glow
bubbletea
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glow | bubbletea | |
---|---|---|
60 | 115 | |
14,530 | 23,297 | |
2.8% | 5.2% | |
6.9 | 8.8 | |
13 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
glow
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Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
To get started, install Mods and check out some of the examples below. Since Mods has built-in Markdown formatting, you may also want to grab Glow to give the output some pizzazz.
- Ask HN: How do you synchronise your notes?
- How would you read your files if Obsidian disappeared?
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Show HN: GPT-engineer – platform for devs to tinker with AI programming tools
Yup, those seem to be the key challenges. I've been making good progress on them, but there's plenty more work to do!
On the topic of "AI-generated PRs", I used my tool to file a PR to the `glow` CLI tool. I don't know the go language, so I had aider make the changes to glow.
https://github.com/charmbracelet/glow/pull/502
I've also been able solve a couple of github issues that were file by users by just pasting the issue into my tool... it fixed itself. Links below:
https://github.com/paul-gauthier/aider/issues/13#issuecommen...
https://github.com/paul-gauthier/aider/issues/5#issuecomment...
- FLiPN-FLaNK Stack Weekly May 8 2023
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Show HN: Frogmouth – A Markdown browser for your terminal
Nice idea! I’m excited to check it out. I write a lot of docs in Markdown and this could be a great way to browse them.
Out of curiosity, have you seen glow[0]?
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Recommendations on file/dir/module structure, common dependencies, and/or anti-patterns for writing CLI tool in Rust
Charm's Glow is a joy to use, a good example of having the Charm's Bubbletea usage - but from the code perspective, it's a bit difficult to navigate as many code paths are put in the same package
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Markdown in neovim
glow.nvim is a wrapper around the terminal tool glow. you could probably adapt it to other terminal markdown readers tho
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I wish Asciidoc was more popular
The problem I have with AsciiDoc (AD) and Markdown (MD) is that they are too effective (in the best way)! Follow my reasoning for a moment, please...
I was reviewing a command-line MD reader today. I think it was the nth time I've looked it over. It's called glow : https://github.com/charmbracelet/glow
I always come to the same conclusion. I don't need it. I don't need to remember to use (yet) another command line program to read MD or perform a very specific (and non-vital) function.
The reason is that MD and AD are so very easy to read. They are too effective at their jobs. They aren't like HTML tags that get in the way of the text. You barely even notice MD/AD in most(?) cases. Text plus MD/AD are incredibly easy to read without a 3rd-party program "rendering" the results.
Having said that... the only time I got really excited about MD/AD was when there was a post about Textual Markdown : https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34028765
It wasn't that the "rendered" text looked great (it looked beautiful, btw) but I could see 'Textual Markdown' turning into a command-line, online browser just for MD text! Think about that...
I even thought about how great it would be if the GeminiSpace folks : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemini_(protocol)?useskin=vect... : embraced MD/AsciiDOC instead of their limited markup language.
It's exciting to think of MD/AD making themselves an alternative lightweight tagging system on the web. Exciting to think about a lightweight web in general - no tracking, adware, tons of JS, etc...
Exciting to think about a bunch of browsers growing out of this (ie; you don't need billions/yr to support MD/AD browsers) - from full-blown GUIs to, well... "Textual-Markdown".
Anyway... MD/AD would be great if it grew beyond offline use. For offline use only... you really don't need rendering. Maybe it helps a bit with really long files but otherwise...
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what is the simplest MarkDown viewer ?
Glow
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.
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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
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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
For Golang there is Bubbletea [1], Textual [2] for Python and tui-rs for Rust [3].
[1] https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea
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Show HN: Frogmouth – A Markdown browser for your terminal
The closest thing in Go I know about is bubbletea:
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Which packages do you recommend for building cli tools?
Don't forget https://github.com/charmbracelet/bubbletea and the rest of the https://charm.sh suite!
What are some alternatives?
Rich Interactive Widgets for Terminal UIs - Terminal UI library with rich, interactive widgets — written in Golang
markdown-preview.nvim - markdown preview plugin for (neo)vim
tcell - Tcell is an alternate terminal package, similar in some ways to termbox, but better in others.
pcstat - Page Cache stat: get page cache stats for files on Linux
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.
rich - Rich is a Python library for rich text and beautiful formatting in the terminal.
mdless
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.
termui - Golang terminal dashboard
mdcat - cat for markdown
termdash - Terminal based dashboard.
cobra - A Commander for modern Go CLI interactions