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.
scripts
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Jedi-Vim not working well with konsole terminal?
here's a Python script I use for testing 256-color support: show-all-256-colors
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Time to move on from 18.04...
I try to minimize the differences from stock Ubuntu installs to as little as possible, and I try to automate the changes I make (e.g. I've a shell script that adjusts my GNOME setup using dconf load). This sometimes means that I have to participate in upstream development to get a bugfix or feature that I really want included directly upstream, so I won't have to do local builds of stuff after the next Ubuntu upgrade.
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Do you use ctags or LSP?
Oh! I remember now -- I created a wrapper ~/bin/ctags that updates .git/info/exclude before delegating to /usr/bin/ctags.
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The ! command, what do you use it for?
These days my wrapper does a bit more, since I build vim from the git repo and run it directly from the source tree by skipping the make install step (so my wrapper sets VIMRUNTIME instead).
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It took years to perfect my setup and now I want to share it with everyone
I also have a ~/bin that I clone from https://github.com/mgedmin/scripts on some machines, where I need my helpful scripts. Some of these I run on a fresh Ubuntu install to tweak my GNOME desktop so I won't have to do that manually (250 ms keyboard repeat delay is a necessity for me, and I'd rather not try to match it exactly with a GUI slider, back when GNOME had such a slider).
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How do you keep your Ubuntu package list clean?
I do a fresh install every time I buy a new hard drive. I keep notes to all the customizations etc. I do to my machine, so it's easier to do it again, plus I try to script things for the same reason.
add-ed
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Hired: A Modern Take on 'Ed'
It isn't too late yet, you can be the one to bring The Standard Editor to the Webshit masses!
The backing library https://github.com/sidju/add-ed could either be run through https://neon-bindings.com/ , or compiled into web assembly for that matter. Should just be a weekend project to create an electron `ed`, and if that isn't sufficiently bloated you can `node install everything`.
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pacdef, the declarative package manager for Arch, releases v1.0.0
When/if "later (TM)" occurs, I recommend defining your tests using fixtures/check functions. For example, my library requires a fair bit of work both to setup an arbitrary state and read the resulting state after a test. Since that is needed in every test I have abstracted it into this function https://github.com/sidju/add-ed/blob/main/tests/shared/inner_fixture.rs , which I then create more readable/usable wrappers around here https://github.com/sidju/add-ed/blob/main/tests/shared/fixtures.rs .
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The ! command, what do you use it for?
( The ed clone I am writing: https://github.com/sidju/hired , and its backend: https://github.com/sidju/add-ed )
- Intuitive: A crate for writing TUIs declaratively
What are some alternatives?
dotfiles - My personal Linux shell settings
hired - A modern take on 'ed'
NiceOS - Every Linux distro replacement
jless - jless is a command-line JSON viewer designed for reading, exploring, and searching through JSON data.
CTRLGGitBlame.vim - Append git blame information to the output of <C-g>
server_common
intuitive - A library for building declarative text-based user interfaces
YouCompleteMe - A code-completion engine for Vim
debian - A complete, minimalist Debian setup for power users
lsp - Language Server Protocol (LSP) plugin for Vim9