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But I'm fine with it.
You know lite-xl? (If you don't, go read the post I wrote on it)
my original post about lite-xl
So there's this plugin for lite-xl called ghmarkdown (shorthand for GitHub markdown) which allowed for preview of markdown files by sending them to GitHub's markdown rendering API.
The loss of trust by sending data to a closed source organization isn't worth the convenience of rendering markdown, is it?
That said however, i do wanna render my markdown files.
Now if you know anything about me, you know i have a bit of a problem trying to read languages that use a lot of symbols, like brackets and arrows and whatnot.
Lua certainly has an element of that.
I have the following options:
Oh and it's not even the end of problems for pandoc: WHY IS IT SO LARGE? I realise it supports a very large number of formats for conversion, however they should provide a "lite" version for the common conversions; i don't know why they don't.
Luamd is a simple markdown rendering library just like markdown.lua, however it's not nearly as stale as markdown.lua and supports most of GitHub Flavoured Markdown!
There's a file i have, called test.md which has every feature used in commonmark and GitHub Flavoured Markdown. However, luamd doesn't like that file for some reason, and simply doesn't convert it.
I know pandoc is large and the executable issue exists, so for now I'm making it mandatory to have a global install of pandoc; not to mention I'm keeping the pandoc version on a separate branch.
You're right! This was simply the context.
so what do i wanna talk about?
at this point you must be throwing your arms in the air going
well, yes and no.
of course i know how to write hello world, and how to do the "enter a number, enter another number, here's some random math done with them" kinds of programs.
that said however, i didn't know how to write programs that actually matter. like the kind of things you actually do programming for. making useful applications. a text editor, or a mail client or something.
one can only leap to the other side if they have the kind of logic required to write computer programs.
you, dear reader, are one of two types of people; you either have the programming logic deeply ingrained inside your mind, or you don't have it in you at all.
have you ever seen people on forums, talking about how they looked through tutorials and courses and made stuff, but when they have to make something on their own, they're completely blank?
that's what i mean.
Having knowledge of syntax means nothing if you have no idea how to solve problems. Programming, at its core, is you trying to make a computer do what you want; if you have no meaningful answer for the computer when it asks you what you want it to do, you have failed as a programmer.
FINALLY, AN ORIGINAL QUOTE
tl;dr: writing a plugin opened my third eye, and now i'm the god of programming
this post was written on April 14, 2022.