For a long time I hated markdown.

Now I love it.

What do you think?

  • ProletarianDictator [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    3 months ago

    Mixed feelings on Markdown. I like that it is available everywhere and pretty simple. I don’t like that you don’t always know which flavor a given piece of software is using.

    For Lemmy comments and basic documents, it serves the use case great. But lots is left to be desired when making more complex docs. I have a problem with making everything a heading.

    Regardless, I will always prefer it over Word / OpenOffice formats or LaTeX. I still have to look into Org mode.

        • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          You are welcome. Forgot to say, for proper WYSIWYG you have to click the HTML-Tag button in the lower right corner.

          • glans [it/its]@hexbear.netOP
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            3 months ago

            No because you compose in one window and you see it in another. WYSIWYG means there is just one window and it correctly displays however the end result will be. Like using Word. It just isn’t the same thing.

            Split window + live preview is presumably much easier to program and requires less resources. It is perfectly serviceable in some situations. But for working with complicated documents: tables, images, nested lists, long URLs etc, a WYSIWYG editor is the best choice.

            I’m not sure if it’s impossible to create a proper WYSIWYG editor without electron or just nobody has bothered.

            • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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              3 months ago

              WYSIWYG means there is just one window and it correctly displays however the end result will be. Like using Word.

              The only thing WYSIWYG means is “what you see is what you get”. If you have a live preview you see what you get. *shrug*

              Anyway, I’m pretty sure I have seen an editor that does it in a single pane, but couldn’t recall the name of it right now for the life of me. Also not sure if it used Electron…

              Split window + live preview is presumably much easier to program

              Yes, obviously. It’s actually so simple that I once built this myself in a few hours, with a bit of Qt and a call to pandoc. You can skip building, saving, and updating an abstract syntax tree, as well as expanding the nodes the cursor is in to the markdown source, which is a whole lot of complexity.

              I’m not sure if it’s impossible to create a proper WYSIWYG editor without electron or just nobody has bothered.

              Of course it’s possible. But by now there are like hundreds of markdown editors around, so the problem will be finding the one that meets your specifications between the avalanche of those which don’t.

              • glans [it/its]@hexbear.netOP
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                3 months ago

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WYSIWYG

                In computing, WYSIWYG (/ˈwɪziwɪɡ/ WIZ-ee-wig), an acronym for What You See Is What You Get,[1] refers to software which allows content to be edited in a form that resembles its appearance when printed or displayed as a finished product,[2] such as a printed document, web page, or slide presentation. … In general, WYSIWYG implies the ability to directly manipulate the layout of a document without having to type or remember names of layout commands.[4]

                History

                Before the adoption of WYSIWYG techniques, … Users were required to enter special non-printing control codes (now referred to as markup code tags) to indicate that some text should be in boldface, italics, or a different typeface or size.

    • glans [it/its]@hexbear.netOP
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      3 months ago

      It doesn’t seem to exist. I think the best way would be to make a very robust syntax highlighting but you’d have to go beyond what they can already do for change in text size, hiding elements, adding links, etc.

  • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    XKCD 927: Standards

    (Just to be clear I’m referring to different markdown “flavours”)

  • RedWizard [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 months ago

    For format transportability and readability I love it. It has its limitations but I’m not designing posters over here.

    I’ve been using Logseq recently and it’s really made me love Markdown more. The simplicity of being able to scrape a site using external tools into markdown and getting a knowledge network db out of it is sweet.

    For fun the other day I wrote a powershell command that scraped the Marxists.org encyclopedia and pulled all its sub pages, and ripped each term on the page into its own md file. Could have been cool but it was like 3000 files and Logseq choked on it lol.

    There’s probably a better way to do that, maybe a list of terms per alphabetical letter or something as an MD file. Either way, I just like that I can scrape content into an easily readable format and get like a wiki out of it for my own personal use.

        • glans [it/its]@hexbear.netOP
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          3 months ago

          that’s what I thought. but maybe you wanted an encycolopedia of every marxist email list that existed in the year 2000.

          what was logsec’s role in the scraping? was the script itself in logsec or was it converting to md?

          • RedWizard [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            3 months ago

            Powershell did all the scraping using a module called PSParseHTML. I did my own markdown conversion logic of the paragraph elements. It dumped each term into a directory as a md file formatted for logseq.

            Logseq was going to be a means of graphing the relationships between the terms based on where they are mentioned. I never got to that point because the volume of pages were to much for logseq and it would hard lock on loading the directory.

            • glans [it/its]@hexbear.netOP
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              3 months ago

              volume of pages were to much for logseq and it would hard lock on loading the directory.

              maybe you could break them up in chunks some how.

            • glans [it/its]@hexbear.netOP
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              3 months ago

              OK sorry if I am telling you something you already know, but the classic tool to use to scrape a website is wget. Starting from one URL it can find all linked URLs and download them, or not, based on configuration. I have always found it pretty much accessible it was one of the earliest cli tools I used. You can learn a little bit or a lot. I think for this task you could learn a little. So that would get you a perfect local mirror or the site.

              GNU has the comprehensive docs of course https://www.gnu.org/software/wget/. But starting with some random tutorial might be better choice.

              To get it to markdown you’ll have to add another step, perhaps turndown or pandoc.

              Other projects to check out is httrack and tangentially archivebox.

              • RedWizard [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                3 months ago

                Its all good. I’ve heard of wget and used it in the past. I use PowerShell at work so I’m more accustomed to using it and it’s an object oriented programing language which I have a good understanding of.

                The module is masked on angular and so I could do element queries for the dom nodes I wanted and created some logic to move to the next paragraph under a given header until I reached the next header. Each header + paragraphs were collected then written to the HDD as markdown files.

                But thanks for the tool suggestion, its good to know of alternatives.