Website, community, Github

I’ve been working on an alternative web UI for Lemmy for a couple weeks now and it’s got enough features I wanted to share it. I love that somehow people have found it despite me never having posted online about it until now (until a couple days ago it was called sx-lemmy, sx being an abbreviation of my username) so you might have seen it in a list already.

Alexandrite is a (for the moment) desktop-first Lemmy interface, I primarily use Lemmy on my computer and I wanted a more convenient way to view posts and comments without juggling tabs or losing my place in the feed (with infinite scrolling). It’s still very much in beta, and I have a lot of work to do still, but it’s got most of the basic features.

You can view a post and comments in an overlay without losing where you scrolled to:

A non-exhaustive list of things you can do:

  • view home/community/user/communities feeds
  • post/comment
  • subscribe to communities
  • vote
  • save posts
  • search
  • inbox stuff

Noteworthy missing features:

  • reporting
  • blocking users/communities
  • mod tools
  • image uploading
  • automatic linkifying of urls/communities/users in comments/posts

For those who care, it’s all Sveltekit which is a dream to work with. Alexandrite is the name of the kind of gem in my wife’s wedding ring, it looks cool and changes color in the light.

  • Leraje@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m now replying to you from Alexandrite - so yes, that was it :)

    Never got a warning from Lemmy…weird.

    • sheodox@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Woo! I’ll put the same 60 character limit on my login form then. Thanks for figuring this out with me!

      It would appear the way it’s setup with the hard character limit there’s probably no good way for them to figure out if you were trying to input a longer password, since everything gets cut off at 60 regardless. Totally understandable though, not many people use that long of passwords.

      • Leraje@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The way I’ve coded such things is just to count the length of the string in the field and then do an if() to test if’s greater than or less than a specific length. I’m surprised Lemmy doesn’t do that.

        Thanks are due to you, not me, for helping me figure this out :)

        • sheodox@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Hey I pushed some changes, including a 60 character maxlength. If you’re self hosting the dev version you’ll need to git pull, npm install again and re-run npm run dev. The npm install is because I had to add support for maxlength to the text inputs which I import from my own UI library, and I needed to bump the version for that.