TBX-Scope
homebrew-bundle
TBX-Scope | homebrew-bundle | |
---|---|---|
5 | 27 | |
2 | 5,113 | |
- | 0.7% | |
10.0 | 8.8 | |
over 1 year ago | 5 days ago | |
Swift | Ruby | |
- | 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.
TBX-Scope
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Hitting roadblocks when trying to build my own projects
You can then use the same technique of identifying annoying things in your life and fixing them to create more and more complex apps. The next thing I hated was that the only way to browse through a TBX termbase was to download massive bloated CAT apps (a niche use case, but that's the point). So I created TBX Scope to fix that problem by creating a lightweight TBX browser. I wanted to make this app available on the App Store, so I learned all about app signing, the review process, and much more
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Cork, a neat GUI for Homebrew
Hey, thank you very much for the encouraging words! I'm glad you like the organization :D If you like how Cork is organized, you'll love TBX Scope
- Native Mac Application Development in 2023
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My first macOS app: An open-source browser for TBX-based termbases built with SwiftUI
This app is completely free and open source, and you can inspect its source code in this repository.
- What’s everyone working on this month? (October 2022)
homebrew-bundle
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How do you setup a new Mac?
I maintain a Brewfile (https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-bundle) which contains the majority of the non-project specific applications that I like to install on any new Mac:
https://github.com/jonahgeorge/dotfiles/tree/main
What's really nice is the `cask` & `mas` keywords allow you to install .dmg files & directly from the App Store.
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While its not included in there yet, I've been experimenting with maintaining a private Homebrew tap which contains my ~/bin directory as opposed to shell aliases.
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Pkgx – “Run Anything” from the creator of brew
> It's strange that people are so against declarative systems, or even file-based OS configuration. When I get my new Macbook I was up-and-running within a few minutes. I can't imagine maintaining a list of brews I need to re-install just to set up everything + my configs + everything else.
I haven’t had time to try Nix yet, but HomeBrew does have a declarative-ish workflow that I’ve been using for years:
[Brew Bundle](https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-bundle) let’s you have a plaintext file listing all packages you want installed on your system. Add a line for stuff you want installed, delete a line for stuff you want removed, invoke it the right way and it will install/remove packages until your system matches the list. The initial list can be generated by “brew bundle dump” or something like that.
For configuration, I find that a normal dotfile repo cloned into my ~/.config (with a script that maintains symlinks to config files in e.g. ~/Library) works well enough for my use.
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Ask HN: What are your favorite iOS/macOS automations?
Brew supports dumping installed things into a brewfile: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-bundle
I was using text files before as well to manage it.
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Show HN: Applite – Clean Homebrew front end app for macOS built with SwiftUI
Assuming everyone's on a Mac, I'm actually surprised there isn't that much use of something like homebrew-bundle[1]. It's definitely nicer to have your tooling run natively rather than, say, trying to wrap everything in Docker, or trying to get everybody on board with nix or guix.
I think the only real issue here is that you can't really pin to specific versions unless a formula exists, and there is no guarantee that a formula with a pinned version will stick around because homebrew likes to stay lean.
[1]https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-bundle/
- Brew Bundle
- The new Obsidian icon
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Which apps do you install first on any new Mac?
You should checkout Homebrew bundle and create a Brewfile instead. That will let you install both stuff from brew, casks and Mac AppStore apps in one go.
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macOS users: you can now install Active Trader Pro with Homebrew!
If you use brew bundle and create your own Brewfile, you can store this with your personal dot files and automate bootstrapping (auto-installing all your system tools) a new or recently reformatted Mac by including auto-trader-pro in your Brewfile.
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2 Days ago I made a comment saying I would quit photography before buying an Apple for photo editing. I'm sorry, be gentle
And if you're already loving Homebrew, definitely check out Homebrew Bundle!
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I was a MacOS hater until...
If you like homebrew, definitely give homebrew bundle a whirl if you haven't already
What are some alternatives?
Author-Ity - Terminal tool for transferring Author-It image captions XML → XHTML
linuxbrew-core - đź’€Formerly the core formulae for the Homebrew package manager on Linux
Spriteoscope - Swift+SpriteKit implementation of the classic Kaleidoscope for the Cromemco Dazzler
FinderFix - FinderFix lets you resize and reposition Finder windows to your liking
CreateAPI - Delightful code generator for OpenAPI specs
PopClip-Extensions - Source code extensions in the official PopClip Extensions directory.
ZippyZip
homebrew-lilypond - Install LilyPond from homebrew/core instead of this tap: https://formulae.brew.sh/formula/lilypond
AsyncValue - A simple swift package that provides a Swift Concurrency equivalent to `@Published`.
mas - :package: Mac App Store command line interface
linearmouse - The mouse and trackpad utility for Mac.
homebrew-command-not-found - 🔍 Ubuntu’s command-not-found equivalent for Homebrew on macOS