diarycli | dragon | |
---|---|---|
6 | 26 | |
7 | 1,209 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
4 months ago | about 1 year ago | |
Python | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
diarycli
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Plain Text Journaling in Vim
Shameless plug of basically the same idea except as a pip package:
https://github.com/Aperocky/diarycli
`pip install diarycli`
Alternatively there is a shell version if you are averse to python/pip package manager as well:
https://github.com/Aperocky/diaryman/blob/master/diaryman.sh
I've been using this for years, it doesn't have any fancy features - it only reliably opens up/create today's diary in vim whenever I type `diary` in command line. with some minor utilities.
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The power of keeping a coding journal (2014)
Shameless plug on the same subject if you are vim user fond of terminal:
https://github.com/Aperocky/diarycli
`pip install diarycli`
Alternatively there is a shell version if you are averse to python/pip package manager as well:
https://github.com/Aperocky/diaryman/blob/master/diaryman.sh
The only way I can get myself to write things down is to have it one commands away in the terminal.
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Ask HN: Small scripts, hacks and automations you're proud of?
Diary script.
`$ diary` create/open a file for today's diary in vim: https://github.com/Aperocky/diaryman/blob/master/diaryman.sh
Or try `pip install diarycli`: https://github.com/Aperocky/diarycli, for a pip packaged python version that does the exact same thing.
I've actually kept diary and work logs, things I did not know I was capable of.
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Never take meeting notes again
My luddite? solution: make note taking as painless as there is, make it one word command away in the terminal, and that command organize the notes/diary in dates:
https://github.com/Aperocky/diarycli
It's a pip package and by installing you can invoke the `diary` command to directly edit the day's note or diary (as long as the python package bin are in your shell PATH). You can also configure location where they are stored or the shell editor you want to use.
- Show HN: Diarycli
dragon
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Drag and drop support for gokcehan lf file manager
https://www.reddit.com/r/suckless/comments/13hr5zy/comment/jmlxizk https://github.com/mwh/dragon
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Is there any way or kitten to drag and drop from kitten
https://github.com/mwh/dragon https://github.com/nik012003/ripdrag
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Drag and drop support for st?
Have a look at dragon
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Ask HN: Small scripts, hacks and automations you're proud of?
I write a lot of extremely simple but handy shell functions.
This one lets me drag/and drop things out of a terminal session (kind of) into applications with https://github.com/mwh/dragon and i use it way too often!
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[OC] XFiles: A modular X11 file browser (WIP)
I'm used on a terminal workflow (ranger fm in the past, switched to lf) on a desktopless wm. I prefer it that way, the only thing missing is drag 'n' drop functionality, mainly for web apps. There is dragon but I'm considering installing a light gui fm for the job.
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"Super Buffer File" and Dragon integration
Yeah, some amount of extra explanation would have helped. I'm using this with a local program (https://github.com/mwh/dragon) that creates a pop-up GUI window (independent of Emacs) for "drag and drop" functionality. It only works with files on the local system, so the purpose of super-buffer-file is to create a local file associated with a buffer if one doesn't already exist, and return the name of that file.
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Is there a way to use an external file picker on Linux?
Not a direct answer, but maybe still useful… They way I handle this is using a drag and drop tool.
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TUI file manager killer functionality that never gets implemented!
I know there is dragon and the feature would require a terminal that supports it, but being able to simply select files and drag-and-drop them into a browser upload without requiring an additional window would be awesome.
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How to copy files from ranger into clipboard?
You can use Dragon
- Dragon – simple drag-and-drop source/sink for X or Wayland
What are some alternatives?
nb - CLI and local web plain text note‑taking, bookmarking, and archiving with linking, tagging, filtering, search, Git versioning & syncing, Pandoc conversion, + more, in a single portable script.
mpv - 🎥 Command line video player
emergency-poncho - Emergency Poncho - an HTTP Archive replayer
warpd - A modal keyboard-driven virtual pointer
GenFortune - A clone of the unix "fortune" utility supporting more advanced features like dynamic generation and modern JSON syntax while still using less than
activate-linux - The "Activate Windows" watermark ported to Linux
gorss - Go Terminal Feed Reader
applications
dotfiles - ben's dotfiles
ranger_udisk_menu - This script draws menu to choose, mount and unmount drives using udisksctl and ncurses for ranger file manager
diaryman - Lazy (wo)man's CLI diary manager
stretchly - The break time reminder app