libconfini
cli-guidelines
libconfini | cli-guidelines | |
---|---|---|
8 | 47 | |
155 | 2,788 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 3.6 | |
almost 2 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
C | CSS | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 |
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libconfini
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Why the fuck are we templating YAML? (2019)
Personally I prefer INI over nearly all configuration formats.
https://github.com/madmurphy/libconfini/wiki/An-INI-critique...
- An INI Critique of TOML
- Do you call it an "ini" file or a "dot I N I" file?
- libconfini: Yet another INI parser
- An INI critique of TOML
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YAML: The Missing Battery in Python
Essentially the reasons given here. (This is from an INI parser developer, but I don’t think it’s particularly biased.)
- If a linux/unix was rewritten today, what would be different?
cli-guidelines
- Ask HN: Where to read about terminal UIs?
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Ask HN: Do you read Secrets from Environment Variables
The Command Line Interface Guidelines [1] says:
> Do not read secrets from environment variables
> Secrets should only be accepted via credential files, pipes, `AF_UNIX` sockets, secret management services, or another IPC mechanism
Which one of these do you use? On github it seems common for projects to use environment variables for secrets.
[1] https://clig.dev/#environment-variables
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Command Line Interface Guidelines
Seems they took a small step back from their previous "don't bother with man pages" stance. Now it's "Consider providing man pages."
I still find it a rather shocking order of priority, honestly.
https://clig.dev/#documentation
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Ask HN: Best way to do scoped commands in a CLI app
- E. `blah project foo --edit`
Wondering if there was any guidance on this from the UNIX people. Perhaps scoping should be done using the file system. `cd path/to/project && blah edit`. Like git does with `git --cwd=path/to/project`. Maybe a virtual FS could even be used. Then you wouldn't have to continuously type in the scope with each command. Interesting thinking about how to maintain state in the terminal...thinking about how Python's virtual env bin/activate modifies the shell.
Found an interesting guide here: https://clig.dev/
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CLI user experience case study
Capturing these guidelines is one of the primary reasons that https://clig.dev/ exists.
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Introducing my Password Manager project - Seeking Feedback and Contributions
You may want to take a look at various existing CLIs to get inspiration on how they operate, the user feedback loop and the ergonomics on using them. Here is a great website on some CLI structing guidance https://clig.dev/
What are some alternatives?
config-parser - A slim, fully managed C# library for reading/writing .ini, .conf, .cfg etc configuration files.
redox - Mirror of https://gitlab.redox-os.org/redox-os/redox
bubblewrap - Low-level unprivileged sandboxing tool used by Flatpak and similar projects
nodejs-cli-apps-best-practices - The largest Node.js CLI Apps best practices list ✨
ini-parser - Read/Write an INI file the easy way!
toml - Tom's Obvious, Minimal Language
typer - Typer, build great CLIs. Easy to code. Based on Python type hints.
crudini - A utility for manipulating ini files
argparse-benchmarks-rs - Collected benchmarks for arg parsing crates written in Rust [Moved to: https://github.com/rosetta-rs/argparse-rosetta-rs]
guile-gi - Bindings for GObject Introspection and libgirepository for Guile
picocli - Picocli is a modern framework for building powerful, user-friendly, GraalVM-enabled command line apps with ease. It supports colors, autocompletion, subcommands, and more. In 1 source file so apps can include as source & avoid adding a dependency. Written in Java, usable from Groovy, Kotlin, Scala, etc.