conventional-changelog
broot
Our great sponsors
conventional-changelog | broot | |
---|---|---|
11 | 41 | |
7,550 | 10,019 | |
1.1% | - | |
9.0 | 9.1 | |
4 days ago | 6 days ago | |
TypeScript | Rust | |
ISC 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.
conventional-changelog
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Using semantic-release to automate releases and changelogs
conventional-changelog-conventionalcommits is a package used for creating conventional commits and has a bit more configuration possibilities with changelogs in contrast to the default Angular commit scheme.
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Conventional Commits - Specification for Your Commit Messages
Finally, it is also interesting to be able to automatically generate the CHANGELOG file from the commit messages. There are various tools for this, one of them is Conventional Changelog
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Minor imperfections that shout ‘beginner code’
Some projects generate change logs automatically from commits. For example, angular uses conventional-changelog.
- GitHub Actions can't find built binaries to put them to a release
- FRONT END - LINKS CRIATIVOS E TÉCNICOS
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Confused about how to get my packages up to `1.0.0` using Lerna / Conventional commits...
I'm under the understanding from this issue that in semver, a package that is <1.0.0 is considered unstable. This means that a breaking change can occur at any version, usually between minors.
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Automatically update git major tags on GitHub marketplace release
conventional-changelog-conventionalcommits
- Keep a Changelog
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What are some good practices for writing changelogs/update notes?
I dont use myself, but some people follows something like the conventional commit spec, and then uses a generator.
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Automated versioning and package publishing using GitHub Actions and semantic-release
@semantic-release/commit-analyzer It determines the type of our release (e.g. major, minor, patch) by analyzing commits with conventional-changelog. semantic-release uses Angular Commit Message Conventions by default.
broot
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Use Midnight Commander like a pro (2015)
Take a look at broot https://github.com/Canop/broot
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Johnny Decimal: A System to Organize Projects
A past coworker implemented a system like this. It was awful. He was the gatekeeper because the numbers and names had to be "just so" to meet his approval, and he was the most senior person on the team. He was neurotic in general and a pain to work with.
The idea of limiting yourself to a few top-level categories in a directory hierarchy and then doing the same with subdirectories makes sense, but adding numbers is a bad idea. It just creates more work, and other people have to learn your idiosyncratic nomenclature. Just give the directories good names and get on with it. Search really isn't as bad as the article suggests, especially with something like broot [1].
- Broot: A new way to look at file management written in Rust
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Antonmedv/walk: Terminal file manager
I've used a lot of the tools mentioned here in comments, but I think just for finding a directory/file broot[1] is much faster and easier than others. Though it is also quite feature rich but mostly it's just write a fuzzy search term that could even be sub-sub-directory and open, extremely quickly.
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Projectable: A TUI file manager built for projects
`broot` (https://github.com/Canop/broot) is another file manager with a curious interface that seems to fill a similar niche.
Of course, there are many other file managers to choose from (mc, ranger, nnn, lf, ....), but most of them don't show nested subdirectories by default.
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Report on platform-compliance for cargo directories
As a macOS user, it boils my brain whenever I've to type in something like ~/Library/Application Support/org.rust-lang.Cargo/config.toml. macOS users have been begging CLI tools to support XDG variables on macOS too. Setting defaults is a strong indication to the community what should be the "preferred" locations. The defaults defined in your article will invariably lead to some authors saying that if that path is good enough for cargo, then it is good enough for their tool. Even the latest draft RFC acknowledges that macOS should use XDG variables too. I've written more about this here.
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erdtree v1.2.0, a modern multi-threaded alternative to `du` and `tree` now with support for globbing, icons, and more
You may be interested in broot
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bsdutils: Alternative to GNU coreutils using software from FreeBSD
I think you’re conflating different projects.
There are projects that aim for a better user experience, with better command line interface, defaults, performance and UI. These are of course breaking changes and the programs can’t be used as drop in replacement. Some examples are
- ls => exa (https://github.com/ogham/exa)
- grep => ripgrep (https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep)
- cat => bat (https://github.com/sharkdp/bat)
- tree => broot (https://github.com/Canop/broot)
The person you’re replying to was speaking of a different project - uutils (https://github.com/uutils/coreutils). These are drop in replacements with identical interfaces (modulo bugs).
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Reading Ebooks on the Commandline
Even better broot, previously adding view verb to config:
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Is possible to configure "micro" terminal text editor with "broot" tool, to open text file with micro?
Broot: https://github.com/Canop/broot
What are some alternatives?
keep-a-changelog - If you build software, keep a changelog.
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
standard-version - :trophy: Automate versioning and CHANGELOG generation, with semver.org and conventionalcommits.org
nnn - n³ The unorthodox terminal file manager
git-cliff - A highly customizable Changelog Generator that follows Conventional Commit specifications ⛰️
xplr - A hackable, minimal, fast TUI file explorer
Release It! 🚀 - 🚀 Automate versioning and package publishing
zoxide - A smarter cd command. Supports all major shells.
release-please - generate release PRs based on the conventionalcommits.org spec
lf - Terminal file manager
rn-boilerplate - React native boilerplate with formik, ui kittens, eslint setup, and expo
voidrice - My dotfiles (deployed by LARBS)