Like... why are we doing this. What is the purpose of having a bunch of green checkbox emojis in the already bulleted list of features. The only thing it tells me is that an LLM was probably used extensively in building this project.
Why a previewer rather than an editor that updates as you write?
Do you have a specific use case?
It seems to me that markdown is for writing with the ultimate output supposedly being html. Having a viewer of the markdown doesn't seem to add anything.
Whereas making it an editor makes it more of a rich text editor.
I'm not particularly saying youre wrong, more posing a philosophical question.
If this project doesn't have open issues going back a year that are unanswered, it's doing better than glow. I forked glow to fix this one specific rendering bug, because the maintainers didn't respond to my bug report. I can't say that my fork is any better maintained, because no one is using it, but glow isn't maintained and has bugs so I wouldn't hold it up as anything other than abandonware.
> Features:
> <bullet> <checkbox> description 1
> <bullet> <checkbox> description 2
> ...
Like... why are we doing this. What is the purpose of having a bunch of green checkbox emojis in the already bulleted list of features. The only thing it tells me is that an LLM was probably used extensively in building this project.
`pandoc "$@ | lynx -stdin` and I save you from 225 potential supply chain attack crates.
`cargo audit` finds 3 vulnerabilities, you should fix them.
Blazing safe.
Glow is also an excellent markdown viewer for the terminal, and it’s in most repositories.
Hi HN,
I built leaf, a Markdown previewer that runs entirely in the terminal.
It supports keyboard/mouse navigation, syntax highlighting, tables, checkboxes, clickable links, search, table of contents, local Markdown links, inline images, Mermaid diagrams, and LaTeX-to-Unicode rendering.
It works on Linux, macOS, Windows, and Termux.
GitHub: https://github.com/RivoLink/leaf
I’d appreciate feedback on the UX, missing features, and performance on large Markdown files.
Please consider adding a screenshot directly into the README (rather than a separate link).
Also maybe a single paragraph at the top describing the project rather than jumping into `install`.
Why a previewer rather than an editor that updates as you write?
Do you have a specific use case?
It seems to me that markdown is for writing with the ultimate output supposedly being html. Having a viewer of the markdown doesn't seem to add anything.
Whereas making it an editor makes it more of a rich text editor.
I'm not particularly saying youre wrong, more posing a philosophical question.
cool project, how does it compare to glow? https://github.com/charmbracelet/glow
If this project doesn't have open issues going back a year that are unanswered, it's doing better than glow. I forked glow to fix this one specific rendering bug, because the maintainers didn't respond to my bug report. I can't say that my fork is any better maintained, because no one is using it, but glow isn't maintained and has bugs so I wouldn't hold it up as anything other than abandonware.