ata
jinglebells
ata | jinglebells | |
---|---|---|
7 | 1 | |
269 | 0 | |
- | - | |
6.5 | 1.4 | |
3 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Rust | Go | |
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.
ata
-
Ask HN: What are some of the best ChatGPT Clients out there?
> My main gripe with it though is that the actual interface is quite limited, and I don't like having to navigate to the site every time I want to use it.
https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata. Written in Rust. Does streaming responses and supports Emacs keyboard shortcuts. That's it. All that's needed for quickly looking up things.
-
Ask HN: How are you using GPT to be productive?
- Checkout definitions. I have a small tool (https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata) available on a keyboard shortcut and use it to quickly checkout definitions for words when I come across a word that I don't know.
- Show HN: Ask the Terminal Anything (ATA) – ChatGPT in the Terminal
-
ata: Ask the Terminal Anything - OpenAI GPT in the terminal
As a little side-note, it actually involved some hacking to get the output printing correct because it appeared that the API sometimes responds denotes a newline by two tokens (["\", "n"]) and sometimes by one token (["\n"]). In the playground (https://platform.openai.com/playground), they convert the two token version to a single token, so that's what ata does too (details in https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata/pull/6). My guess is that this is basically a bug in the model which they manually fixed in the Playground and ChatGPT front ends.
-
Running GPT in the terminal for extra productivity
ChatGPT made my work more productive, but I was having a bit of a struggle with the browser, timeouts and slow responses, and the lack of keyboard shortcuts. That's why I made a terminal application: https://github.com/rikhuijzer/ata. You can download it for free in the releases section or build it yourself from source. I'm using it daily and hope it is useful for people here too
- Show HN: OpenAI GPT in the Terminal
jinglebells
-
Ask HN: How are you using GPT to be productive?
I’m obligated to pick up a new bioinformatics DSL and have been asking GPT4 to translate my current code (bash, go, python) into this language. It is not perfect but it gets me close to what I need, with some editing.
Sometimes I ask it to make music: https://github.com/carbocation/jinglebells
What are some alternatives?
gptel - A simple LLM client for Emacs
gpt-generated-commit-messa
gpt-anywhere - Use GPT anywhere with just one shortcut. Available for Mac, Windows, and Linux. Over 1,500 downloads.
askai - Your simple terminal helper - A CLI integration with OpenAI's GPT3
gpt-generated-commit-messages - Commit and push with one step and ChatGPT generated commit message
datasette-paste-table - Create tables in Datasette by pasting in TSV
hey-chatgpt-cli - Hey is a powerful chatbot for the command line CLI that uses ChatGPT to generate commands based on natural language input
grammatical - Corrects the spelling and grammar of your text using ChatGPT
clevercli - ChatGPT powered CLI utilities. Easily add new prompt types in ~/.clevercli/
shared-recruiting-co - SRC (Shared Recruiting Co.) is an open-source, candidate-centric recruiting platform