The JS side is made in StimulusJS. You can take it, it's MIT.
I haven't worked with python and don't have plans to port it to React or anything else.
If you do start work on it, I can guide you though the process if you need a hand...
Hmmm... My responsible developer gut tells me to redo it in React so you don't import StimulusJS just to render one editor.
It's like having jQuery as a dependency in a React project.
Let's open an issue and discuss it there.
I never used diagrams and that library, but if I see a couple of other implementations, maybe it can be a drop-in...
I've had good success teaching markdown to a fair few non-techie people. At the end of the day it better serves as a machine-readable middleground between a user-facing WYSIWYG (markdown-powered) editor and the server responding to it.
It's common enough that a bigger percentage of normal people than you'd think probably find themselves using it on sites at least occasionally (Reddit, etc.), even if they don't consciously think of it as Markdown or know all the particulars of the syntax.
The GitHub-style editors are nice in that when a user sees the syntax directly when they press a formatting button in the markdown-toolbar-element, it makes associating a hash symbol with a headline or two asterisks surrounding a word with bold text pretty straightforward. In that sense, they teach you through using it since the syntax is fairly simple for the basics for someone seeing it the first time. Use it a couple of times, and you'll skip touching the buttons--at least for the basics.
That said, I think a Writebook-style editor[0] mentioned elsewhere may have some advantages for people with less computer experience, but I don't think a straight GitHub-style one like this is bad in those circumstances. It's quite good, especially if you pair it with some instructions (whether they be in a modal or whatever have you).
It’s hard to know how popular dark vs light is among people who work in tech, but in my anecdotal data the majority of people/coworkers I’ve seen use GitHub have it in light mode.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 83.8 ms ] threadA. Rebuild the stimulus portions in react B. Write a react wrapper around the stimulus
I use rails for everything I do, but like to use vite_rails on the front end for react. Excited to use this library!
Does this integrate with action_text? Wasn’t that a big thing in rails 6/7, with like… trix?
Out of interest are there any plans to support embedding Mermaid diagrams in the same way as Github supports?
nice to see that they are starting to push the whole ecosystem.
The GitHub-style editors are nice in that when a user sees the syntax directly when they press a formatting button in the markdown-toolbar-element, it makes associating a hash symbol with a headline or two asterisks surrounding a word with bold text pretty straightforward. In that sense, they teach you through using it since the syntax is fairly simple for the basics for someone seeing it the first time. Use it a couple of times, and you'll skip touching the buttons--at least for the basics.
That said, I think a Writebook-style editor[0] mentioned elsewhere may have some advantages for people with less computer experience, but I don't think a straight GitHub-style one like this is bad in those circumstances. It's quite good, especially if you pair it with some instructions (whether they be in a modal or whatever have you).
0. https://once.com/writebook
I read that 37signals will also spin-off the markdown editor they built for Writebook (https://once.com/writebook), so nice to have different options.
It’s hard to know how popular dark vs light is among people who work in tech, but in my anecdotal data the majority of people/coworkers I’ve seen use GitHub have it in light mode.
There may be an argument to default to “system”.
https://writewithharper.com