| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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This wasn't used anywhere, and never gets hit. It's a neat hack, but not worth the cognitive and maintenance cost of keeping around.
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This was obviated by upgrading past Actix 3.
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The author of maud seems to be slow on updating to newer actix releases, and the syntax, while clever, is ultimately less tool-friendly than "HTML with some weird characters" is.
I do still like the idea, but I also want to use Actix 4.
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`maud`, which was the main reason for nightlies, relies on proc macros. Those are stable in the 2021 edition, and maud 0.23+ uses them in a stable-friendly way.
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Rust nightly un-broke doctests!
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This pulls the top-level framework for HTML out into its own partial.
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This is a style experiment; the utility of using partials in an app with
one view is limited, to say the least.
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This accomplishes two things:
1. The og cards and page title no longer contain half-baked markup. Instead, they show the markdown equivalent, which is generally pretty friendly. In other words, the page title is "Have you checked `resolv.conf`?" and not "Have you checked <code>resolve.conf</code>?"
2. Phrases can now start with terms other than "Have you checked".
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This is somewhat overengineered in places, but does the job and exposes broadly the same interfaces as the Python version. Builds with emk/rust.
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