An editor for plain text where you can also seamlessly insert line drawings. Designed above all to be easy to modify and give you early warning if your modifications break something.
http://akkartik.name/lines.html
This fork experiments with a simple implementation of hyperlinks to local files. If any word surrounded by whitespace (that doesn't wrap around multiple lines) is also the name of a file relative to the current directory, it renders in blue with an underline and can be clicked on to switch to the corresponding file.
Install LÖVE. It's just a 5MB download, open-source and
extremely well-behaved. I'll assume below that you can invoke it using the
love
command, but that might vary depending on your OS.
To run from the terminal, pass this directory to LÖVE, optionally with a file path to edit.
Alternatively, turn it into a .love file you can double-click on:
$ zip -r /tmp/lines.love *.lua
By default, lines.love reads/writes the file lines.txt
in
a directory relative to this app.
To open a different file, drop it on the lines.love window.
While editing text:
ctrl+f
to find patterns within a filectrl+c
to copy, ctrl+x
to cut, ctrl+v
to pastectrl+z
to undo, ctrl+y
to redoctrl+=
to zoom in, ctrl+-
to zoom out, ctrl+0
to reset zoomalt+right
/alt+left
to jump to the next/previous word, respectivelyshift
+ movement to select text, ctrl+a
to select allFor shortcuts while editing drawings, consult the online help. Either:
ctrl+h
, orh
to see your
options at any point during a stroke.lines.love has been exclusively tested so far with a US keyboard layout. If you use a different layout, please let me know if things worked, or if you found anything amiss: http://akkartik.name/contact
No support yet for Unicode graphemes spanning multiple codepoints.
No support yet for right-to-left languages.
Undo/redo may be sluggish in large files. Large files may grow sluggish in other ways. lines.love works well in all circumstances with files under 50KB.
If you kill the process, say by force-quitting because things things get sluggish, you can lose data.
The text cursor will always stay on the screen. This can have some strange implications:
So far this app isn't really designed for drawing-heavy files. For now I'm targeting mostly-text files with a few drawings mixed in.
No clipping yet for drawings. In particular, circles/squares/rectangles and point labels can overflow a drawing.
Touchpads can drag the mouse pointer using a light touch or a heavy click. On Linux, drags using the light touch get interrupted when a key is pressed. You'll have to press down to drag.
Can't scroll while selecting text with mouse.
No scrollbars yet. That stuff is hard.
This repo is a fork of lines.love, an editor for plain text where you can also seamlessly insert line drawings. Updates to it can be downloaded from the following mirrors:
Further forks are encouraged. If you show me your fork, I'll link to it here.