calcurse
delta
calcurse | delta | |
---|---|---|
21 | 88 | |
940 | 20,765 | |
- | - | |
5.5 | 8.1 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
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.
calcurse
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Can anyone recommend a Lightweight TUI journal application with calendar for windows ?
The Windows CLI is unfriendly to developers, a bit of shoving great-grandpa in the corner (despite its origins in DOS); as such, CLI developers tend not to spend much time investing in Windows-native TUI applications. With WSL, you at least mitigate a lot of that, opening you (OP) to the *nix world of CLI/TUI applications. Within WSL, you (OP) might also investigate calcurse which allows you to associate items like notes with dates. Or check out remind, my favorite, but focused more on complex calendaring rather than journaling (for my journaling, I just have a single text-file)
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New in node
Hello everyone, I have used node with express but I've started to see many CLI projects like inquirer and I want to make a calcurse clone but don't know how to start, any advice in how can I make a CLI interface like inquirer or calcurse?
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Recommend a calendar for Sway
Try calcurse.
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Calcure 2.7 - View events and tasks from cloud calendars in your terminal!
If you, well, almost borrow your name from calcurse, then shouldn't you highlight the key differences from your rival?
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Developing an App for CLI-Calendars - "opinion poll"
calcurse: fairly complex with events, reminders, notes/todos, as well as the ability to import/export .ics iCal files, customizable layout choices, etc.
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Need recommendations to view calendar events in i3wm
There's also calcurse if you like terminal apps.
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Looking for a simple calendar/todo app with calDAV sync
I use evolution the gnome email client. There is also calcurse, which is a ncurses based calendar with "experimental CalDAV support", I havent used it for too long, as I need an email application anyways and it's alright.
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Lesser known tools
Most folks are used to a pretty visual calendar like Google Calendar or calcurse with wizards for creating events, so entering them in a text-file feels archaic/baroque. But using remind gives me a LOT more power for creating events that do weird things like having my entries modify their text based on presentation or calculations (e.g. birthday events that say "Joe turns 31 in 7 days", adjusting the age each year and giving multiple days of countdown notice), crazy things like having repeating events that shift around conditionally ("trash day is on Thursday, but if there was a holiday earlier in the week, move trash day to Friday").
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Forebruary is a wall calendar that you do not need to replace every year. (2013)
Interested in checking this out! Is it called calcurse though? Can find one named cursecal.
https://github.com/lfos/calcurse
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What beautiful Linux apps deserve more "marketing attention" for lack of a better term?
calcurse a text-based calendar and scheduling application
delta
- Difftastic, a structural diff tool that understands syntax
- Popular Git Config Options
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So You Think You Know Git – Git Tips and Tricks by Scott Chacon
Thanks for the difftastic & zoxide tips.
However, I've been using this git pager/difftool: https://github.com/dandavison/delta
While it's not structural like difft, it does produce more readable output for me (at least when scrolling fast through git log -p /scanning quickly
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Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
View on GitHub
- Potencializando Sua Experiência no Linux: Conheça as Ferramentas em Rust para um Desenvolvimento Eficiente
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Unified versus Split Diff
I'm currently waiting on the integration between Delta and Difftastic:
https://github.com/dandavison/delta/issues/535
Difftastic now has JSON output, whic should make it much easier to build this.
- Delta, a syntax-highlighting pager for Git, diff, and grep output
- Ask HN: What's a new developer tool you recently started using?
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Magit
I'm surely in the minority here. I've been using Emacs for almost a decade now, but I just can't get into the Magit workflow. I've tried several times, but always end up going back to Git on the command line. I have dozens of aliases, shell integrations, a nice diff viewer[1], etc., and interacting with Git has become muscle memory. I can commit, cherry-pick, rebase, bisect, fix conflicts, etc., in a fraction of the time it would take me to navigate Magit's UI. I'm sure with enough practice, a Magit user could do this more quickly and efficiently, but honestly, with some custom-built porcelain, Git's UI is not so bad. Though this could very well be Stockholm syndrome after using it for such a long time...
For whatever reason, Magit's opinionated workflows never clicked with me. A part of it is the concern that it will do something weird to my repo that I'll then have to waste more time undoing manually. I usually don't trust sugary wrappers around tools. And another is the fact I don't use Emacs on all machines, and setting up Git on a remote system is just a matter of copying over my config and some shell integrations.
Also, on a more personal note, I find the cultish fanboyism whenever Magit is brought up slightly offputting. Does anyone have anything bad to say about it? No software can realistically be this infallible. :)
[1]: https://github.com/dandavison/delta
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How to use Git?
For looking at diffs I still prefer the command line though, and use delta to view diffs between commits or branches.
What are some alternatives?
khal - :calendar: CLI calendar application
diff-so-fancy - Good-lookin' diffs. Actually… nah… The best-lookin' diffs. :tada:
vdirsyncer - 📇 Synchronize calendars and contacts.
difftastic - a structural diff that understands syntax 🟥🟩
Vim - The official Vim repository
vim-fugitive - fugitive.vim: A Git wrapper so awesome, it should be illegal
visidata - A terminal spreadsheet multitool for discovering and arranging data
lazygit - simple terminal UI for git commands
bottom - Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor.
vim-gitgutter - A Vim plugin which shows git diff markers in the sign column and stages/previews/undoes hunks and partial hunks.
calcure - Modern TUI calendar and task manager with minimal and customizable UI.
gitui - Blazing 💥 fast terminal-ui for git written in rust 🦀