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Tildes Userscript: Tildezy
Updated: June 29th 2023 Hello folks, Like many of the other people that have been around lately, I'm new to Tildes, I've been browsing it without an account since last Monday or so while waiting...
Updated: June 29th 2023
Hello folks,
Like many of the other people that have been around lately, I'm new to Tildes, I've been browsing it without an account since last Monday or so while waiting for an email response (thanks @Deimos), and in that time I've been working on a little tool to add some QOL features I thought would make my experiences with the site feel better.
I didn't plan on sharing it initially, because I didn't think I'd be able to get the javascript into a usable state, and I'm not fond of sharing my code in general, as I always get a big wave of impostor syndrome whenever I do, "What if they look at my messy code and see how silly I do some things", that sort of thing. But with Tildes I want to try to correct some of my internet behaviours, for years I've generally stayed as a lurker, never commenting or sharing content of my own, so, hello there, hopefully, I stick to my guns and you see more of me.
Onto the script itself, currently, I've built five main features into it all of them being rather minor on their own, I did do bug testing on everything and couldn't find anything else, but if you notice anything please feel free to report it to me or post an issue on the repo. It's easy to miss bugs when you've only got one set of eyes.
The GitHub contains installation instructions if you've never used a userscript before, and contains some images showing off each feature described below.
Comment Collapser
The comment collapser was built because, with my shakey hands, I had a few times when I would click someone's name instead of the [-] beside it. With this feature *Triple* clicking anywhere on a comment, be it text or header, will collapse it as if you used the [-] button. It's set to 3 clicks as sometimes I double-click to begin copying a line and didn't want the conflict, but it can be changed to any amount of clicks on line 132https://github.com/TeJayH/Tildezy/blob/main/Tildezy.user.js#L132
Group Stars/Favourites
Allows you to click a ☆ beside each ~group on the Tildes homepage to *favourite* it, moving it to the top of the list. Supports as many or as few favourites as you'd wish.Scroll to Top Button
Adds a button pinned in the top right of every Tildes thread that sends you back to the top of the page. No more scrolling or reaching for the home keyOpen Comments in New Tab
Replaces the default function of a posts "x comments" to open the page in a new tab instead of the current tabUser Colors
This one is the thing that I made the entire script for, an entirely useless feature but one I love for silly reasons. Replaces the stock username color with a randomized one based on a hash made from the user's username. So everyone gets assigned their own color which will always be their color anywhere you see them. This one helps multi-person conversations flow better in my headNew Comment Traveller
Gives you navigation buttons either beside the Collapse Replies/Expand all buttons when scrolled up, or pinned in the top right when scrolled past those buttons. Navigation buttons jump quickly between each new comment in a thread.Markdown Buttons
Adds a selection of various buttons under every comment box that automatically insert markdown for you. No more forgetting which bracket style goes first for a clickable URL.Settings
Not really a *feature* on its own, but it exists. Adds a "Tildezy Settings" beside the Log In/Username button in the top right of the header, which opens a settings window to enable/disable any and all features of the script. Features can also be disabled by modifying lines 26-41 in the script, allowing you to hard toggle everything *including the settings itself* off should you wish.https://github.com/TeJayH/Tildezy/blob/main/Tildezy.user.js#L26-L41
Hopefully, someone gets some use out of this with me, I look forward to chatting with you all.
EDIT
Refactored the code and added a new comment traveller feature based on some of the comments below.EDIT 2
Up to 1.3.0, we've got markdown buttons now, see comment explaining the change or check out the github readme120 votes -
Lazy userscript
Just a hack job, but I'd seen some comment about it being inconvenient to ignore posts so I made a quick userscript (tested with Tampermonkey on Firefox) that adds hotkeys for...
Just a hack job, but I'd seen some comment about it being inconvenient to ignore posts so I made a quick userscript (tested with Tampermonkey on Firefox) that adds hotkeys for
b
ookmarking/i
gnoring/v
oting on a post. It can also navigate to thel
ink orc
omments or prev/next pages (←
/→
). Only implemented for posts 1-9 at the moment.Ex:
i+2
ignores and hides the 2nd post (or restores, if ignored)?
shows a summary of hotkeys// ==UserScript== // @name Tildes // @namespace http://tampermonkey.net/ // @version 0.1 // @description Quickie convenience hotkeys for tildes.net // @author TT // @match *://tildes.net/* // @icon https://www.google.com/s2/favicons?sz=64&domain=tildes.net // @grant none // @require https://unpkg.com/hotkeys-js/dist/hotkeys.min.js // ==/UserScript== (function () { "use strict"; let Action; (function (Action) { Action[Action["Invalid"] = 0] = "Invalid"; Action[Action["Bookmark"] = 1] = "Bookmark"; Action[Action["Comments"] = 2] = "Comments"; Action[Action["Ignore"] = 3] = "Ignore"; Action[Action["Open"] = 4] = "Open"; Action[Action["Vote"] = 5] = "Vote"; })(Action || (Action = {})); const regex = /tildes\.net(\/~(?<group>\w+))?/gi; let match = regex.exec(document.location); //In a group if I wanted to support hotkeys there? if (match.groups.group) { //alert(match.groups.group); } else { addArticleNumbers(); addMainHotkeys(); } //Route function routeAction(action, event, handler) { event.preventDefault(); //Grab index. Zero-index? let indexText = handler.key.substring(2); let index = parseInt(indexText) - 1; if (isNaN(index)) return; actOnArticle(action, index); } function actOnArticle(action, index) { //Get article for index let article = document.querySelector(".topic-listing").children[index].children[0]; //Do the thing switch (action) { case Action.Bookmark: if (article.style.borderStyle === 'solid') article.style.borderStyle = 'none'; else article.style.borderStyle = 'solid'; article.querySelector('button[data-ic-put-to$="bookmark"]').click(); break; case Action.Comments: article.querySelector(".topic-info-comments a").click(); break; case Action.Ignore: //Hide vs blank? if (article.style.visibility === "hidden") article.style.visibility = "visible"; else article.style.visibility = "hidden"; // article.style.display = 'none'; article.querySelector('button[data-ic-put-to$="ignore"]').click(); break; case Action.Open: article.querySelector(".topic-title a").click(); break; case Action.Vote: article.querySelector(".topic-voting").click(); break; } } function addArticleNumbers() { let titles = Array.from(document.querySelectorAll(".topic-title a")); for (let i = 1; i <= titles.length; i++) { let title = titles[i - 1]; title.text = i + " - " + title.text; } } function addMainHotkeys() { //Set up handlers const handleBookmark = (event, handler) => routeAction(Action.Bookmark, event, handler); const handleComments = (event, handler) => routeAction(Action.Comments, event, handler); const handleIgnore = (event, handler) => routeAction(Action.Ignore, event, handler); const handleOpen = (event, handler) => routeAction(Action.Open, event, handler); const handleVote = (event, handler) => routeAction(Action.Vote, event, handler); hotkeys("shift+/", (e, h) => alert(getHelpText())); //Page nav hotkeys("left", (e, h) => Array.from(document.querySelectorAll(".pagination a")).find((e) => e.textContent == "Prev").click()); hotkeys("right", (e, h) => Array.from(document.querySelectorAll(".pagination a")).find((e) => e.textContent == "Next").click()); for (let i = 1; i <= 9; i++) { hotkeys("b+" + i, handleBookmark); hotkeys("c+" + i, handleComments); hotkeys("i+" + i, handleIgnore); hotkeys("o+" + i, handleOpen); hotkeys("v+" + i, handleVote); } } function getHelpText() { return ` ←/→ = navigation b = Bookmark, i = Ignore, v = Vote, c = Open comments, o = Open link, Action+[1-9] calls that action on the corresponding article`; } })();
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As I recall, about 2-3 years ago I had experimented with what is called the
npm install xyz
through some tutorials, etc. The objective was to improve my tooling or toolchain at least with things like css/js minification, etc. along with Bootstrap customization. The idea was to then move on to other newer learnings like react, etc.But I was soon disgruntled by the whole process! Neither bootstrap turned out to be an easy horse to tame, and NPM was like this astronomical universe of packages that keep on downloading into your folders! I soon lost taste of the whole thing and kept using my tried and tested stack of PHP scripts and using stock Bootstrap through CDNs.
But today, I want to give it another shot. Has NPM improved than earlier days? What is the best way to go about building a toolchain using it? Are there any useful guides that make the whole process easier to digest?
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I'm going to be building a simple blog for myself. Partially I just want something really simple and customizable, and also it will be a fun little programming project. I'll be using PHP and mySQL...
I'm going to be building a simple blog for myself.
Partially I just want something really simple and customizable, and also it will be a fun little programming project.
I'll be using PHP and mySQL for the backend. I won't be using any sort of framework as it shouldn't be necessary for a very simple blog. I'm fairly comfortable with JavaScript.
What I'm imagining is some sort of JavaScript library I can just download, link to my html and then turn a textarea into a simple wysiwyg editor. It could be as simple as a markdown editor or something with a little more features.
It has to be free. Open source would be a plus.
If anyone has any recommendations or advice I would be very grateful. Thanks!
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I'm currently developing a minimal userscript manager who's main goal is to be fully auditable by any user in only ten minutes or so - my prototype uses less than 300 lines of javascript, and I'm trying to keep it that way.
To get the codebase this small, however, I have to be very picky with what features I implement - most notably, the code editor has to be very barebones. Are there any features that I'd be shooting myself in the foot by not including?
For example:
- syntax highlighting
- cloud sync
- regex url matching
- fullscreen editor (currently, it's just a browser popup - the intention is that you write code elsewhere and paste it in)
Any feedback is greatly appreciated!
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