zlib1g (>= 1:1.1.4).
[1] https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/releases
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Accessible open textbooks in math-heavy disciplines
Another option is Quarto [1]. It's basically a friendly wrapper around Pandoc [2], letting you write in Markdown (+ lots of Quarto-specific extensions) and render to LaTeX, Typst, multi-page HTML, EPUB, docx, and more.
[1] https://quarto.org/
[2] https://pandoc.org/
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Overengineer your CV
The resulting Markdown is passed to pandoc to convert it to HTML
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If it is worth keeping, save it in Markdown
To be fair, one there's a good one there's much less incentive to write something new. In this case the good converter is Pandoc: https://pandoc.org/
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How to convert Markdown to PDF
There are a handful of excellent command-line tools, and Pandoc comes to mind. It is not just a one-trick pony, too. With Pandoc you can convert between many different formats.
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Proposed Perl Changes (part 2)
I’ll be using the Template Toolkit to build the site, with a sprinkling of Bootstrap to make it look half-decent. Because there is a lot of Markdown-to-HTML conversion, I’ll use my Template::Provider::Pandoc module which uses Pandoc to convert templates into different formats.
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LibreOffice 400M Downloads, and Counting
So happy that it continues to grow in popularity. Draw is probably their best tool in the suite. Also related, people might be interested in using Xournal (https://xournalpp.github.io/) for PDF manipulations and pandoc (https://pandoc.org/) for general document conversion.
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Haskell: A Great Procedural Language
The other ones most people point to are https://pandoc.org and https://shellcheck.net
What are some alternatives?
pretty-simple - pretty-printer for Haskell data types that have a Show instance
pandoc-highlighting-extensions - Extensions to Pandoc syntax highlighting
colorful-monoids - colorful-monoids: Styled console text output using ANSI escape sequences
sphinx - implementation of a sphinx client in haskell
miso-from-html - Lex, parse and pretty print HTML as Miso View syntax
kramdown - kramdown is a fast, pure Ruby Markdown superset converter, using a strict syntax definition and supporting several common extensions.