field_names
tab-rs
field_names | tab-rs | |
---|---|---|
2 | 13 | |
37 | 650 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
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.
field_names
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Trick for keeping fields of two structs in sync
PS: The rename protection here requires that the field types are completely identical between the two. If you need to do Into or AsRef conversions, this will still catch field addition and removal, but you may need to add a unit-test that uses something like field_names.
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What's everyone working on this week (9/2021)?
I've added a test/example to the field_names showing how it can be used to keep two structs' fields in sync (source code). This solved a problem I was having where edits to one struct risked breaking deserialization if the same change wasn't applied to a second struct.
tab-rs
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Another terminal multiplexer for team leads.
If you want to read some code, my project is tab-rs.
- Zellij – A Terminal Workspace and Multiplexer Written in Rust
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Zellij: a Rusty terminal multiplexer releases a beta
I myself use the many (alacritty) terminals + tiling WM solution at the moment (switching between i3wm and LeftWM) but it doesn't feel optimal. I always though tmux looked too involved to learn so I've been on the lookout for alternatives such as Wezterm (a terminal with built-in multiplexing), tab (a command line controlled multiplexer) and now zellij.
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What's everyone working on this week (9/2021)?
Plus a lot of cleanup in the tab-pty-process crate. It now exposes an interface similar to portable-pty, but with non-blocking file handles.
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My take on byobu, an easy to use terminal multiplexer
I ended up writing a terminal multiplexer because screen and tmux were too complicated to use. It has a built in fuzzy finder, stateless navigation, and YAML configs for persistent sessions: https://github.com/austinjones/tab-rs/
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Actors with Tokio
The way I typically unify messages is define an enum, and map/merge channel receivers. tokio-stream would probably work with these examples. Here's an example from a fuzzy-finder implementation: https://github.com/austinjones/tab-rs/blob/main/tab-command/src/service/terminal/fuzzy.rs#L332
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Terminal Multiplexers
Really nice cheat-sheet write up on screen & tmux & byobu.
Also worth checking out tabs-rs[1] which seems very well reviewed & recent.
Personally, I am a huge fan of dtach[2][3], which isn't a multiplexer, just a detachable proxier of terminal sessions. This let's me run a persistent vim session that I can reconnect to, and vim has however many terminals I need open in it. Vim does my multiplexing, dtach just allows me to make vim persistent. Very glad to have re-discovered dtach, to enable this workflow.
Notably dtach is very lightweight. Unlike tmux, it is not a virtual terminal. Upon reconnect to my vim session, I issue a control-l to refresh the screen. Dtach hasn't retained the screen state, isn't translating between terminfos. The one thing that can go wrong here is connecting from different terminals- few programs have a way to update the TERM setting once the program has launched.
[1] https://github.com/austinjones/tab-rs
[2] https://github.com/crigler/dtach
[3] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Dtach
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Hurl 1.0.0, a command line tool to run and test HTTP requests
The nice thing about that is that many other tools can work too. Someone using direnv can set properties that would be available in the hurl script. Likewise, someone using tab could have environment variables defined for their active tab that could be used. If you invent your own notion of an environment, you lose interop with a lot of other tools that target the standard environment.
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I wrote a terminal multiplexer called tab. It's designed to be intuitive, and config-driven.
Are you running v0.5.3? I just released a fix for a Kakoune issue that was caused by add-highlighter global/ number-lines -relative in kakrc. It sounds similar to what you described.
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How To Write A Terminal Multiplexer With Rust
There are also some crazy ANSI sequences that cause the terminal emulator to write stdin - so applications can query the terminal state. Crazy stuff can happen when those sequences are copied from the scrollback buffer (which is why tab now filters them out).
What are some alternatives?
mp4 - MP4 library, CLI tool, server
zellij - A terminal workspace with batteries included
rust-fsm - Finite state machine framework for Rust with readable specifications
.tmux - 🇫🇷 Oh my tmux! My self-contained, pretty & versatile tmux configuration made with ❤️
negate - Attribute macro that generates negated versions of`is_something` functions
starship - ☄🌌️ The minimal, blazing-fast, and infinitely customizable prompt for any shell!
azure-sdk-for-rust - This repository is for active development of the *unofficial* Azure SDK for Rust. This repository is *not* supported by the Azure SDK team.
pueue - :stars: Manage your shell commands.
Bytecode - A Rust proc-macro crate which derives functions to compile and parse back enums and structs to and from a bytecode representation
zoxide - A smarter cd command. Supports all major shells.
rustfuif - Performance & correctness oriented beursfuif implementation in rust
wezterm - A GPU-accelerated cross-platform terminal emulator and multiplexer written by @wez and implemented in Rust