turbo
blessed-contrib
turbo | blessed-contrib | |
---|---|---|
9 | 10 | |
419 | 15,398 | |
- | - | |
6.7 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 4 months ago | |
C++ | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
turbo
-
The Tilde Text Editor
https://github.com/magiblot/turbo which is built using Turbo Vision framework
- Turbo: An experimental text editor based on Scintilla and Turbo Vision
-
I miss Turbo C, I've never used such a fantastic IDE again. It could include assembly commands directly from C code, it had a powerful graphics library for the 80s. in forty years I've used many languages, environments, frameworks... but I still miss the simplicity and power of Turbo C under MS/DOS/
also https://github.com/magiblot/turbo
-
Lesser Known Terminal Editors
Turbo - editor made using TurboVision, with support for Unicode: https://github.com/magiblot/turbo
-
Building Rich Terminal Dashboards
Show them this, too:
https://github.com/magiblot/turbo
Applications like tvedit were designed for MS-DOS, which offered full interaction with the mouse and keyboard, and many of them were commercial products aimed at a general audience. TUI applications from the Unix tradition, however, were designed for use in terminals with limited capabilities, and were aimed at more technical users (or were created by the users themselves).
User-friendly TUI applications in MS-DOS were succeeded by Windows applications, while the largest revolution in the last 20 years in Unix TUIs has been the widespread support of 256/24-bit colors and UTF-8. Hence the gap in usability between the two worlds.
-
An experimental text editor based on Scintilla and Turbo Vision
Scintilla provides a few default platform adapters: GTK, Qt, Win32, etc. In order to have it work in a terminal application, I just wrote my own adapter.
blessed-contrib
-
good high-level ncurses library
I still can't tear myself away from blessed-contrib and it's unfortunate to see that these projects are not very maintained
-
Dear Redditors! Can someone please explain to me how this widget works?
Link:https://github.com/yaronn/blessed-contrib PS I'm sorry for the bad English
- does anyone know of libraries with which I can make a text element on the site (as in the example)
-
Command line applications
Yes, you can create whatever you want - from simple CLI utils , through moderately complex interactive tools (example by me), to complex, full-fledged command line applications (example, another example).
- An idea for a virtual pet in my Linux terminal
-
Table and color formats
On Rust/WASM I have been playing around with using TUI which is a lib inspired by the NodeJS library Blessed Contrib which might me a good idea to look at (not sure how well it works with javascript though). I have also used Comfy-table with Rust for simple table output.
-
I created an htop-like terminal dashboard for viewing and managing docker containers, written in Node
✅ Built with the Node.js, blessed, and blessed-contrib
- I made a terminal utility to monitor some system stats. Was wondering if you guys know of anything better or if I should continue dev work on it since we need it?
-
Building Rich Terminal Dashboards
If you plan on using blessed, there’s also (blessed-contrib)[https://github.com/yaronn/blessed-contrib], which is a library of widgets for blessed.
What are some alternatives?
TuiCss - Text-based user interface CSS library
python-prompt-toolkit - Library for building powerful interactive command line applications in Python
pkg - Package your Node.js project into an executable
notcurses - blingful character graphics/TUI library. definitely not curses.
GUMBO-Editor - The simple text editor in written in C++
blessed - A high-level terminal interface library for node.js.
reflex-vty - Build terminal applications using functional reactive programming (FRP) with Reflex FRP.
dashing - Terminal dashboards for Python
tilde - The Tilde text editor
Turbo Vision - A modern port of Turbo Vision 2.0, the classical framework for text-based user interfaces. Now cross-platform and with Unicode support.
bpytop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor