PSReadLine
WingetUI
PSReadLine | WingetUI | |
---|---|---|
15 | 25 | |
3,551 | 9,278 | |
1.5% | - | |
7.6 | 9.9 | |
13 days ago | 5 days ago | |
C# | PowerShell | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | MIT License |
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.
PSReadLine
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Tools to achieve a 10x developer workflow on Windows
sets up PSReadLine: command autocompletion and many other features.
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Wierd behaviour with using 'Dir' as an alias for my own function
Sounds like a bug, you should report it to PSReadLine. I believe PSReadLine and not PowerShell is the one that handles tab completion here, it sounds like it's caching the alias target so still thinks it is completing Get-ChildItem.
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DirectoryPredictor - Plugin module for PSReadLine to actively search the current directory for matching files
I then used PSReadLine's GitHub to understand how they made their own module, shared data with Cmdlets and everything inbetween. Which got me the rest of the day.
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Keyword search through PSReadline command history with '#' operator?
Highly recommend checking out the team’s sample file: https://github.com/PowerShell/PSReadLine/blob/master/PSReadLine/SamplePSReadLineProfile.ps1
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Using PowerShell for non system-administration
I have a hotkey that converts aliases on the command line when I hit alt+% That makes it easier to paste into discord or wherever. Why % ? I'm not sure, that's what what PSReadLine used
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Leveling up Windows Powershell with Oh My Posh
GitHub - PowerShell/PSReadLine: A bash inspired readline implementation for PowerShell
- PSReadline – bash inspired readline implementation for PowerShell
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Hot Reload with Notepad in .NET 6
Bit late, but it's PSReadLine
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New PowerShell Version - v7.2.0-preview.6: [7.2.0-preview.6] - 2021-05-27
Just a bit of a heads up. The PSReadLine 2.2.0 beta 1 and beta 2 do not work with this release so either you can downgrade to PSReadLine 2.1.0 or stay on PowerShell 7.2.0 preview 5. The PSReadLine 2.2.0 beta 3 will solve the issue.
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How to solve "Update-Help: Failed to update Help for the module(s) 'PSReadline, WindowsUpdateProvider' with UI culture(s) {en-US} : One or more errors occurred. (Response status code does not indicate success: 404 (The specified blob does not exist.).)." ?
The PSReadline update-help failing is new and should probably have an issue filed on their github, assuming there isn't one already. The failure on "WindowsUpdateProvider" has been around for years, you're missing help for these cmdlets without it
WingetUI
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[Rant] Your Software Isn't the Only One Our Company Uses FFS
Ya I use Chocolatey sometimes but now I use WingetUI which can pull from multiple sources including Chocolatey. Although If anyone decides to try it the constant update notifications can be quite annoying but they can be disabled if you wish.
- MS and Windows gets a lot of (well deserved) hate, but winget is just fantastic!
- Solutions Open Source pour mettre à jour vos logiciels et vos Drivers sous Windows
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Tools to achieve a 10x developer workflow on Windows
Second, install all the packages and programming languages. For this I use WingetUI, an amazing GUI for finding and managing packages from all sorts of windows package managers. Edit WingetUI-Packages.json by deleting the packages you don't want, then import the file into WingetUI and install the packages.
- The software set up part takes significantly more time for me than the hardware assembly part
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Install wsl2 through PowerShell or store?
WingetUI - WingetUI: A better GUI for your package managers: As in WinGet (+MS Store), Chocolatey, Scoop, npm, pip, ...(?)
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WingetUI – A better UI for your package managers
It is available on winget and scoop according to:
https://github.com/marticliment/WingetUI/#installation
Maybe soon on Chocolately too.
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JAPM - TUI package manager
The ncurses tui is nice, maybe you can make a wrapper with ideas from topgrade and/or Wingetui
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Scoop
https://github.com/marticliment/WingetUI
... provides a nice interface to both.
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Can you advise me, if there is a platform similar to "Steam" or "Google Play Store" dedicated exclusively to software for Windows?
I use scoop from command line. But after I saw your post, I searched and found WingetUI which might be a good GUI solution.
What are some alternatives?
ohmyzsh - 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,300+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
proxinject - a socks5 proxy injection tool for Windows, making selected processes proxy-able
libxo - The libxo library allows an application to generate text, XML, JSON, and HTML output using a common set of function calls. The application decides at run time which output style should be produced.
scoop-directory - A searchable directory of buckets for the scoop package manager for Windows
PSScriptAnalyzer - Download ScriptAnalyzer from PowerShellGallery
WinGetty - An open source REST Backend for creating a private WinGet Repo without any cloud dependency.
oh-my-posh - The most customisable and low-latency cross platform/shell prompt renderer
WoeUSB-ng - WoeUSB-ng is a simple tool that enable you to create your own usb stick windows installer from an iso image or a real DVD. This is a rewrite of original WoeUSB.
bass - Make Bash utilities usable in Fish shell
Winget-AutoUpdate - WAU daily updates apps as system and notify connected users. (Allowlist and Blocklist support)
Windows Terminal - The new Windows Terminal and the original Windows console host, all in the same place!
winget-cli - WinGet is the Windows Package Manager. This project includes a CLI (Command Line Interface), PowerShell modules, and a COM (Component Object Model) API (Application Programming Interface).