Our great sponsors
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.
dotfiles
dotfiles
-
Ask HN: Can I see your cheatsheet?
Set a huuuuuuuge shell history https://github.com/craigjperry2/dotfiles/blob/aa77ddcbde63bf... then fzf ctrl+r bindings mean you can recall anything right where you need it.
If you’re going to do this then have an escape hatch for commands you don’t want memorised https://github.com/craigjperry2/dotfiles/blob/aa77ddcbde63bf...
-
Command Line Tools for Productive Programmers
The integration is pretty decent in vim, i have it configured to open a window overlay on n (requires neovim) https://github.com/craigjperry2/dotfiles/blob/main/dotfiles/...
That said, i don't find myself using that as much. Usually i'm in the shell when i invoke nnn - i might open a file in vim from nnn though.
In vim, i typically lean on fzf.vim more often - usually i know something about the next file i want to open so it just feels more direct.
What are some alternatives?
dotfiles - My configuration files
watchexec - Executes commands in response to file modifications
learn_gnugrep_ripgrep - Example based guide to mastering GNU grep and ripgrep
zsh-history-substring-search - 🐠 ZSH port of Fish history search (up arrow)
goexamples - Complete golang example; sample Go code
nnn - n³ The unorthodox terminal file manager
cheatsheet - 📜 A compendium of CLI commands I can't stop looking up
murex - A smarter shell and scripting environment with advanced features designed for usability, safety and productivity (eg smarter DevOps tooling)
dotfiles - Managed using https://yadm.io/
fx - Terminal JSON viewer & processor
cheat.sh - the only cheat sheet you need