You recommend using AI to produce code you don’t understand?
You recommend using AI to produce code you don’t understand?
It takes a couple of hours to learn the basics.
I agree, you’re right about the part after the pipe and RegalPotoo’s explanation was not entirely correct.
Only the part after the pipe character. The pipe character works as an “or” operator. RegalPotoo is right.
Hot take: You’re shit at coding if you can’t do regex.
Obsidian looks interesting.
Thanks for the suggestion, but it seems like the challenges with Komga would be similar to those when using Mylar. I’ll probably just go for a spreadsheet.
That was my first idea too, but last I checked it didn’t scrape much other than English editions (using Comicvine AFAIR) and had no way of manually adding stuff it can’t scrape.
Scraping metadata. Wish/purchase/pull lists. Keeping track of multiple editions. Perhaps even scraping entire collections/storylines into manageable lists?
At the very least a quick way to use my phone to check if I already have a specific comic when I’m at the store.
Grist might be useful if I end up setting more than a spreadsheet up, thanks.
Thanks for the suggestion. I think that might be too much work for my needs though.
The container sees each volume as a seperate filesystem, regardless of your underlying disk setup and you cannot hardlink across filesystems.
This has huge potential. What I personally look for in a podcast solution is:
For now, I’m using Pocketcasts which pretty much does what I need, except for handling the backlog, which I do with a homemade python-script that adds backlog episodes to my playlist whenever it has less than 4 hours of playtime left, using Pocketcast’s web player REST API. The result is an endless playlist where newly released episodes are played within a few hours and older episodes are sprinkled on with no real need for micro-managing episodes in the playlist.
It looks like web/desktop players and sync is already in scope, but are there any “advanced” podcast organization features on your roadmap?
That is not correct. Prowlarr also searches Newznab-compatible providers (i.e. most nzb-indexers).
Exporting to PDF is supposed to be a digital equivalent to printing.
It really isn’t. Even without this feature (that I’d never heard of before) it is a format that is very easy to edit.
If you need PDFs to be tamperproof, you can however digitally sign them. (And then the recipient needs your public key to verify).
That wouldn’t fly during a code review.