antidote
zinit
antidote | zinit | |
---|---|---|
5 | 24 | |
705 | 2,313 | |
- | 2.1% | |
8.3 | 8.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 13 days ago | |
Shell | Shell | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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antidote
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Quickest path to a decent zsh setup?
Although there are all sorts of Zsh starter kits and plugin managers out there, based on what you've described as an OMZ user, it seems like you would benefit most from investing in customizing your OMZ config with a $ZSH_CUSTOM folder and then saving your $ZSH_CUSTOM folder in a cloud git provider like GitLab, BitBucket, or GitHub.
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Oh-my-zsh without oh-my-zsh?
Zinit seems overly complicated. I prefer antidote
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Current state of plugin managers
Awesome! Glad it works well for you. Feedback welcome if you run into problems or would like to see new features: https://github.com/mattmc3/antidote/issues
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Yet another "which plugin manager" question
[[ -e ~/.antidote ]] || git clone https://github.com/mattmc3/antidote.git ~/.antidote
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Introducing Antidote - A native zsh continuation of the antibody plugin manager
Some notable features: - Antidote is not written in Go - it's a native Zsh implementation - Your existing antibody ~/.zsh_plugins.txt file should work without modification - All antibody commands are implemented (bundle, help, home, init, list, path, purge, update) for compatibility - If you load your plugins statically like you did with antibody, the performance is still astounding and will continue to rival any other plugin manager (Go not required, though I have nothing against Go - it's truly a great language) - I combed through old antibody issues for non-implemented feature requests and plan to implement some of them. Some, like zsh-defer support are already available - Cloning and updating are done in concurrently just like in Go - The feature roadmap is available by looking at the open GitHub issues
zinit
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Deeply scammy looking zsh plugin manager called "zi"
I don’t use zsh plugin managers myself, but it looks like zinit already had the ability to update itself. Why on earth replace a working solution with a broken one? zi won’t be able to load plugins when the computer is offline for no good legitimate reason that I can possibly think of.
https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/zinit#upgrade-zinit-and...
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fish-shell: the user-friendly command-line shell
Am i the only one who feels fish is not worth it despite of hype? Don't get me wrong. I think that fish is really good shell.
BUT...
After adding the following plugins to zsh(before you chime in, it's just adding these lines,not anything configuring much. also it auto bootstraps on new install), I found out that fish is no where near configured zsh.
1) https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/zinit (plugin manager)
2) https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/fast-syntax-highlightin...
3) https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/history-search-multi-wo...
4) https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-autosuggestions
5) https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-completions
6) https://github.com/Aloxaf/fzf-tab
7) any good shell prompt generator like https://github.com/romkatv/powerlevel10k
For example, I use fzf integration for tab completion. Fish's fzf integration is nowhere as good as that of zsh's. Also, posix compat and almost bash compat of zsh is plus.
I acknowledge that zsh isn't perfect shell either and I have tried and failed few times in past to switch to fish. If you provide me compelling reason/s to switch to fish, I am all ears.
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Oh-my-zsh without oh-my-zsh?
You can use a plugin manager that supports oh-my-zsh plugins and libraries such as zinit (my personal favorite). You can also take a look at my personal project zunder-zsh.
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Current state of plugin managers
If you want everything-and-the-kitchen-sink and don't mind that the original author bailed on the project in a way that was destructive to the Zsh community, then zinit is still around
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Brew for plugins or clone the repo manually...
```sh ❯ zinit self-update; zinit update [self-update] fetching latest changes from main branch From https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/zinit * branch main -> FETCH_HEAD Already up to date. [self-update] compiling zinit via zcompile [self-update] reloading zinit for the current session Assuming --all is passed [self-update] updating zinit repository [self-update] fetching latest changes from main branch Note: updating also unloaded snippets
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Demo: zsh4humans ssh teleportation
Cool idea but I'm zinit dependent
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"|?|" renders at line wraps in Man, copies to clipboard as "-"
Zinit: Really quick plugin manager that loads multiple plugins via lazy loading, in parallel etc. It compiles the plugins upon installation.
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This Week In Neovim #5 — Mon Aug 15 2022
You should try zinit
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They say KDE is heavy on the resources but in my experience it's one of the most lightweight dekstop enviorenments. These are not virtual machines and I installed all on the same disk.
Yeah. My setup is basically zinit with p10k and it's instant even on an old phone on Termux.
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What are really usefull ZSH plug-ins?
The one and only https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/zinit
What are some alternatives?
zpm - Zpm— Zsh Plugin Manager
zi - ✨ A Swiss Army Knife for Zsh - Unix Shell
zsh-vi-mode - 💻 A better and friendly vi(vim) mode plugin for ZSH.
zsh-autosuggestions - Fish-like autosuggestions for zsh
zsh_unplugged - 🤔 perhaps you don't need a Zsh plugin manager after all...
zgenom - A lightweight and fast plugin manager for ZSH
antibody - The fastest shell plugin manager.
zplugin - Plugin manager with clean fpath and reports
dotfiles - My dotfiles managed by yadm.
zsh-defer - Deferred execution of Zsh commands
zsh-snap - ⚡️ Znap! Fast, easy-to-use tools for Zsh dotfiles & plugins, plus git repos
.dotfiles - :fireworks: Arch Linux with i3 / nvim / tmux / urxvt / zsh / ...