-
Updated
Oct 8, 2020 - R
literate-programming
Here are 250 public repositories matching this topic...
-
Updated
Oct 8, 2020 - Jupyter Notebook
-
Updated
Oct 9, 2020 - Jupyter Notebook
-
Updated
Oct 9, 2020 - Assembly
-
Updated
Oct 3, 2020 - Julia
-
Updated
Sep 2, 2020 - D
-
Updated
Sep 9, 2020 - TypeScript
-
Updated
May 27, 2020 - R
-
Updated
Sep 27, 2020 - Julia
-
Updated
May 12, 2020 - Emacs Lisp
-
Updated
Jan 24, 2017 - Go
-
Updated
Jan 11, 2016 - TeX
-
Updated
Oct 5, 2020 - YASnippet
-
Updated
Aug 14, 2020 - Python
-
Updated
Aug 19, 2020 - Lua
-
Updated
Jul 3, 2020 - Emacs Lisp
-
Updated
Oct 31, 2019 - Python
-
Updated
Aug 17, 2020 - C++
-
Updated
Sep 15, 2020 - Jupyter Notebook
-
Updated
Jul 7, 2020 - Python
-
Updated
Dec 4, 2019 - Shell
-
Updated
Oct 2, 2020 - TeX
-
Updated
Jul 21, 2018 - Shell
-
Updated
Aug 21, 2020 - Rust
This should be quite easy. There is not much to check:
- generate docs and see that the files exist: both transformed sources and md-files
- check that old files are cleaned up
- check that setting locations map works as expected
-
Updated
Sep 25, 2020 - Shell
-
Updated
Nov 14, 2019 - R
Improve this page
Add a description, image, and links to the literate-programming topic page so that developers can more easily learn about it.
Add this topic to your repo
To associate your repository with the literate-programming topic, visit your repo's landing page and select "manage topics."


Hi!😃 I am wondering if there are test-images or something that extensively test if things are implemented correctly? The code I came up with does not match your example code exactly and I'd like to see if would make a difference in a hypothetical "compliance test suite".
First, thanks for the guide, I enjoyed it