crossterm
bubbletea
crossterm | bubbletea | |
---|---|---|
28 | 115 | |
2,977 | 24,316 | |
1.7% | 3.6% | |
6.8 | 8.8 | |
9 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Rust | Go | |
MIT 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.
crossterm
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Question: In your experience, is Helix always more snappy/responsive than Neovim?
I have this feeling with all rust apps using crossterm crate as their backend like GitUI for example
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Canonical way to handle concurrent events with crates that don't model that use case
I guess you could use EventStream like in this example
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[2022 Day 14 (Part 1/2) [Rust] Made a small toy
Made a small toy using crossterm that simulates the falling sand using the rules laid out by day 14. Bit late to the party but was pretty fun. The moment I saw the prompt I was fully intent on making some sort of visualization for this after getting the solution.
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How difficult is ncurses?
There are plenty of terminal UI libraries that are actually nice to work with. For Python, there's Textual and PyTermGUI. For Rust, there's ratatui and Cursive (or, if you want something a bit lower level, crosster or termion). For Go, there's bubbletea.
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AMDGPU_TOP v0.1.2 - switch to crossterm-backend, add simple fdinfo viewer
Switching the backend of Cursive to crossterm removed dependence on ncurses
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How can I create 'time' in my game loop?
I don't know where to start, CrossTerm can read events asynchronously with tokio https://github.com/crossterm-rs/crossterm/blob/master/examples/event-stream-tokio.rs , but I don't have any idea what that really means, I am coming from the HTML Canvas and TypeScript. I want the most simple and basic method possible. Cheers!
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termion development status?
Just wondering if anyone has any insight into the current development and maintenance of termion? It currently has 67 issues and 24 merge requests and no code activity has happened since Sep 27 2021, so nothing in over a year. I am of course grateful for the existing project, but just somewhat concerned that it ends up being abandoned or forgotten seeing as it is one of the premiere tui libraries written purely in Rust (other being crossterm).
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I made a terminal-based flashcard app - with incremental reading!
I might make a gui frontend in the future, but for now i'll focus on the terminal. The terminal doesn't mean it doesnt support mac or windows though, they have terminals too! And the library used for accepting key-input is crossterm which supports windows!
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[Media] I made a Rust CLI game that tests how fast you can guess the language of a code block!
I used crossterm. Really love the simplicity of the API, definitely fit my purposes well.
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How difficult could it be to make a console program that looks like this and has a game loop running on a separate thread? Any suggestions or crate recommendations are welcome!
For the terminal part you could use https://crates.io/crates/crossterm
bubbletea
- Harlequin: SQL IDE for Your Terminal
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When creating console based applications how do you replicate the following realtime updates:
I recommend looking at the charm libraries. Lip gloss https://github.com/charmbracelet/lipgloss can provide the styling and bubble tea can handle the screen updates and framework https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea there is a premade progress bar component in bubbles library. https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbles
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Built a TUI app to find anime scenes by image
I built a TUI app to find anime scenes by image to learn the TUI framework [Bubbletea](https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea)
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Lazydocker
TUI’s are awesome; I’ve used this library to build them in the past: https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea
For a sufficiently-complex system, a CLI client just isn’t as powerful as a live “console”. A TUI can play the part and you don’t have to venture into the web SPA world.
- Separated input/output windows.
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New to go, suggestions for non-web projects.
If you want to build terminal app, I highly recommend the bubbletea library: https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea
- [Python] Bibliothèque CLI UI similaire à Bubbletea
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snips.sh: passwordless, anonymous SSH-powered pastebin
You can view your snippets in a human-friendly web UI that syntax-highlights the code and even renders markdown. In addition to the Web UI, the TUI (powered by bubbletea) has a file browser, code viewer and attribute editor.
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Ink: React for interactive command-line apps
A sibling comment points at https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea as a Go alternative with a similar architecture
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Show HN: Frogmouth – A Markdown browser for your terminal
The closest thing in Go I know about is bubbletea:
https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea
What are some alternatives?
Termion - Mirror of https://gitlab.redox-os.org/redox-os/termion
Rich Interactive Widgets for Terminal UIs - Terminal UI library with rich, interactive widgets — written in Golang
tui-rs - Build terminal user interfaces and dashboards using Rust
tcell - Tcell is an alternate terminal package, similar in some ways to termbox, but better in others.
pancurses - A Rust curses library, supports Unix platforms and Windows
pterm - ✨ #PTerm is a modern Go module to easily beautify console output. Featuring charts, progressbars, tables, trees, text input, select menus and much more 🚀 It's completely configurable and 100% cross-platform compatible.
fui - Add CLI & form interface to your program. Docs: https://docs.rs/fui
rich - Rich is a Python library for rich text and beautiful formatting in the terminal.
bearlibterminal - BearLibTerminal FFI for Rust
termui - Golang terminal dashboard
rustgenhash - CLI tool written in Rust which can be used to generate hashes
textual - The lean application framework for Python. Build sophisticated user interfaces with a simple Python API. Run your apps in the terminal and a web browser.