This reminds me of Mozilla's Ubiquity a few years ago [1]. You could write commands for it with JavaScript that would make http requests as you type and render bits of HTML. It seems Ubiquity no longer exists, which is a shame.<p>I'd love to see something like this that integrates with the browser or command line. Perhaps Ubuntu's Unity comes close.<p>[1] <a href="https://wiki.mozilla.org/Labs/Ubiquity" rel="nofollow">https://wiki.mozilla.org/Labs/Ubiquity</a>
It seems great. Thanks.<p>Is there any possibility to integrate this with Dash? (<a href="http://kapeli.com" rel="nofollow">http://kapeli.com</a>). I like having offline documentation and being able to search dash via alfred with suggestions would be great.
Oh man, I've been holding off on upgrading Alfred for a while because I didn't see the point, and now I'm upgrading so I can download a free add-on. This is an honest killer app for Alfred's new workflow feature.
I clicked the link, I saw something I might like and would use but I found absolutely no instructions or information on how to actually use the downloaded archive. Is it mac only? How do you run it?
Are there any tools that can read most standard formats of library documentation (cross-language) and then present it all in a standardised way, e.g. in a locally hosted web app?