Hi all,
What's a good minimal sshd?
Or should we just run stunnel + telnetd?
Patrick
On 2019-04-28 21:44, Thomas Meulendijks wrote:
> I am currently using pandoc to convert my markdown files into pdf.
1) use TeX
2) create the TeX macros that you want to use
3) write a script to convert the old non-TeX docs
4) ditch markdown.
On Sat, Feb 16, 2019 at 12:47 AM Ivan Tham wrote:
> By the way, Patrick. Why use anthy instead of mozc for japanese input? I
> heard anthy is a dead project (from arch wiki).
Further follow-up: I switched from scim+anthy to fcitx+mozc, and the
previous problems went away. Now (printf
On Sat, Feb 16, 2019 at 12:47 AM Ivan Tham wrote:
> By the way, Patrick. Why use anthy instead of mozc for japanese input? I
> heard anthy is a dead project (from arch wiki).
I started using scim+anthy several years ago, and it has continued to
work for me, so I've continued to use
On Fri, Feb 15, 2019 at 11:33 AM Silvan Jegen wrote:
> With the suggested patch applied, everything worked for me when using
> IBus and in st we use a similar pattern to what this patch is proposing
> (x.c:1007-1014). I am not sure why Patrick's IME (SCIM) is working in
> st but not in dmenu with
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 12:29 AM Hiltjo Posthuma wrote:
> Please try the latest git version and report back.
It works for me. That is, there is no segfault from, for example,
printf 'foo\nbar' | ./dmenu
When I test with: printf 'あ\nお' | ./dmenu, I can't see a way to select
the second option (sci
I have:
GTK_IM_MODULE=scim
XMODIFIERS=@im=SCIM
QT_IM_MODULE=scim
If I unset XMODIFIERS, dmenu works correctly. If I set
XMODIFIERS=@im=scim, dmenu segfaults.
XSetLocaleModifiers returns '@im=SCIM', as expected.
On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 1:57 AM Silvan Jegen wrote:
>
> Hi Patrick
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 12:43 PM Silvan Jegen wrote:
> I found that the XSetLocaleModifiers("") call returns "@im=ibus" in my
> case which is not surprising because the env variable XMODIFIERS is
> set to @im=ibus on my machine. If Ibus is not running, however, I get
> a segfault just like Jordan
19 at 4:30 PM Jordan Timmerman wrote:
>
> I believe I have a patch to fix this issue. It is attached.
>
> Taken from: https://www.mail-archive.com/fltk-bugs@easysw.com/msg01159.html
>
> The link was pointed to by the Servo issue that Patrick Smith linked
> to. (Thanks, Patrick!
ther that would be an appropriate fix in
the context of dmenu.
On Sun, Feb 10, 2019 at 4:17 PM Patrick Smith wrote:
>
> Another point of information... after seeing
> https://github.com/servo/servo/issues/9938, I tried these two commands
> with my instrumented dmenu:
>
> >>&
little finagling, I've managed to produce a backtrace by using
> Quentin's suggested flag modifications to config.mk. This is attached.
> It seems to me only to confirm what we've already learned: the failure
> occurs in XmbLookupString. Perhaps with the additional diagnostic
>
I'm experiencing a problem that appears very similar to this one, and
I can add a bit of information.
Summary: When I have scim+anthy installed as an input method, the call
to XOpenIM fails, returning a null pointer. But I don't know much
about the internals of X, so can't be 100% sure this is the
riting-coach
(Source)
In music, take Bach's E-Major Fugue from the second volume of the Well
Tempered Clavier. Here's Glenn Gould's commented interpretation:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFOqX3JGERo
This is just a random collection of things that spontaneously came to my
mind on a sunday morning.
Patrick
reduce the HTTP payload big time, especially when gzipped M-(
>
> Stop this madness.
>
Yes, please!
Patrick
ws-notepad-now-supports-unix-line-endings/
Patrick
On 2017-10-31 08:46, Kurt Van Dijck wrote:
> I deal with GPIO for my projects by creating a device-tree overlay that
> describes the hardware (input/output, active-low, ...).
NICE
sit around idle in the
meantime...).
Thanks,
Patrick
size=16:antialias=true:autohint=true:lang=ru";
The important part is to use "xos4 Terminus" instead of just "Terminus".
It's related to a fontconfig update a couple of months ago. Maybe that's
your problem.
Patrick
On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 11:23:28PM +0800, Ivan Tham wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 07:25:06PM +0100, Patrick Bucher wrote:
> > I'm using st and dwm at the same time, and today I discovered a little
> > problem
> > when using the default config of both programs. s
on my machine. (Maybe some of you use
Super_L, vulgo "the Windows key".)
So guess what happened when I was trying to copy some code into the clipboard
today ;-)
How do you deal with that?
Thanks for suggestions,
Patrick
PS: Anybody using Arch Linux here? Since the fontconfig update today st
On 2014-11-03 14:32, Greg Reagle wrote:
> It occurred to me that environment variables can be used to configure a
> program, instead of programming in a parser or extension language
Things to think over and critique:
http://www.catb.org/esr/writings/taoup/html/ch10s04.html
extern char **environ;
Hi,
On Fri, Jan 10, 2014 at 05:33:07PM +0100, Christoph Lohmann wrote:
> Greetings.
>
> On Fri, 10 Jan 2014 17:33:07 +0100 Patrick Steinhardt wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I've written a patch that enables per-client 'cfacts'. This
> > allows use
tack.
Attached is the patch and a description. Feel free to add this to
the patches-section.
Regards
Patrick
diff --git a/config.def.h b/config.def.h
index 875885b..809788b 100644
--- a/config.def.h
+++ b/config.def.h
@@ -65,6 +65,9 @@ static Key keys[] = {
{ MODKEY,
On 2013-12-13 14:25, Chris Down wrote:
> > Is there an easier way to encourage clean URLs?
> If masking files with directories is considered "clean", then I don't
> want to live on this planet any more.
Maybe give him the benefit of the doubt that he meant something like
'maintains hierarchical ta
On 2013-12-11 22:46, Andrew Gwozdziewycz wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 6:02 PM, Charlie Kester wrote:
> > Maybe I'm have a dumb day (it happens, all too often), but is there a
> > way to get the exit code of the longrunningscript in case it fails
> > *after* the timebomb goes off?
> There will
On 2013-12-11 12:21, Andrew Gwozdziewycz wrote:
> Yes. You can do exactly that. But you *can't* do:
> when -t "ssh user@host" "xmessage 'Connected'"
Time to rock the IPC?
#!/bin/bash
MAGIC=5
system_time_epoch() { date +%s; }
file_time_mod() { stat --printf='%Y' $1 ; }
file_age() { echo $(( $
On 2013-12-11 11:31, Andrew Gwozdziewycz wrote:
> Maybe one of you will stop laughing long enough to find it useful.
So why isn't this a standard unix utility?
On 2013-11-28 21:03, Markus Teich wrote:
> I had to smile on this one. But i don't treat „rm music-track.mp3“ any
> different
> than „rm important-file“. I think before I hit enter. And if by any chance I
> learn this was a mistake 10 years later, then ffs I deserve to rip that disc
> again.
You
On 2013-11-28 11:06, Charlie Kester wrote:
> Hmm. I'm in the hardlinks-as-default camp
BTW, anyone heard from Kurt M recently? It seems like it's been a while
and he never seemed like the kind of guy to sit in the corner quietly
nursing a beer unless some serious shit was happening.
On 2013-11-28 11:06, Charlie Kester wrote:
> Here's a use-case that argues for hardlinks: I've often encountered
> situations where ripping a CD or downloading from Amazon has resulted in
> the same artist appearing in my collection under two slightly different
> names. (I like world music, for ex
On 2013-11-28 19:33, Markus Teich wrote:
> I for example see my music collection not as only-growing but also delete
> stuff
> I don't want to hear anymore regularly.
Instead of rm'ing, tag it with a keyword e.g.
'lady-gaga-strangled-by-baboons-sounds-better-than-this-shit' and patch
slm to expor
On 2013-11-28 19:22, Markus Teich wrote:
> > I would recommend to rebuild the farm before usage. Hardlinks seem to be
> > more
> > sane since they maintain a stable state (no links can be broken), while a
> > symlink can suddenly point to /tim/buck/too or nowhere at all.
An example use-case shows
On 2013-11-28 16:26, FRIGN wrote:
> However, I don't see a definite reason to favor one solution over the
> other. It may just be another question of what your needs are, so I'd
> propose to offer a compile-time solution to select symbolic or hard
> links.
I concur.
On 2013-11-28 18:06, Markus Teich wrote:
> I would recommend to rebuild the farm before usage. Hardlinks seem to be more
> sane since they maintain a stable state (no links can be broken), while a
> symlink can suddenly point to /tim/buck/too or nowhere at all.
Imagine a use-case where I would rm
On 2013-11-28 18:47, Roberto E. Vargas Caballero wrote:
> Offer one of them as default option, but I think it should have the
> runtime option to select one or other.
Compile time; this seems to be a huge philosophical divide. ;)
Maybe at some point I change my philosophy, so I just update the
ex
On 2013-11-28 18:51, Markus Teich wrote:
> As I posted earlier, I would favor the hardlinks as default.
Can we get a couple concrete reasons / use-cases why?
On 2013-11-28 10:06, Charlie Kester wrote:
> Well, for one thing, it solves the problem of stale symbolic links that
> was mentioned earlier.
Do you think we delete files accidentally?
Assume that we treat our repo of music as non-rm, non-mv, since we only
ever upgrade a file's quality.
On 2013-11-28 17:48, Roberto E. Vargas Caballero wrote:
> I think having the option in runtime can be good, and I agree with you
> that symlinks are more discoverable than hardlinks, so I think
> symlinks should be the default option.
WTF? Can I get a cogent discussion of sym vs hard links?
sym
On 2013-11-27 23:01, Charlie Kester wrote:
> In fact, now that you mention it, I think this should be the default.
Why?
On 2013-11-27 23:50, Nick wrote:
> Have you considered writing this using FUSE instead?
Likely overkill. What's the cost of a stale link vs the cost to fix?
Underlying all this is a need for a canonical directory structure for
the source media files, i.e. never rm or mv, only ever upgrade quality
On 2013-10-24 14:43, Chris Down wrote:
> On 2013-10-24 01:04, Samuel Holland wrote:
> > [body]
> > content="%ol%%p%"
> > [ol]
> > style="list-style-type: decimal"
> > content="%li.1%%li.2%%li.3"
> > [li]
> > style="display: list-item"
> > content1="Lack of proper hierarchy, for one;"
> > content2="
On 2013-04-26 23:11, hiro wrote:
> just mod your shell to always copy all stdout of commands into a temp
> file, then open the file with less after one of these stupidly long
> commands.
Or run them via 'at'
Or run 'script' when you login
And sed out all the terminal carp later on.
On 2013-04-25 20:05, Christoph Lohmann wrote:
> while trying to copy some stuff from iotop I came to the idea of having
> some ??halt?? function in st. This is like the ??halt?? in 9term, where ev???
> erything will stand still but the terminal is working on the output in
> the background.
Why
On 2013-04-11 21:17, Carlos Torres wrote:
> it was there just a little hidden
> http://git.suckless.org/sites/tree/tools.suckless.org/ii/patches/ii-ipv6.diff
i mean in the ii repo -> http://git.suckless.org/ii
On 2013-04-11 20:53, Nico Golde wrote:
> http://tools.suckless.org/ii/patches/ii-ipv6.diff
Aw fsck. Can we put the patches in the git repo? Either as plain files
in patches/, or create a branch based on the commit they diff'd at?
On 2013-04-10 13:13, William Giokas wrote:
> There are extremely strong technical arguments for using systemd as a
> simple, easy to use and easy to configure initialization system.
systemd trades simplicity for boot-speed and stack integration.
There are always trade-offs. It's just this seems l
Attached is a patch to add IPv6 support to ii, based on where it was as
of 7a99152ce64d7006730006094b333edbecbe505a
Enjoy, scream, whatever...
diff --git a/ii.c b/ii.c
index d93266c..0ebeee3 100644
--- a/ii.c
+++ b/ii.c
@@ -37,6 +37,7 @@ static int irc;
static time_t last_response;
static Channe
On 2013-02-21 10:19, sta...@cs.tu-berlin.de wrote:
> of course:
> sed -n '/^\s*
On 2013-02-21 14:19, Kai Hendry wrote:
> If you are a Makefile demi-god, you could please help me support input
> files blighted with spaces. For example running the Makefile on my
> blog, it chokes and stops with
> https://github.com/kaihendry/natalian/blob/master/archives/tag/fair%20use.mdwn
htt
On 2012-01-28 14:22, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
> When I think of it, I can't but wonder if we could write a program
> that does tagging and tagging only, and a selection of separate
> layout managers that automatically tile or maximize mapped windows.
> Interoperability with (other) no-wm tools wou
On 2012-01-04 21:28, Hannes Blut wrote:
> When making surf on my setup i get
do what the error says, add it to your libs in your config.mk, like:
LIBS = -L/usr/lib -lc -lX11 -ljavascriptcoregtk-1.0 ${GTKLIB} -lgthread-2.0
On 2012-01-02 12:26, hiro wrote:
> I don't understand how this is related to your quote?
Suraj re-evaluated his toolset. I think the re-evaluation part is a good
idea, however it seems you could spend too much time doing it.
> You always execute ls when you cd to a different folder?
in interacti
On 2012-01-01 21:13, Suraj N. Kurapati wrote:
> So I considered the trade-offs between SLOC minimalism, project and
> community activity, and my productivity in DWM vs. WMII and finally
> decided to switch back to WMII (which I used since six years prior).
How often do people re-evaluate their too
On 2011-12-23 23:16, hiro wrote:
> Only so nobody falls in the same pits: gnuplot sucks, bourne shell
> sucks (better use awk for tabular calculations)
post the scripts?
also, check out http://www.colorcombos.com/
On 2011-12-22 13:58, hiro wrote:
> What tools do you know that are able to render such graphics and
> update once per second or so?
push the burden of making pretty crap on the client; drop the data to
json and let the clients use a javascript library like highcharts.
On 2011-12-07 11:04, Justin Pogue wrote:
> At work, I typically have a terminal doing something like "while true;
> do ls -l /var/cores && sleep 10 && clear; done"
Jobs need two scriptable pathways to your brain: 1) an immediate
attention interrupt, and 2) a handle when not busy interrupt.
status
On 2011-11-27 15:32, Roger wrote:
> locate "stest" |grep ^stest$
08:53:31 Err 130 /Volumes/Users/phaller
> locate ls | grep ^ls$
08:53:34 Err 1 /Volumes/Users/phaller
> locate ls | grep ^/bin/ls$
/bin/ls
08:53:43 /Volumes/Users/phaller>
On 2011-11-25 22:42, Julian Dammann wrote:
> > It's all about spatial locality.
> Ever tried ":!your_terminal &" in vim? Maybe that's good enough for you if
> bound to some key.
autocmd BufEnter * cd %:p:h
for when you use multiple buffers in vim.
On 2011-11-18 13:24, pancake wrote:
> should we support code written by bitches?
K&R v1, page 59:
for (i = 0, j = strlen(s)-1; i < j; i++, j--) {
SLoC count? Bitch count? ;)
}
sloc()
{
__sloc "$1" | wc -l
__sloc "$1" | sed -e 's,;,ROFL\n,g' |grep ROFL |wc -l
__sloc "$1" | sed -e 's,(,ROFL\n,g' |grep ROFL |wc -l
}
worrying about stuff like the next seems tree/forest-y
if (error)
return printf("boot->head => missed?"), -1;
btw, anyone recommend a suckless AST tool for C?
Patrick
tk-webkitwebview.html#WebKitWebView-load-error
something like:
void
loaderror(WebKitWebView *v, WebKitWebFrame *f, gchar *u, gpointer e, gpointer
d, Client *c) {
return printf("err %s\n", e->message), FALSE;
}
Patrick
d a progress bar to that patch.
Patrick
diff -urN surf-tip/surf.c surf-dl/surf.c
--- surf-tip/surf.c 2011-11-04 22:21:52.077749801 +0800
+++ surf-dl/surf.c 2011-11-04 23:35:55.630343708 +0800
@@ -42,6 +42,15 @@
gboolean zoomed;
} Client;
+typedef struct Download {
+ We
you want to control every window, you don't need a window manager.
Patrick
place as *the* place for users
Patrick
ould probably test for functionality, something like:
ssh_agent_check ()
{
for sock in {$TMPDIR,/tmp}/ssh-*/agent*
do
export SSH_AUTH_SOCK=$sock
ssh-add -l && return
done
eval `ssh-agent`
}
Patrick
perl for the filter
filter has been a ridiculously useful script, being a hash of common
encoding transforms. It could be a sed scripts or in C; anyone seen
or written something like it?
Patrick
wcat() {
which curl > /dev/null 2>&1 && curl -s "$1";
On 2011-10-29 23:22, Yue Wu wrote:
> I'm looking for a cli newsreader, suckless, less dependencies. Thanks!
cron + curl + xmlstarlet + md5 = lighter than rss2email.py
Patrick
On 2011-10-29 01:44, Connor Lane Smith wrote:
> This thread is demented... *very* irritating.
Trolls have to perform some socially useful function or else we'd all
have learned by now.
Patrick
* yeah, I know it's only October. ;)
On 2011-10-26 11:48, Manolo Martínez wrote:
>
> In openbox I have a key bound to the following:"wmctrl -xa mutt ||
> urxvt -name mutt -e mutt"
xlsclients | grep -q mutt || urxvt -e mutt
eems like too much; probably only need a few generic ones: string,
number, binary, list, hash.
Too many types will hurt us just like re-inventing tar as MIME as output
delimiter hurt us.
> we ought to optimise for effectiveness of use by the user
Absolutely; perhaps by reducing the output options of our programs. ;)
Patrick
d
input = free-form text. We combined data exchange with user interface,
and user interface usually won that fight.
Say data exchange won; would it help us to rewrite our programs to
output JSON and our shells to pretty-print* JSON?
Patrick
[*] The cynic points out that people would then spen
interrupt vector
(and not an sms)? If so, I'd do something stoopid like parse the output
of [1] and for every warning, put up a picture of kitty cat, and for
every critical, put up an angry tiger.
It sounds like w3m and a sed script would work just GRRReat!
Patrick
[1]
http://ligers_kic
update an alias or
> function in all my open terminals.
??? something like?
update_config() { [ `mtime $cfg` -gt `mtime $history` ] && . $cfg ; }
export PS1='`update_config`> '
Patrick
On 2011-09-28 14:51, Nick wrote:
> Quoth Troels Henriksen:
> > Nick writes:
> > Huh? I have not had trouble using wget for this.
> Can anyone else confirm / deny this?
Not for those sites, however I did see enough fails to add the same to
https://github.com/patrickhaller/surf-ph
Patrick
On 2011-09-25 03:19, Christoph Lohmann wrote:
> ocaml;wu (ocaml; won't use)
use the bringer_obsolete.bash [1] from the package?
why ocaml;wu? because it's outside the C/sh stack, or ?
Patrick
[1] send
"https://github.com/cfuehrmann/bringer/raw/master/bringer_obsolete.bash \r"
expect "bash;wu"
On Mon, Sep 12, 2011 at 10:05:16PM +0100, Rob wrote:
> I don't think this would be worth it, suckless tools are supposed to be
> lightweight, even someone who hasn't seen the code before can make
> changes, they don't have to be an expert at C, so merging a few lines
> here and there is no big deal
On Thu, Jun 30, 2011 at 04:40:23PM +0200, f...@snakeoilproductions.net wrote:
> perhaps _20h_'s thingmenu fits your need?
> http://git.r-36.net/thingmenu/
or clock from http://www.jessies.org/~enh/software/x11/
On Mon, Jun 13, 2011 at 08:49:45PM +0200, Jakub Lach wrote:
> To add another one, I'm not entirely sure LCD vs CRT
> eyes health debate is settled.
>
I'm fairly sure the "Cathode ray cannon pointed at your head; is it safe ?"
debate is well over..
djp
On Wed, Jun 08, 2011 at 08:01:10AM +0200, Petr Sabata wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 08, 2011 at 12:57:40PM +0800, Patrick Haller wrote:
> >
> > define $EDITOR then ^x^e
>
> I guess this is just something bash-specific?
yeah, edit the current command using $EDITOR
file manager
On Tue, Jun 07, 2011 at 09:03:06PM -0700, Noah Birnel wrote:
> ls >listing && vim listing && mv `cat listing` dest
define $EDITOR then ^x^e
Patrick
hile true; do
exec sleep 30 &
done
#2
while true; do
exec sleep 30
done
#3
while true; do
sleep 30
done
Patrick
es in
would help, so whether someone wants to try a different layout engine or
something, they can hack it up in perl or pure or whatnot.
Patrick
* yes, i'm declaring ICCCM/EWMH a wasteland for users. There's only apps
and window managers in there. With surf, it's easy to check for
th them can be fixed with a
DISPLAY=:0.0 x-alt-tab
and from then on, add x-alt-tab to the end of what spawned that beast.
Patrick
1 and no window manager, the top-most window under the
pointer receives Key* events. By tying XCirculateSubwindows to
XSetInputFocus'ing back to the root window, we can get around clients
that focus themselves.
However, that provides a certainly limited Focus / Stack setup ;)
Patrick
On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 11:17:50AM -0500, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> Precisely what value do you get out of hacking up shell scripts to do
> this with a dozen tools?
It's at least a good way to understand exactly what one gets from X11. ;)
Patrick
> just be creating a (very minimalist) window manager out of those
> tools?
yup. WMs usually bind several orthogonals: window manipulation /
decoration, keyboard shortcuts. focus management.
Separate them. ;)
Patrick
indowmap
mapped not viewable =>
xdotool search stupid_window windowmove 0 0
I keep a stack of unmapped windows (especially for surf, which i open unmapped),
managed via the script below.
Patrick
#!/bin/bash
dir="${HOME}/.wm-banished"
[[ ! -d $dir ]] && mkdir -
Anyone here try using X11 without a window manager?
Just using Xresources + specific tools: xbindkeys, xdotool, etc... I'm
documenting the setup and adding small tools as needed (x-alt-tab,
x-move-resize, x-session).
https://github.com/patrickhaller/no-wm
Patrick
On Fri, Feb 11, 2011 at 07:34:48PM +0100, Benoit Chesneau wrote:
>
> What would you choose for a really minimal OS?
arch linux, rolling binary releases reduce maintenance time.
what do you want a minimal os for?
Patrick
only works for very simple use cases which don't need dozens
> of variables
well, don't beat up only one of the twins:
extern char **environ;
extern char **argv;
char *foo = NULL;
foo = getenv("foo");
environ = argv;
if (getenv("foo") != NULL)
foo = getenv("foo");
Patrick
On Sat, Feb 05, 2011 at 05:06:20PM -0500, Brandon LaRocque wrote:
> Which one do you use? Why do you use it? What does it have that the
> others don't?
XFS because http://www.jukie.net/bart/blog/usb2-enclosure-benchmark
Lots of tradeoffs with FSs, how about tackle userland first?
Patrick
On Sat, Jan 22, 2011 at 11:28:20AM -0500, Eitan Goldshtrom wrote:
> Hi. I'm trying to print out a progress bar sort of thing that
> represents my remaining battery life.
Why use python? dc and printf suffice.
Patrick
percent=$1
buckets=10
# annoying math
decimal=$( dc -e &q
mount of CPU resources in the range of 30-50%. Perhaps there
> was an incompatibility with the latest Xorg server, I'm not sure. I
> didn't stay with it long enough to find out.
That's cause sinac.c as posted used usleep while working with secon
.
Patrick
diff -urN slock-1.0/slock.c slock-1.0-getopt//slock.c
--- slock-1.0/slock.c 2009-11-26 20:53:26.0 +0800
+++ slock-1.0-getopt//slock.c 2010-09-18 12:34:56.761712744 +0800
@@ -74,9 +74,9 @@
static void
#ifdef HAVE_BSD_AUTH
-read_password(Display *dpy)
+read_password(Display *dpy
On 10-08-22 12:47 PM, David J Patrick wrote:
pandoc extends markdown and has some table support,
I think.. or maybe it doesn't..
anyhow, it's a noble effort, best of luck, keep us posted,
djp
On 10-08-22 12:37 PM, Alexander Teinum wrote:
What doesn’t work well for me, is that I cannot easily extend
Markdown. The design that I propose is simpler and more strict. All
tags work the same way. The input is close to a data structure, and it
doesn’t need complex parsing. The drawback is that
On 10-08-22 11:52 AM, Alexander Teinum wrote:
I didn’t want to start a completely off-topic discussion in the
typesetting thread, so I created a new thread. I’m playing with the
idea of creating a language that is simple to read like Markdown, but
that has a stricter syntax. It looks like Common
On 10-08-22 07:15 AM, Martin Kopta wrote:
Hi everyone,
I wrote my bachelor thesis using LaTeX and now I am going to write my
master thesis. I would rather avoid TeX and everything TeX based this time.
consider writing in markdown and transforming via pandoc.
http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc
On 10-08-17 02:57 AM, Alexander Teinum wrote:
I don’t have time to try it out right now, but I see how an
interactive interface might be practical.
Don't have time right now, hence that task management application ? ;-)
taskwarrior is also purely cli at the moment, but working towards adding
On 10-08-14 08:18 AM, Alexander Teinum wrote:
I have been working on a program that makes it easy to keep myself,
and perhaps others, in check. It’s inspired by suckless. I now
consider it stable enough to share it with you.
Sounds intriguing, and I'm going to check it out, but I have to admit
1 - 100 of 111 matches
Mail list logo