hck
difftastic
hck | difftastic | |
---|---|---|
15 | 68 | |
680 | 19,530 | |
- | - | |
4.6 | 9.9 | |
17 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
The Unlicense | 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.
hck
- An old but good field command for printing tab separated fields from a file to stdou.t
-
What is yay situation?
hck ["hck" in community repo] - a fancier cut with regex field delimiters
-
What are your favorite Rust-powered Linux programs?
Biased because it's my tool, but I do use it every day! hck - which is like cut, but much faster and with a tidier set of features.
-
Tuc – When cut doesn’t cut it
hck - close to drop in replacement for cut that can use a regex delimiter instead of a fixed string
-
Tuc – when cut doesn’t cut it
Nice, especially the format output.
See also:
* hck (https://github.com/sstadick/hck) - close to drop in replacement for cut that can use a regex delimiter instead of a fixed string
* rcut (https://github.com/learnbyexample/regexp-cut) - my own bash+awk script, supports regexp delimiters, field reordering, negative indexing, etc
- csvlens: Command line CSV file viewer
-
Ask HN: Let's Build CheckStyle for Bash?
You might want to check out 'hck' to replace 'cut'.
https://github.com/sstadick/hck
- hck v0.6.6: > 24% performance improvements on common workloads
- Show HN: Hck – a fast and flexible cut-like tool
difftastic
-
Linus Torvalds adds arbitrary tabs to kernel code
i want a diff tool that shows me exactly which tokens have changed, and which haven't, regardless of how they are laid out.
These already exist: https://github.com/Wilfred/difftastic
when we get that, then we should get even less merge conflicts.
Counterintuitively, that is not the case. AST-merge is a much, much, much, much, much harder problem than AST-diff.
https://github.com/Wilfred/difftastic?tab=readme-ov-file#can...
The fact that diffs can be used to drive a 3-way merge is in fact an accidental property that arises due to the sheer crudeness of the diff format. As soon as you start using more-sophisticated diff formats, solutions to "the diff problem" no longer lead directly to solutions to "the merge problem".
- FLaNK AI Weekly 25 March 2025
-
Difftastic, a structural diff tool that understands syntax
Yes there is an `—-override` option you can use to specify the language in which a file should be parsed.
https://github.com/Wilfred/difftastic/blob/master/CHANGELOG....
-
So You Think You Know Git – Git Tips and Tricks by Scott Chacon
Use the fantastic difftastic instead of git's diff. https://difftastic.wilfred.me.uk/
[alias]
- Difftastic: A structural diff tool that understands syntax
-
SemanticDiff now supports Rust
difftastic provides similar capabilities in a free tool based on treesitter
-
My programming language aware diff for VS Code and GitHub now supports Rust
difftastic? https://github.com/Wilfred/difftastic
-
Prettier $20k Bounty was Claimed
If you're looking for a VS Code extension or a GitHub app, check out https://semanticdiff.com/. I'm a co-founder of this project.
If you prefer a CLI tool, check out https://github.com/Wilfred/difftastic. It supports more languages, but doesn't recognize when code has been replaced by an equivalent version ("invariances"). So it will show some changes (e.g. replacing a character in a string with an escape sequence) even though they are technically equivalent.
-
Pijul: Version-Control Post-Git • Goto 2023
Shameless plug: I've written difftastic[1], a tool that builds ASTs and then does a structural diff of them. You can use it with git too.
It's an incredibly hard problem though, both from a computational complexity point of view, and trying to build a comprehensible UI once you've done the structural AST diff.
[1]: https://github.com/wilfred/difftastic
-
Always leave a trailing comma in Python lists, dicts, tuples
There is a diff tool called difftastic: https://github.com/Wilfred/difftastic
The idea is that it does not show diff based on text change, but on syntastic meaning. For that, it uses tree-sitter.
I think it still shows the trailing comma in the situation as shown in the article, but it's quite different experience than the standard text based diff.
What are some alternatives?
sd - Intuitive find & replace CLI (sed alternative)
delta - A syntax-highlighting pager for git, diff, and grep output
murex - A smarter shell and scripting environment with advanced features designed for usability, safety and productivity (eg smarter DevOps tooling)
diffsitter - A tree-sitter based AST difftool to get meaningful semantic diffs
nlpo3 - Thai Natural Language Processing library in Rust, with Python and Node bindings.
neogit - An interactive and powerful Git interface for Neovim, inspired by Magit
csvlens - Command line csv viewer
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
UNIC - UNIC: Unicode and Internationalization Crates for Rust
gumtree - An awesome code differencing tool
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
tree-sitter-cpp - C++ grammar for tree-sitter