Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
Handwritten.js – Convert typed text to realistic handwriting
40 points by alias-rahil on Aug 15, 2020 | hide | past | favorite | 15 comments


You'd be better off posting this as a Show HN. See https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html and the tips at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22336638.

Post your main link (https://github.com/alias-rahil/handwritten.js), then add a first comment to the thread giving the backstory of how you came to work on this, and explaining what's different about it. That tends to seed discussion in a good direction. Good luck!


Thanks for pointing me in the right direction! I am new to HN and I didn't knew about the tag.


This is cool. Did you introduce randomness somehow? It looks like the 'it' in the first two sentences are different. But it could just be my phone.


There appear to be different variations on the letters (src/dataset), one of which is randomly selected.



4 posts this week.... we get it.


can it be expanded to include multiple languages and fonts ?


This tool takes a file that can be consumed both by machines and humans and converts it to something that is impossible to consume by machines and hard to consume by humans, also inflating the document size. What are you trying to achieve with this?


This has uses for a university student. Last week I had the option to have 6 pages of cheat sheets during the final exam with the stipulation that all notes were handwritten. I find this rule to be really annoying because if I have the option of my own notes during the exam, it should not matter whether it is handwritten or not.

Anyway, to the creator of this tool: Thank you. I really wish I had known about this before my exam yesterday. This could have saved me hours of time, had I known about it. I will also be bookmarking this for the future, for when the instructors enforce such a rule again.


Such an engineer thing to say. ;)


Are you meaning it in a negative way?


Not at all! It's just funny how different brains work. He has a very valid point from an engineering perspective.


I'd imagine a OCR could probably manage to consume it, but you could also mark it up with fallback text for screen readers. Everything inflates document size, and that's okay, it's what documents are for!


For art, games etc?


That makes sense, you could make a puzzle game with this




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: