10 comments

  • ssivark 4 hours ago
    Couldn't help riffing off on a tangent from the title (since the article is about diagramming tools)...

    Dylan Beattie has a thought-provoking presentation for anyone who believes that "plain text" is a simple / solid substrate for computing: "There's no such thing as plain text" https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/theres-no-such-thing-as... (you'll find many videos from different conferences)

    • rmunn 30 minutes ago
      Haven't watched the videos yet, but from the slides, it looks like part of the issue he was talking about was encodings (there's a slide illustrating UTF-16LE ve UTF-16BE, for example). Thankfully, with UTF-8 becoming the default everywhere (so that you need a really good reason not to use it for any given document), we're back at "yes, there is such a thing as plain text" again. It has a much larger set of valid characters, but if you receive a text file without knowing its encoding, you can just assume it's UTF-8 and have a 99.7% chance of being right.

      FINALLY.

  • draven 17 minutes ago
    Also: M-x artist-mode in emacs.
  • suprjami 3 hours ago
    The list at the top could be longer:

    - https://asciiflow.com/

    - https://asciidraw.github.io/

    Anybody know more?

  • dlcarrier 3 hours ago
    From the title, I was not expecting a bunch of extended ASCII characters.
    • Freak_NL 1 hour ago
      The article mentioned that the use of 'ASCII' within the context of those tools should not be seen as the limited character set ASCII. Personally, I would avoid mentioning ASCII at all.

      The title just talks of plain text though, and plain text usually means UTF-8 encoded text these days. Plain, as in conventional, standardised, portable, and editable with any text editor. I would be surprised if someone talked about plain text as being limited to just ASCII.

  • keyle 43 minutes ago
    I'm all for it, but it's dangerously mixing ASCII with the meaning of plain-text...
  • OuterVale 4 hours ago
    Unsung is one of the best little blogs around. Well worth checking out the rest of the posts.
  • shevy-java 31 minutes ago
    Text and text files are simple. I think this is their number #1 advantage.

    There are limitations though. Compare a database of .yml files to a database in a DBMS. I wrote a custom forum via ruby + yaml files. It also works. It also can not compete anywhere with e. g. rails/activerecord and so forth. Its sole advantage is simplicity. Everywhere else it loses without even a fight.

  • nullhole 3 hours ago
    I have a mixed opinion of unicode, but it's hard not to love the box-drawing / block-element chars.
  • edelkas 5 hours ago
    [dead]