vis
dust
vis | dust | |
---|---|---|
56 | 48 | |
4,171 | 7,819 | |
- | - | |
8.2 | 7.5 | |
6 days ago | 5 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
vis
- Vis: A vi-like editor based on Plan 9's structural regular expressions
- Oasis – a small, statically-linked Linux system
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Why Kakoune
> I wonder if the author has ever heard of vis[0]
Yes.
https://github.com/martanne/vis/wiki/Differences-from-Kakoun...
https://github.com/mawww/kakoune/wiki#onboarding
> which imho fulfills far better each one of those premises
Not very motivated for such a harsh critic..
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The Text Editor Sam by Rob Pike
If you want an editor that uses Sam's structural regexes with keyboard-focussed vi-style interaction, you might be interested in https://github.com/martanne/vis
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Can we write a Neo-vim Successor using rust?
Not Rust, but there's vis which aims to be a Vi(m) inspired editor with Sam's structural regular expressions.
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Met that guy one the train yesterday
I do not use vim nor a WM nor a Thinkpad, but I do use vis. It's great.
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Helix: Release 23.03 Highlights
> They either break from Vim's model (kakoune, helix) or follow Vim along with all it's flaws (Neovim, Vis).
I am sincerely curious of what flaws from Vim has Vis inherited, in your opinion.
I have the impression that the design idea of Vis is taking only the modal design of Vi (not Vim), plus the structural regular expressions of Sam, then make it as clean as possible with programmability via Lua plugins.
In fact, the state non-goals [1] seems to clearly distant itself from Vim.
[1]: https://github.com/martanne/vis#non-goals
- Helix: Post-Modern Text Editor
- Mle is a small, flexible, terminal-based text editor written in C
dust
- Dust Hits Version 1.0.0
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What command do i use for finding out space used and free
Try using dust https://github.com/bootandy/dust
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Deciding between Rust or Go for desktop applications
Folks open to using gdu might like to try dust (6k stars), or even erdtree (1.4k stars) which is too recent to show up on lists like this and still a bit behind on stars. A lot of people seem to use starship (33k stars) though I'm personally oldschool on prompts. There are many other items on that list I'm not motivated to check.
- Hyprland is now in community
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Rust vs Go Issue
The first thought I had was to use rayon for this. And looking at some prior art that does pretty much the exact same thing, it does indeed use rayon.
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Thank you DaisyDisk!
The dust CLI command (made with Rust) can do this too.
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erdtree: A modern, multi-threaded, and ️🌈aesthetic️🌈 alternative to tree and du - v1.7.0 release ️
How does this compare to dust?
- Dust
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Sloth – A Mac app that shows all open files, directories, sockets, etc.
Happened to me this morning, something filled up my drive in minutes. I used dust[1] to look for large files while it was happening but knowing what was doing it would've been a big help.
[1] https://github.com/bootandy/dust
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What "nice-to-have" CLI tools do you know?
dust is also really nice.
What are some alternatives?
kakoune - mawww's experiment for a better code editor
mako - A lightweight Wayland notification daemon
micro-editor - A modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor
dutree - a tool to analyze file system usage written in Rust
nextvi - Next version of neatvi (a small vi/ex editor) for editing bidirectional UTF-8 text
dua-cli - View disk space usage and delete unwanted data, fast.
vim-visual-multi - Multiple cursors plugin for vim/neovim
btdu - sampling disk usage profiler for btrfs
mle - flexible terminal-based text editor (C)
tesseract-ocr - Tesseract Open Source OCR Engine (main repository)
nvim-select-multi-line - Neovim plugin. select multiple lines that are not adjacent.
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore