freespeech 1.0.82 → 1.0.88

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Files changed (57) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +4 -4
  2. data/CYCLE_OF_HEALTH +9 -15
  3. data/Makefile +1 -1
  4. data/README.md +54 -46
  5. data/VERSION_NUMBER +1 -1
  6. data/bin/append_each +0 -0
  7. data/bin/google_speak +4 -3
  8. data/bin/lines +0 -0
  9. data/bin/nth_word +0 -0
  10. data/bin/prepend_each +0 -0
  11. data/bin/rgsub +0 -0
  12. data/documentation/append_each +3 -0
  13. data/documentation/left_right.exe +1 -1
  14. data/documentation/page +41 -41
  15. data/documentation/prepend_each +3 -0
  16. data/gem_data/VERSION_NUMBER +1 -1
  17. data/index.html +57 -51
  18. data/install.sh +5 -1
  19. data/non_compiled_programs/google_speak +4 -3
  20. data/src/_compilation/abs +38 -19
  21. data/src/_compilation/add +38 -19
  22. data/src/_compilation/append +38 -19
  23. data/src/_compilation/append_each +290 -0
  24. data/src/_compilation/args +38 -19
  25. data/src/_compilation/delete +38 -19
  26. data/src/_compilation/div +38 -19
  27. data/src/_compilation/exp +38 -19
  28. data/src/_compilation/floor +38 -19
  29. data/src/_compilation/gsub +38 -19
  30. data/src/_compilation/gsubip +38 -19
  31. data/src/_compilation/last_nth +38 -19
  32. data/src/_compilation/lines +38 -19
  33. data/src/_compilation/mul +38 -19
  34. data/src/_compilation/nth +38 -19
  35. data/src/_compilation/nth_word +38 -19
  36. data/src/_compilation/prepend +38 -19
  37. data/src/_compilation/prepend_each +290 -0
  38. data/src/_compilation/rip +38 -19
  39. data/src/_compilation/rnip +38 -19
  40. data/src/_compilation/selectlines +38 -19
  41. data/src/_compilation/sub +38 -19
  42. data/src/_compilation/swap +38 -19
  43. data/src/_compilation/trim +38 -19
  44. data/src/programs/append_each +0 -0
  45. data/src/programs/lines +0 -0
  46. data/src/programs/prepend_each +0 -0
  47. data/src/rgsub +0 -0
  48. data/src/rgsub.c +24 -25
  49. data/src/src/Makefile +1 -1
  50. data/src/src/cd +3 -0
  51. data/src/src/code +30 -9
  52. data/src/src/functions.cr +29 -16
  53. data/src/src/mk +6 -8
  54. data/src/src/rm +1 -0
  55. metadata +12 -3
  56. data/src/src/q.cr +0 -9
  57. /data/images/{12.png → 8.png} +0 -0
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data/CYCLE_OF_HEALTH CHANGED
@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
1
- The following shall be regarded as a methodological "Cycle of Health", a cycle of behavior that humans happen to fall into, or can knowingly cause, that is very likely to, result in optimal health.
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+ The following shall be regarded as a methodological Cycle of Health,” a cycle of behavior that humans happen to fall into, or can knowingly cause, that is very likely to, result in optimal health.
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  Statistics should be found or determined that prove this, this is simple and loop
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  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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- 1.1. De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific "group" would qualify as such)
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+ 1.1. De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific group would qualify as such)
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  1.2. Positive interaction with 1 or more others in PISPG
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  for each of Cycle 1, after the point is completed:
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  2.1. Recognition of having likely improved survival potential (on whichever aspects(s) of life)
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Statistics should be found or determined that prove this, this is simple and loo
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  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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  So the full cycle would be:
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- 1) De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific "group" would qualify as such)
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+ 1) De facto joining of Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group (on whichever aspects(s) of life, you can identify or another, whether or not a specific group would qualify as such)
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  2) Recognition of having likely improved survival potential (on whichever aspects(s) of life)
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  3) [(Mental/spiritual/physical/emotional/general/uncategorized) health]/[pleasure]/[happiness], just here, and nowhere else
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  4) Positive interaction with 1 or more others in Potentially-Increasing-Survival-Potential-Group
@@ -25,8 +25,6 @@ Statistics should be found or determined that prove this, this is simple and loo
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  A short form would be
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-
29
-
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  As a loop
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  Join, recognize good, happiness
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@@ -34,24 +32,20 @@ As a loop
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  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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- (A "group" could be any kind of group, it could only be 2 people, it could be 1 million people.)
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-
39
- "De facto joining" would be very liberal in classification
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+ (A group could be any kind of group, it could only be 2 people, it could be 1 million people.)
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+ “De facto joining” would be very liberal in classification
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  Obviously, people and robots should operate on the basis of this.
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-
45
- It is currently very not-known, the relative importances of these points. So there is no statement to "do one point more than another".
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+ It is currently very not-known, the relative importances of these points. So there is no statement to “do one point more than another.”
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42
 
47
43
  Everyone should try to maximize, to the best of their ability, all 7 points.
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44
 
49
-
50
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  Point 2.2 is completely incompatible with psychiatry. The upsides of such an approach could, and should, be tested. Surely, there would
51
- be a tremendous amount of bias and vested interest in this methodology not seeming to "work in practice", but would this work in practice?
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-
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- The answer is <b><span color="blue" size="large">YES, DEFINITELY.</span></b>
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+ be a tremendous amount of bias and vested interest in this methodology not seeming to work in practice,” but would this work in practice?
54
47
 
48
+ The answer is <b><span color="blue" size="large">YES, DEFINITELY.</span></b>
55
49
 
56
50
  See also
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- Ask this software about "ai"
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+ Ask this software about ai
data/Makefile CHANGED
@@ -24,6 +24,6 @@ clean:
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  rm bin/*
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  exit 0
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  push:
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- (rm index.html; make all && ./page clear && push)
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+ (rm index.html; make all && ./install.sh y && ./page clear && push)
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  install:
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  ./install.sh
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  <h1 style='color: green'>Practical Self-Empowerment Utilities Covering Every Facet of Life </h1>
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-
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+ [![Video](https://img.youtube.com/vi/Fx9x8cArK30/maxresdefault.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fx9x8cArK30)
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@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ I intend to make people more able.
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31
  I was working on a “to buy” program regarding stocks, but it only
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  partly works right now and it's not as useful as the other software.
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  The find housing tool actually helped me to find housing in real life.
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- Those aside, there are these 84 programs.
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+ Those aside, there are these 86 programs.
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  Some ones that convert text are skipped in this documentation because
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36
  their name and usage is obvious (e.g., color tools).
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37
 
@@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ You can use them anywhere without dependencies.
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97
 
98
98
  Democracy Github Ruby Gem Python PIP Package
99
99
 
100
- Without further ado, here are the 84 documented programs. (The obvious usage
100
+ Without further ado, here are the 86 documented programs. (The obvious usage
101
101
  ones are omitted.)
102
102
 
103
103
  ### 1. Ultimate Chat Application.exe
@@ -183,7 +183,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
183
183
  maximum prices, and Kijiji opens with your options.
184
184
  This tool kind of actually helped me to find housing in real life.
185
185
  The default city is “Ottawa.” You can easily change this.
186
- ### 6. Google Speak
186
+ ### 6. Prepend Each
187
+
188
+ Prepends a string to each line
189
+ ### 7. Google Speak
187
190
 
188
191
  Google speak is really useful. It speaks a statement using the Google
189
192
  Translate voice, which is probably the most authoritative and
@@ -191,7 +194,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
191
194
  It's kind of like “espeak” or similar tools, but it is much better.
192
195
  You need an internet connection for it to work.
193
196
  It is probably limited at 100 characters.
194
- ### 7. Selectlines
197
+ ### 8. Append Each
198
+
199
+ Appends a string to each line
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+ ### 9. Selectlines
195
201
 
196
202
  selectlines shows all nonblank lines from the input
197
203
  Example
@@ -199,7 +205,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
199
205
  (echo 2; echo; echo; echo) | selectlines
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  => 2
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207
  The result would be 2, with no blank lines after that
202
- ### 8. Processes
208
+ ### 10. Processes
203
209
 
204
210
  Processes lists all processes with a certain name
205
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  For example
@@ -207,7 +213,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  processes bash
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214
  processes ruby
209
215
  processes gsub
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- ### 9. Emeraldc
216
+ ### 11. Emeraldc
211
217
 
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  The Ultimate C Preprocessor
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  I'm naming this preprocessor “Emerald C.”
@@ -339,32 +345,32 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  sys 0m0.160s
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  Rust takes 0.637 seconds to compile an empty file!
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  That is not ideal.
342
- ### 10. Nth Word
348
+ ### 12. Nth Word
343
349
 
344
350
  nth_word gets the nth word of each line
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351
  For example
346
352
  nth_word 3
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353
  gets the 3rd word of each line
348
- ### 11. Last Nth
354
+ ### 13. Last Nth
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355
 
350
356
  Last nth gets the last n lines from input
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  For example
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  last_nth 3
353
359
  Would get the 3rd from the last line
354
- ### 12. Speakcat
360
+ ### 14. Speakcat
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361
 
356
362
  Speak cat is a tool like “cat,” which shows the content of files
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  (technically, it combines the content of files).
358
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  But speak cat also speaks the text.
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  Which could be useful in some circumstances.
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366
  It's kind of like “tee” to your ear.
361
- ### 13. UCA CLI
367
+ ### 15. UCA CLI
362
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363
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  CLI for uca app
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- ### 14. Big Num
370
+ ### 16. Big Num
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  ![UCA](./images/10.png)
367
- ### 15. Squeeze
373
+ ### 17. Squeeze
368
374
 
369
375
  Squeeze reads all input from stdin, then it prints it back omitting
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  argument 1 line from the front, and argument 2 lines from the back
@@ -374,20 +380,20 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  squeeze 5 3
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  This would omit the first 5 lines and the last 3 lines
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  squeeze 2 2 [file] also works, it outputs text to file
377
- ### 16. Dictate
383
+ ### 18. Dictate
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379
385
  Dictate opens web pages in emerald browser, or in any browser
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  (depending on the environment variable set), by you speaking, instead
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  of typing.
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  There is a mode called c_mode, that allows you to make code from
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  speaking.
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- ### 17. Prepend
390
+ ### 19. Prepend
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391
 
386
392
  prepend prepends input taken from the standard input to a file
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393
  Usage
388
394
  prepend [file]
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395
  This is text to be prepended
390
- ### 18. Chat Rb
396
+ ### 20. Chat Rb
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397
 
392
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  This program is excellent.
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  It's essentially a mix of ChatGPT and a shell, such as bash or ZSH.
@@ -396,16 +402,16 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  It outputs chatgpt data to an output folder in home folder and copies
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  it to clipboard
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  To run a shell command, prefix things with “c,” such as c gcc.....
399
- ### 19. Append
405
+ ### 21. Append
400
406
 
401
407
  Appends text to file
402
408
  Example
403
409
  append file
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410
  This is more text to be appended
405
- ### 20. Delete
411
+ ### 22. Delete
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412
 
407
413
  Recursively delete all files named a certain name.
408
- ### 21. Gsubip
414
+ ### 23. Gsubip
409
415
 
410
416
  Global Substitute (Gsub) In Place
411
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  gsubip is like gsub, which replaces all instances of a regular
@@ -422,7 +428,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
422
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  It takes exactly 3 arguments, no more, no fewer.
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  See also
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  gsub
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- ### 22. Rhyme
431
+ ### 24. Rhyme
426
432
 
427
433
  A very powerful music generator program that doesn't use AI.
428
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  See this channel as an example of potential usage of this public
@@ -603,7 +609,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
603
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  Disingenuous to the extreme, the society they subvert
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  The society is the ones who hurt
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611
  ---
606
- ### 23. Email
612
+ ### 25. Email
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613
 
608
614
  This currently doesn't work for gmail since 2022 due to policy changes.
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  A simple and practical tool to email people using Himalaya
@@ -618,10 +624,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  Example
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  email 'Gregory, I love your software!' gregorycohenvideos@gmail.com
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  my_friend@outlook.com person@example.com
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- ### 24. Floor
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+ ### 26. Floor
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628
 
623
629
  Gets the floor of numbers e.g. 21.3 -> 21
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- ### 25. Rgsub
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+ ### 27. Rgsub
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631
 
626
632
  Recursively replaces text.
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633
  Verbosely tells you everything that happens.
@@ -639,11 +645,11 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  -v, verbose mode
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646
  -- Indicate end of options.
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647
 
642
- ### 26. Lines
648
+ ### 28. Lines
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649
 
644
650
  Lines gets the number of files in the current folder that you are in.
645
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  It can also act like “wc -l” if you pipe data into it.
646
- ### 27. Clock
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+ ### 29. Clock
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648
654
  clock is useful
649
655
  clock is a command line alarm clock
@@ -660,14 +666,14 @@ ones are omitted.)
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  To stop it
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  Run this command
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  clock stop
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- ### 28. Emoji
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+ ### 30. Emoji
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665
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  Emoji converts words to emojis from the standard input
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672
  It can also speak the output
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  It can also copy the output to your clipboard
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  It is very useful
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  ![UCA](./images/6.png)
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- ### 29. Close
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+ ### 31. Close
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672
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  “Close” is a simple program that closes “Emerald Browser,” a new web
673
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  browser based on the same engine as Chrome. Currently, Emerald Browser
@@ -701,12 +707,12 @@ ones are omitted.)
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707
  some people.
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708
  Currently, content, like YouTube videos, can't be made fullscreen.
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709
  If anyone wants to contribute, feel free to!
704
- ### 30. Copy
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+ ### 32. Copy
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711
 
706
712
  copy copies the standard input
707
713
  Example
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714
  ls | copy
709
- ### 31. Gsub
715
+ ### 33. Gsub
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716
 
711
717
  Gsub is very powerful.
712
718
  Usage
@@ -715,7 +721,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
715
721
  cat text | gsub man dog
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722
  cat text | gsub 'man|boy|cat|dog' food
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723
  ls | gsub Desktop cat
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- ### 32. News
724
+ ### 34. News
719
725
 
720
726
  Gets the news from bbc
721
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  Usage
@@ -723,14 +729,14 @@ ones are omitted.)
723
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  news speak
724
730
  uses google_speak to SPEAK the news, one story at a time.
725
731
  ![UCA](./images/5.png)
726
- ### 33. Args
732
+ ### 35. Args
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733
 
728
734
  args is like a better xargs
729
735
  args works properly with spaces in the name of commands
730
736
  It takes exactly one argument
731
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  Example
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738
  ls | args “mv -t ../f”
733
- ### 34. Rnip
739
+ ### 36. Rnip
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740
 
735
741
  Replace Not In Place
736
742
  This is like gsub, but for strings, not for regular expressions
@@ -738,10 +744,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
738
744
  echo .......... | rnip foo bar
739
745
  See also
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746
  gsub
741
- ### 35. Trim
747
+ ### 37. Trim
742
748
 
743
749
  Trims spaces of each line
744
- ### 36. Quot
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+ ### 38. Quot
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751
 
746
752
  Turns quotes in text into good text and makes text presentable.
747
753
  Example
@@ -752,7 +758,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
752
758
  Example 3
753
759
  (Quote the file and output it)
754
760
  quot text_file
755
- ### 37. Open
761
+ ### 39. Open
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762
 
757
763
  “open” is a very efficient program that searches a query from google,
758
764
  and then opens it in Emerald Browser.
@@ -773,25 +779,25 @@ ones are omitted.)
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779
  See also
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780
  emerald-browser
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781
  close
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- ### 38. Swap
782
+ ### 40. Swap
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783
 
778
784
  Swaps two files
779
785
  Example
780
786
  swap text1 text2
781
- ### 39. Exp
787
+ ### 41. Exp
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788
 
783
789
  exp is an exponentiation tool
784
790
  (echo 5; echo 3) | exp
785
791
  => 125
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792
  (echo 2; echo 10) | exp
787
793
  => 1024
788
- ### 40. Div
794
+ ### 42. Div
789
795
 
790
796
  Divides numbers
791
797
  Example
792
798
  (echo 5000; echo 100) | div
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799
  => 50
794
- ### 41. Mul
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+ ### 43. Mul
795
801
 
796
802
  Multiply numbers
797
803
  echo 1 > file
@@ -801,10 +807,10 @@ ones are omitted.)
801
807
  echo 5 >> file
802
808
  cat file | mul
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809
  => 120
804
- ### 42. Nth
810
+ ### 44. Nth
805
811
 
806
812
  Nth gets the nth line from the input
807
- ### 43. Abs
813
+ ### 45. Abs
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814
 
809
815
  Abs gets the absolute value of an integer
810
816
  The absolute value of a number is the value of that number without its
@@ -817,13 +823,13 @@ ones are omitted.)
817
823
  => 12
818
824
  The last one would do -2 - -10, the result would be -12, and then the
819
825
  absolute value would be computed, and so the result would be 12.
820
- ### 44. Add
826
+ ### 46. Add
821
827
 
822
828
  See the sub example
823
829
  add adds integers from the standard input
824
830
  (echo 1; echo 2; echo 3) | add
825
831
  The result would be 6
826
- ### 45. Sub
832
+ ### 47. Sub
827
833
 
828
834
  Sub is a simple command line program that subtracts integers.
829
835
  For some reason, no simple program did this.
@@ -840,14 +846,14 @@ ones are omitted.)
840
846
  (echo 5; echo 2) | sub
841
847
  Result =>
842
848
  3
843
- ### 46. Rip
849
+ ### 48. Rip
844
850
 
845
851
  Replace In Place
846
852
  rip tool replaces a string, not a regular expression, with another
847
853
  string
848
854
  Example
849
855
  rip cat dog file
850
- ### 47. G+
856
+ ### 49. G+
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857
 
852
858
  A compiler for C += 2. If you want to use C++ with Python syntax, you
853
859
  can use this.
@@ -855,7 +861,7 @@ ones are omitted.)
855
861
  Example
856
862
  g+ a.cpp -o out
857
863
  See also README file & emerald-browser and its source
858
- ### 48. T
864
+ ### 50. T
859
865
 
860
866
  “t” is incredibly useful.
861
867
  It can be used many, many times every day by computer power users.
@@ -898,7 +904,9 @@ Navigation
898
904
  Emerald Browser
899
905
  Left Right.exe
900
906
  Find Housing
907
+ Prepend Each
901
908
  Google Speak
909
+ Append Each
902
910
  Selectlines
903
911
  Processes
904
912
  Emeraldc
data/VERSION_NUMBER CHANGED
@@ -1 +1 @@
1
- 82.0
1
+ 88.0
data/bin/append_each ADDED
Binary file
data/bin/google_speak CHANGED
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
1
- #!/bin/bash
2
- say() { local IFS=+;/usr/bin/mplayer -ao alsa -really-quiet -noconsolecontrols "http://translate.google.com/translate_tts?ie=UTF-8&client=tw-ob&q=$*&tl=en"; }
3
- say $* &>/dev/null
1
+ #!/bin/sh
2
+ IFS=+
3
+
4
+ mplayer -ao alsa -really-quiet -noconsolecontrols "http://translate.google.com/translate_tts?ie=UTF-8&client=tw-ob&q=$*&tl=en" 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null
data/bin/lines CHANGED
Binary file
data/bin/nth_word CHANGED
Binary file
data/bin/prepend_each ADDED
Binary file
data/bin/rgsub CHANGED
Binary file
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
1
+
2
+
3
+ Appends a string to each line
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
1
1
  This is a tool to bring sanity to politics.
2
2
 
3
- ![UCA](./images/12.png)
3
+ ![UCA](./images/8.png)
4
4
 
5
5
  It gets viewpoints from the person that see the good in each political side, left, right, left, right, etc.
6
6
 
data/documentation/page CHANGED
@@ -139,43 +139,43 @@ def main
139
139
  a = "<div class=inner>#{a}</div>"
140
140
 
141
141
  a = <<~EOF
142
- <!DOCTYPE html>
143
-
144
- <html>
145
- <head>
146
- <meta charset="UTF-8">
147
- <title>Democracy</title>
148
- <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"/>
149
- <style type=text/css>
150
- b, a {
151
-
152
- text-shadow:0px 0px 0px black;
153
- color:#009900;
154
- }
155
-
156
- h1, h2 {
157
- color: #009900;
158
- }
159
-
160
- .header {
161
- box-shadow: none;
162
- padding-top: 30px;
163
- margin-top: 20px;
164
- margin-bottom: 20px;
165
-
166
- }
167
-
168
- body {
169
- z-index: 0;
170
- }
171
-
172
- .cd1 {
173
- display:block;
174
- z-index: 1;
175
- }
176
-
177
- .cd2 {
178
- background-color:#{BACKGROUND_COLOR};
142
+ <!DOCTYPE html>
143
+
144
+ <html>
145
+ <head>
146
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
147
+ <title>Democracy</title>
148
+ <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"/>
149
+ <style type=text/css>
150
+ b, a {
151
+
152
+ text-shadow:0px 0px 0px black;
153
+ color:#009900;
154
+ }
155
+
156
+ h1, h2 {
157
+ color: #009900;
158
+ }
159
+
160
+ .header {
161
+ box-shadow: none;
162
+ padding-top: 30px;
163
+ margin-top: 20px;
164
+ margin-bottom: 20px;
165
+
166
+ }
167
+
168
+ body {
169
+ z-index: 0;
170
+ }
171
+
172
+ .cd1 {
173
+ display:block;
174
+ z-index: 1;
175
+ }
176
+
177
+ .cd2 {
178
+ background-color:#{BACKGROUND_COLOR};
179
179
  color:#{BG};
180
180
  width:50%;
181
181
  display:inline-block;
@@ -431,9 +431,9 @@ if (not_first_time) {
431
431
  str.gsub! '"', '\\"'
432
432
  str2.gsub! '"', '\\"'
433
433
 
434
- cmd = 'cd ..; cp index.html /home/a/foon/*/index.html; lynx -dump -stdin<README.md | \
435
- squeeze 0 0 README.md;
436
- ruby -e "print File.read(\"README.md\").gsub(10.chr, \' \'+10.chr).gsub(' << str << "," << str2 << ')"|squeeze 0 0 README.md'
434
+ cmd = 'cd ..; cp index.html /home/a/foon/*/index.html; lynx -dump -stdin<README.md | squeeze 0 0 README.md
435
+
436
+ ruby -e "print File.read(\"README.md\").gsub(10.chr, \' \'+10.chr).gsub(' << str << "," << str2 << ')" | squeeze 0 0 README.md'
437
437
  system cmd
438
438
 
439
439
  a = File.open("../README.md")
@@ -448,7 +448,7 @@ ruby -e "print File.read(\"README.md\").gsub(10.chr, \' \'+10.chr).gsub(' << st
448
448
  File.open "../README.md", "w" do |file|
449
449
  file << ("<h1 style='color: green'>" << lines[0] << " " << lines[1] << "</h1>" << ("\n " * 2))
450
450
  v = "Fx9x8cArK30"
451
- # file << "[![Video](https://img.youtube.com/vi/#{v}/maxresdefault.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=#{v}) "
451
+ file << "[![Video](https://img.youtube.com/vi/#{v}/maxresdefault.jpg)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=#{v}) "
452
452
  file << ("\n " * 5)
453
453
  file << rest.sub(/all\s*still/m, "all still").sub(/IFRAME.+?\n/, "").gsub(/\[\d+\]/,
454
454
  "").each_line.reject do |line|
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
1
+
2
+
3
+ Prepends a string to each line
@@ -1 +1 @@
1
- 81.0
1
+ 87.0