NeoVintageous
moreutils
NeoVintageous | moreutils | |
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4 | 19 | |
650 | 2 | |
1.7% | - | |
9.3 | 0.0 | |
20 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
Python | Shell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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NeoVintageous
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Vim Keybindings Everywhere – The Ultimate List
Fails to mention my favourite text editor, Sublime Text which has an optional Vim mode built in (Vintage). I personally am using NeoVintageous[0] which allows you to run various ex commands and shell commands, as well as incorporating features from popular plugins such as vim-surround.
0. https://github.com/NeoVintageous/NeoVintageous
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Getting Sublime Text modal
So last night I enabled Vintage mode in Sublime via a package called NeoVintageous and this evening I've disabled NeoVintageous and have enabled Sublime's built-in Vintage mode with vintage_ctrl_keys on instead.
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if you're on macOS and use Vim moves in Sublime Text, you may like this
i'm a long term Sublime Text user (10+ years), using NeoVintageous: https://github.com/NeoVintageous/NeoVintageous
- Sublime Text 4 released
moreutils
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Pipexec – Handling pipe of commands like a single command
I use mutlios and even I'm not that attached to it. The majority of my use is combined with process substitution, and could be replaced with common-ish tools like pee¹ or pipexec for more complex cases. The only occasion when I'm thankful for it is if I want to use a shell function as a target, but there are workarounds for that too.
As a noclobber user the footgun is largely hidden to me, but I feel its presence. multios without globbing support would be less useful, but would still work for most of my use cases. Scanning my shell history I see various cases of relying on zsh's ability to apply sorting and filtering to globs with multios' input redirection, but only a couple where I want that in output redirection.
Even with multios unset the behaviour is different between zsh and bash. For example, multios disables all the expansion, so zsh behaves like more like dash with ': >t{1,2}' by creating a file instead producing an error like bash does.
[FWIW, I google'd multiios to link the option in original comment. It really feels to me like it needs double-i, and I read the single i name the same way you do.]
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I'd be one of those people whose desire for dgsh-like functionality wanes. If it was slight DSL that I could "upgrade" pipelines to I'd probably use it, but not enough to warrant working on it or switching other tooling to support it.
The end of result of this morning's pipeline was breaking my jobs up, and applying some judicious use of nq² to keep track of it. I'd follow your advice and move on to more specialist tools if the job grew significantly or if it became a regular occurrence.
¹ https://joeyh.name/code/moreutils/
² https://git.vuxu.org/nq/about/
- Show HN: Simple Script for Enhanced LLM Interaction in Vim
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The shell and its crappy handling of whitespace
For filesystem operations like batch renames at least, I am usually happy with `vidir` (part of `moreutils`: https://joeyh.name/code/moreutils/).
`vidir [path]` will open an editor with the given directory as buffer contents.
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Show HN: LineSelect, shell utility to interactively select lines in a pipeline
See also: "vipe" from the excellent "moreutils" package: https://joeyh.name/code/moreutils/
There are some other gems in this package. The ones I find myself using regularly are 'ts' and 'sponge' but I'm sure the useful subset depends a lot on the kind of work you are doing
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Vim Keybindings Everywhere – The Ultimate List
Joey Hess' excellent moreutils¹ comes with vipe which is a generalised solution for these types of tasks. It allows you to run whatever $EDITOR you've configured mid-pipe, making it possible to work your changes up in an interactive editor session. Useful for those of us not smart enough to write up our changes as a series of -c arguments ;)
(It fixes the vim issue by virtue of using a temporary file to do the magic)
¹ https://joeyh.name/code/moreutils/
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vimv has not only changed my workflow, it changed my life
Sounds like `vidir` from moreutils.
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What "nice-to-have" CLI tools do you know?
vidir and a few others from moreutils
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rtl_fm - record and also output audio on a speaker (Raspberry pi?)
Use pee (yes, I know) from moreutils. Something like:
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How to re-order the strings of a filename in bulk?
I would use vidir from moreutils. Then you can do any edits and play around with any regexes you want!
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Should i learn file management using terminal?
For bulk file renaming, I recommend vidir from moreutils - it lets you rename everything in a directory with your $EDITOR (vim being the default).
What are some alternatives?
ActualVim - Sublime Text 3 input mode using Neovim. Issues are closed, feel free to submit Pull Requests if you have bug fixes however.
pipe-rename - Rename your files using your favorite text editor
Terminus - Bring a real terminal to Sublime Text
atomicxt
LSP - Client implementation of the Language Server Protocol for Sublime Text
map.xplr - Visually inspect and interactively execute batch commands using xplr
ncm2 - :heart: Slim, Fast and Hackable Completion Framework for Neovim
lineselect - Shell utility to interactively select lines from stdin
joes-sandbox
fstring - Make searching for text strings easier on Linux :)
vim-like-pile - Sources of Big Pile of Vim-like
vidir - edit directory in $EDITOR (better than vim . with netrw)