org-mode parser in rust
Go to file
Tom Alexander 7fafbfb6bb
Do not consume whitespace in the final plain list item.
2023-08-16 17:37:19 -04:00
.lighthouse Switch to specifying timeouts instead of timeout in tekton pipelinerun. 2023-08-13 02:20:16 -04:00
docker Update to the latest org-mode. 2023-08-14 13:33:05 -04:00
notes Add notes about optimization ideas. 2023-08-14 23:16:23 -04:00
org_mode_samples Add notes about optimization ideas. 2023-08-14 23:16:23 -04:00
scripts Add support for tracing in run_docker_compare.bash. 2023-08-14 16:12:31 -04:00
src Do not consume whitespace in the final plain list item. 2023-08-16 17:37:19 -04:00
tests Introduce a sexp_with_padding parser. 2023-04-21 20:53:55 -04:00
.dockerignore Initial setup for the parser. 2022-07-16 14:17:33 -04:00
.gitignore Initial setup for the parser. 2022-07-16 14:17:33 -04:00
Cargo.toml Explicitly list which files to include in the cargo package. 2023-08-11 00:11:54 -04:00
LICENSE Add a license. 2022-07-17 18:45:51 -04:00
Makefile Use the rust cache for make dockertest. 2023-08-14 23:17:38 -04:00
README.md Bump version to 0.1.2 and change README to markdown. 2023-08-11 00:00:49 -04:00
build.rs Disable the test showing my plain list implementation is broken. 2023-08-14 23:20:28 -04:00
rustfmt.toml Add an exit matcher to plain text. 2023-04-22 19:46:27 -04:00

README.md

Organic - Free Range Org-Mode

Organic is an emacs-less implementation of an org-mode parser.

Project Status

This project is a personal learning project to grow my experience in rust. It is under development and at this time I would not recommend anyone use this code. The goal is to turn this into a project others can use, at which point more information will appear in this README.

License

This project is released under the public-domain-equivalent 0BSD license. This license puts no restrictions on the use of this code (you do not even have to include the copyright notice or license text when using it). HOWEVER, this project has a couple permissively licensed dependencies which do require their copyright notices and/or license texts to be included. I am not a lawyer and this is not legal advice but it is my layperson's understanding that if you distribute a binary with this library linked in, you will need to abide by their terms since their code will also be linked in your binary. I try to keep the dependencies to a minimum and the most restrictive dependency I will ever include is a permissively licensed one.