LS_COLORS
asciinema
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LS_COLORS | asciinema | |
---|---|---|
3 | 103 | |
2,007 | 13,199 | |
- | 2.0% | |
6.7 | 9.6 | |
3 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Shell | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
LS_COLORS
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What color scheme do you use for LS_COLORS?
obligatory https://github.com/trapd00r/LS_COLORS
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Exa · A Modern Replacement for ls
2. if you want more or different colours, you can use the `LS_COLORS` environment variable. There are various pre-made snippets around you may want to use. e.g. https://github.com/trapd00r/LS_COLORS
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How to make colorful text like this in ohmyzsh?
Along with lsd or exa, I would recommend you check/install LSCOLORS, which enhances the available pallet based on file types.
asciinema
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Asciinema 3.0 will be rewritten in Rust
Incorrect link. Just goes to the list of open requests.
Here is a ticket which mentor the rust rewrite, perhaps this was what was intended: https://github.com/asciinema/asciinema/pull/579
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Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (February 2024)
Location: Europe
Remote: Yes
Willing to relocate: No
Technologies: Rust, Elixir, Nix(OS), WASM, AWS
Résumé/CV: Available upon request
Github: https://github.com/ku1ik
Open-source: creator of https://asciinema.org, contributor and maintainer of many other projects (see Github profile)
Email: hnhire /at/ defn /dot/ 33mail /dot/ com
20 years of professional experience. I enjoy anything backend related, e.g APIs, profiling and solving performance problems, building high performance, low-latency network solutions, among many other things.
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[2023 Day 8 (Part 2)] The slot machine way!
This might be a good usecase for https://asciinema.org/
- Asciinema: Record and share your terminal sessions, the simple way
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Show HN: Hackreels – Animate your code in HD
I do quite a lot of this kind of stuff for my job. Some context that may be useful.
Often the full IDE is needed. I record a lot of gifs of VSCode, where part of the gif is typing code, part is interacting with the rest of the IDE / terminal - perhaps to run the code and view the output.
For me the killer app would be one which could pre-record keystrokes (and maybe mouse actions) so that I could do them error free. I often attempt a gif 10 times before I'm happy with the outcome.
I don't personally love the transition animation. I would want the option for something that seems like it's being typed.
The closest tools I've found are:
Typewriter VSCode extesion: Allows you to copy text and then "types" it out for you. https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=dansilve...
Ascii Cinema: https://asciinema.org/
- Short form video
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Rsh: Ruby SHell
but it seems pretty popular for this kind of screen recording.
[1] https://asciinema.org/
What are some alternatives?
powerlevel10k - A Zsh theme
terminalizer - 🦄 Record your terminal and generate animated gif images or share a web player
lsd - The next gen ls command
TabNine - AI Code Completions
gnome-terminal - An arctic, north-bluish clean and elegant GNOME Terminal color theme.
nerd-fonts - Iconic font aggregator, collection, & patcher. 3,600+ icons, 50+ patched fonts: Hack, Source Code Pro, more. Glyph collections: Font Awesome, Material Design Icons, Octicons, & more
konsole - An arctic, north-bluish clean and elegant Konsole color scheme.
OSCP-Exam-Report-Template-Markdown - :orange_book: Markdown Templates for Offensive Security OSCP, OSWE, OSCE, OSEE, OSWP exam report
colorls - A Ruby gem that beautifies the terminal's ls command, with color and font-awesome icons. :tada:
asciinema-player - Web player for terminal session recordings
exodus - Painless relocation of Linux binaries–and all of their dependencies–without containers.
telescope-repo.nvim - 🦘 Jump into the repositories (git, mercurial…) of your filesystem with telescope.nvim, without any setup