job-security
elvish
job-security | elvish | |
---|---|---|
2 | 44 | |
57 | 5,500 | |
- | 3.2% | |
5.1 | 9.5 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | Go | |
- | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" 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.
job-security
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Elvish, expressive programming language and a versatile interactive shell
Hey, thanks for the compliment! Glad you've enjoyed Elvish.
Re job control - you can run a background job with &, and there are fg and bg commands, but you can't actually ^Z a running program (which is what most people mean by job control). I've heard people have success with https://github.com/yshui/job-security though.
Re Elvish and Nushell, I'd add my biased recommendation for Elvish because it has comprehensive reference documents (https://elv.sh/ref/) :)
- job-security: job control for shells that don't have it
elvish
- State of the Terminal
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Elvish, expressive programming language and a versatile interactive shell
I take your comment as implying that https://elv.sh is nice, clean and elegant, and thank you for the compliment :)
I can't speak for other people, but I made it on my own and don't have any formal training in design.
With the risk of stating the obvious, you first have to realize that as a developer you can make a reasonably clean-looking website on your own. There are just a few basic ingredients: choose fonts, tweak spacing, position elements, draw some background shades, round some corners. You can do any of these from CSS.
After that it's browsing other websites for what looks nice, and a lot of trial and error with CSS. You can do a lot of experiments from the browser's dev tool before committing them into the stylesheet too. But at the end of the time, you have to put in some time. The layout of the current homepage was redone just a few months back and it took me (IIRC) 3 days to tweak everything to my satisfaction.
- Xonsh: Python-powered, cross-platform, Unix-gazing shell
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Antonmedv/walk: Terminal file manager
Shameless plug: Elvish is a shell with a filesystem navigator built in - you can see it in demo 5 on the homepage https://elv.sh
- I really like powershell
- Elvish: Multiplatform shell with expressive programming language
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Looking for programming languages created with Go
- https://github.com/elves/elvish
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Opinion: Rust has the largest learning curve for a non-esoteric programming language.
If you are looking for a more sane *shell* scripting language, Elvish looks promising: https://elv.sh/
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The comment with the most upvotes decides what language I write my finals in this year will be.
Elvish: https://elv.sh/
What are some alternatives?
nushell - A new type of shell
oil - Oils is our upgrade path from bash to a better language and runtime. It's also for Python and JavaScript users who avoid shell!
cobra - A Commander for modern Go CLI interactions
urfave/cli - A simple, fast, and fun package for building command line apps in Go
cointop - A fast and lightweight interactive terminal based UI application for tracking cryptocurrencies 🚀
xonsh - :shell: Python-powered, cross-platform, Unix-gazing shell.
kcli - A kafka command line browser
box-cli-maker - Make Highly Customized Boxes for CLI
murex - A smarter shell and scripting environment with advanced features designed for usability, safety and productivity (eg smarter DevOps tooling)
commandeer - Automatically sets up command line flags based on struct fields and tags.
OPS - ops - build and run nanos unikernels
cli - GitHub’s official command line tool