👽 freezr

Dear Capsulers,

Micro, the editor, is fine to write but not so much for reading, I usually read the drafts in Lagrange with the content already online...

The whole process is a little bit cumbersome... 🫤

What are your strategies to proof-reading your GMI files?

Thanks... 😇

2 years ago · 👍 eph, devyl

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9 Replies

👽 slondr

I just use emacs for editing and rendering · 2 years ago

👽 freezr

@devyl yes I know but I use Lagrange more on the mobile than the computer... So far I came out increasing the size of the terminal font... 🤔 · 2 years ago

👽 devyl

Eh, you can open the gemtext with lagrange (or amfora,....) on your local file system!? · 2 years ago

👽 jo

everything i publish is full of typos all the time but i admit it · 2 years ago

👽 eph

Spellcheck lol · 2 years ago

👽 smokey

I repeatedly read the paragraphs previously written acouple times during the initial writing in vim and after posting in lagrange. usually the spelling mistakes stick out like a sore thumb, but honestly i've come to the conclusion proof reading isn't worth the energy it takes most of the time. I have accepted my human falibility and expect peoples minds tew bhe entellegint nuff tow full in the gawps. · 2 years ago

👽 digbat

vim, hope to spot the errors, git, check on browser (lagrange or elaho) , repeat until correct - alternative could include a local server for dev then push (or rsync) to server when correct - given the small, simple, gmi files i haven't itched enough to spin up a local dev only server yet. · 2 years ago

👽 freezr

@acidus I proofread from Android Lagrange... This is not very useful when is time to do some correction later... 🤔 · 2 years ago

👽 acidus

No matter how many times I proofread, I can’t see all the errors until after I hit “I publish” · 2 years ago