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It's like dotfiles, but no, it's just Lua scripts I find useful.
.abandoned | ||
htmlparser | ||
2pdf.lua | ||
2webm.lua | ||
720p.lua | ||
download-subtitles.lua | ||
htmlparser.lua | ||
install-lua5.1-macos.sh | ||
json.lua | ||
make-epub.lua | ||
print-arguments.lua | ||
README.md | ||
reformat.lua | ||
storage-statistics.lua | ||
test.lua | ||
unique-file-names.lua | ||
unique-file-paths.lua | ||
unique-files.lua | ||
utility-functions.lua | ||
utility-quickref-test.lua | ||
video-dl.lua |
.lua-files
Personally convenient Lua scripts to add to my path.
Installation
- Put this folder somewhere.
- Add that somewhere to your path. (On Windows, search for Environment Variables (it's "part of" Control Panel) and use the UI to add them to System variables.)
- (On Windows) Add
.LUA
to PATHEXT.
Scripts
2webm.lua
: Converts everything in the working directory to .webm files.llm.lua
: (Windows only!) A very WIP script for working with LLMs through WSL using ollama.print-arguments.lua
: For testing how a Lua script receives arguments, because this can be platform-specific.storage-statistics.lua
: Prints a variety of statistics about the files within the current directory. Requires LFS.test.lua
: (Dev Test) Used repeatedly while working on these scripts to verify minor details I'm forgetful about.utility-functions.lua
: (Library) Required for many of these scripts to run.video-dl.lua
: A few premade command lines for usingyt-dlp
to download what I want quicker.
make-epub.lua
This script is only intended for personal use. Do not use it to infringe on copyright.
Usage:
make-epub.lua <config (JSON file)> [action]
If "." is used instead of a JSON file, every JSON file in the current directory
will be used to make multiple ebooks back-to-back.
[action]: If not specified, all steps will be taken in order (except cleanall).
download: All pages will be downloaded to their own HTML files.
convert: Each page is converted to Markdown.
concat: A file is created for each section out of its pages.
markdown: Metadata frontmatter and Markdown section files will be
concatenated into a single Markdown file.
epub: Markdown file will be converted to an ePub using pandoc.
cleanpage: All page files will be deleted, along with their extra
directories.
cleanall: Deletes everything except the config file and ePub.
Requirements:
- Binaries: pandoc, curl
The JSON config spec has two major variations ("Book" and "Anthology").
The following is shared:
authors
: (Optional) Array of Strings: Author names. First in the list is used as a byline in the final output. (Legacy: Anauthor
string works as well. If this exists, it will be first.)title
: (Optional) String: Title of book.base_file_name
: (Optional) String: Alternate final file name. (Default: "title
byauthor
" or just "title
".)keywords
: Array of Strings: Keywords/Tags. (I'm not sure what the difference is in the final output so it goes in both.)sections
: See "Book"/"Anthology" variations. (I call LitErotica's stories sections - because they are often part of a larger whole.)section_titles
: (Optional) Array of Strings: The titles to be used for Table of Contents / headings. (Ifsections.naming
is specified,section_titles
will be ignored.)lazy_titling
: (Optional) Boolean: URLs will be used to generate section titles. (Warning: This process is likely to create janky titles.)page_counts
: Array of Integers: The number of pages on LitErotica per "story". (I call them sections because this script was made to put together story series originally.)
Variation: Book
base_url
: String: A partial URL that is the beginning of the URL used for each section (story) on LitErotica. (This script currently only works for stories that end in a padded two-digit number.) (Technically optional iffirst_section_url
is specified, andsections.start
andsections.finish
are both1
.)first_section_url
: (Optional) String: Some stories don't have the same URL structure for their first section. This allows you to specify its full URL.sections
: Object defining which sections to download, and what to call them (ie. Chapters, Parts, ..).start
: (Optional) Number: Where to start. (1
is the default, since it is the most common.)finish
: Number: Where to end.naming
: (Optional) String: How to name sections in the final output. The result is[naming] [#]
(using section numbers). (If not specified, sections will not have headings.)automatic_naming
: (Optional) Boolean: If any line matches "Prologue" or "Chapter #" (any number), it will be made into a heading. (Note: This does not overridenaming
. Both can be used together.) (Other patterns will be added as I find them.)
Example:
{
"authors": ["Name"],
"title": "Book",
"base_file_name": "Book",
"keywords": ["erotica", "fantasy"],
"base_url": "https://www.literotica.com/s/title-ch-",
"first_section_url": "https://www.literotica.com/s/title",
"sections": {
"start": 1,
"finish": 4,
"naming": "Chapter",
"automatic_naming": true
},
"page_counts": [1, 5, 3, 3]
}
Variation: Anthology
manually_specified_sections
: (Optional) Boolean, must betrue
. Technically not required as the script is capable of figuring out you are using this variation, but should be included.sections
: Array of Strings: A complete URL for each story.section_titles
: (Required) Array of Strings: The titles to be used for Table of Contents / headings. (Must be in the same order assections
.)
Example:
{
"authors": ["Name"],
"title": "Anthology",
"keywords": ["LitErotica", "erotica"],
"manually_specified_sections": true,
"sections": [
"https://www.literotica.com/s/unique-title",
"https://www.literotica.com/s/another-title"
],
"section_titles": [
"Unique Title",
"Another Title"
],
"page_counts": [5, 2]
}