hishtory
shell-bling-ubuntu
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hishtory | shell-bling-ubuntu | |
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19 | 7 | |
2,363 | 65 | |
- | - | |
9.8 | 8.1 | |
1 day ago | about 2 months ago | |
Go | Shell | |
MIT License | The Unlicense |
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.
hishtory
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Show HN: Inshellisense – IDE style shell autocomplete
If you're more used to ctrl+r, you could try hiSHtory (https://github.com/ddworken/hishtory)
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hiSHtory: Your shell history on steroids: Stored in context, synced to all your machines, and easily queryable
Including the server as part of the release sounds reasonable to me. I'm inclined to keep it as a separate file since most people don't need that feature, so I'd rather not unnecessarily increase the size of the main binary size. I filed https://github.com/ddworken/hishtory/issues/78 to track this.
- hiSHtory
- `hishtory` is a better shell history
- GitHub - ddworken/hishtory: Your shell history: synced, queryable, and in context
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Show HN: HiSHtory: Your shell history in context, synced, and queryable
Ah, thank you commenting on this! This is absolutely unintentional and was the fault of a missing comment in the bash script (that I didn't notice because I generally use zsh). See https://github.com/ddworken/hishtory/commit/72ff95ab8b23c3be... and if you run `hishtory update` it should be all fixed.
shell-bling-ubuntu
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Ask HN: I want to learn to use the terminal, where do I start
Personally, I only really got into working at the shell once I started exploring all of the wonderful new programs that people have been writing to make it easy as pie to work with. I ended up collecting them all together into scripts I can `curl | bash` on any new Ubuntu machine: https://github.com/hiAndrewQuinn/shell-bling-ubuntu
Obviously these scripts won't work on Mac. But I do list the programs I install in it right in the README, including what I consider the "Holy Trinity": `rg` (really fast line searching), `fd` (really fast file finding), and `fzf` (best described with examples: see https://andrew-quinn.me/fzf). These all work on my wife's Mac identically to how they work on my own Linux box, and they make the experience of working at a shell much more pleasant.
Finally, install fish! https://mmazzarolo.com/blog/2023-11-16-my-fish-shell-setup-o... You can get back to Bash once you've gotten used to using the shell and find a reason to. Fish is much more pleasant, IMO, and I try to use it wherever I can these days.
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Starship.rs: minimal, fast prompt for any shell
Yes! This is why I pair the two up in https://github.com/hiAndrewQuinn/shell-bling-ubuntu.
These context clues are especially important for newcomers to the command line. A CLI newbie who sticks with it might eventually progress to the point where they decide to ditch Starship, or to ditch fish, or to ditch both, but until they get to that point, the solid defaults and OOTB features of these two have a lot going for them.
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Show HN: Inshellisense – IDE style shell autocomplete
Alternatively, if you simply wish to occasionally bring Copilot into your shell, you should know that Ctrl+X Ctrl+E (on bash) / Alt+E (on fish) will open your current shell line up in $EDITOR, which you may set to Vim or Neovim.
From there, :wq will drop the text back into your command line. If you have Copilot set up in either of those, then it will also work here.
I know from working on https://github.com/hiAndrewQuinn/shell-bling-ubuntu that Neovim's LazyVim setup now supports Copilot out of the box now. I never had much trouble setting up the Vim plugin either. YMMV.
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Ask HN: How does `lnav` run its playground which you can just SSH into?
https://lnav.org/ has a feature that single handedly sold me on trying out the fantastic software: An SSH-reachable playground. It's right there above the fold on the first page: ssh://[email protected]
I want to build a similar playground for people who want to get familiar with the tools my Shell Bling Ubuntu repo provides ( https://github.com/hiAndrewQuinn/shell-bling-ubuntu ). Ideally it consists of a series of very simple tasks to get one's feet wet with each tool provided: Using fish's autocompletion, then using fzf's shell keybindings, then using rg instead of grep to search an enormous number of files for a single needle character in a million lines of wheat , and so on.
I have no clue how to do this safely. I've never seen how anyone else does it either. Can anyone provide me some pointers?
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Cursor – The AI-First Code Editor
Alternatively, if you just want to integrate Copilot into Neovim and get on with your day, I recently discovered that the latest LazyVim integrates it as an extra.
I actually discovered this while working on Shell Bling Ubuntu, which is a couple of easy scripts to get you a bunch of modern command line tools nice and configured in one go, but you can just scroll down to "Add Copilot to Neovim" to see. It's refreshingly user friendly for NV configs.
https://github.com/hiAndrewQuinn/shell-bling-ubuntu
- GitHub - hiAndrewQuinn/shell-bling-ubuntu: A few scripts to be run on a fresh-off-the-presses Ubuntu VM, in order to get its shell nice 'n purdy.
- Show HN: 3 scripts to turn a stock Ubuntu live USB into a modern devbox
What are some alternatives?
atuin - ✨ Magical shell history
inshellisense - IDE style command line auto complete
mcfly - Fly through your shell history. Great Scott!
butterfish - A shell with AI superpowers
ckp - Store and reuse your history and one liner scripts from anywhere, better than gists
fzshell - Fuzzy shell completions you didn't know you needed
zsh-autocomplete - 🤖 Real-time type-ahead completion for Zsh. Asynchronous find-as-you-type autocompletion.
carapace-bin - multi-shell multi-command argument completer
autocomplete - IDE-style autocomplete for your existing terminal & shell
hyperfine - A command-line benchmarking tool