Looking for a replacement for GitHub Gist. Only limitation is I would rather it not be self-hosted, but feel free to provide those if you really enjoy what you are using.

Edited to include an additional requirement
I also like that I can log in and get a list of my items. I don’t mind keeping up with a site, or single link, but don’t want to have to keep up with hundreds of links. I don’t necessarily care about privacy in this instance. I mostly use it to keep one-liner commands.

Maybe I would be better moving to a note taking app.

  • c2c2@kbin.socialOP
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    1 year ago

    Right now Pastebin or Gitlab snippets is looking like where I may land.

    I like the paste.debian idea but the distros I checked had no way to keep track of my pastes. paste.ubuntu did BUT it clearly stated that your stuff was meant to be temporary and could be deleted at any time.

    Gitlab snippets led me to look at Codeberg also, but it does not appear they have an alternative.

  • andyburke@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    what about a microblog here? are there limitations on their size? what are those limits like?

    I mean, if the things support markdown and a decent storage space, that sounds like something better than a tweet and a gist combined.

    edit: I went and looked a little myself, and it seems microblogs must be posted to a magazine? can’t I just publish one from my own user profile or something?

    • c2c2@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      @andyburke you inspired me

      /m/snippets for everyone to Microblog their useful snippets

      Not ideal, like @GerogeWL mentioned, but could be interesting to see what people post

    • GeorgeWL@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      That’s not ideal.

      Gists have a very useful tooling that you can define file extensions and then the parser shows code highlighting automatically based on the file extension.

      There’s nothing even close to that here

      • andyburke@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Markdown often supports code blocks with the language specified, let’s see what happens here:

        use strict;
        
        
        • andyburke@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Could use some better formatting, but that’s as easy as a library integration for a lot of hosts, I would bet.

          • Pamasich@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Iirc I saw formatting for code blocks in the kbin commit history, so we’ll likely get something once they finalize a new release and update kbin.social.