Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
X-Debbugs-Cc: debian-r...@lists.debian.org

* Package name    : harper
  Version         : 0.10.0
  Upstream Contact: Elijah Potter
* URL             : https://writewithharper.com/
* License         : Apache-2.0
  Programming Lang: Rust
  Description     : grammar checker for developers

Harper is an English grammar checker designed to be just right. You
can think of it as an open-source alternative to Grammarly. I created
it after years of dealing with the shortcomings of the competition.

Grammarly was too expensive and too overbearing. Its suggestions
lacked context, and were often just plain wrong. Not to mention: it's
a privacy nightmare. Everything you write with Grammarly is sent to
their servers. Their privacy policy claims they don't sell the data,
but that doesn't mean they don't use it to train large language models
and god knows what else. Not only that, but the round-trip-time of the
network request makes revising your work all the more tedious.

LanguageTool is great, if you have gigabytes of RAM to spare and are
willing to download the ~16GB n-gram dataset. Besides the memory
requirements, I found LanguageTool too slow: it would take several
seconds to lint even a moderate-size document.

That's why I created Harper: it is the grammar checker that fits my
needs. Not only does it take milliseconds to lint a document, take
less than 1/50th of LanguageTool's memory footprint, but it is also
completely private.

----

There are already the standard set of spell checkers in Debian
(aspell, ispell, hunspell and so on), but new things are coming out
out there. There's languagetool which we've been trying to package for
decades at this point (#403619) and grammalecte entered Debian
recently (but it's for French).

Harper is *really* impressive: the home page, above, shows a demo that
runs, *in-browser* in seemingly realtime. For the "desktop" usage, it
provides an LSP interface, so that can plug pretty much in any modern
editor.

I don't know how much work it would be to deal with that rust package,
but i would *love* to see that in Debian!

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