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.
repo
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Sourcegraph is no longer Open Source
The button on the browser just navigates to the URL `git-peek://https://github.com/name/repo`. How your system handles this git-peek protocol is completely up to you. While the git-peek package does offer to setup a handler for this custom git-peek protocol, I went ahead and set it up manually. Now, my system calls this bash script whenever it encounters the git-peek protocol:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
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Syncing between personal MacBook and a Work Windows computer
You just clone the repository onto that computer with git clone https://github.com/name/repo. It should work automatically
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When i push from my computer, i'm never asked for my password, which is good but i don't understand why.
I have a /home/.ssh/ directory, with id_rsa and id_rsa.pub inside, and I think that's the reason i don't have to manually authenticate, however every post i found about how to use this method also explains that i have to associate the key with my account or repo on github, which i haven't done (at least, when i go to my github setting there's aren't any SSH keys registered), and to use SSH-compatible URLs for my repos, which i'm not doing neither (i'm just using the very normal https ones, like https://github.com/name/repo).
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Updating py-cord to 2.0
you can install a package with git like using pip install git+https://github.com/name/repo
- A list of "curl pipe in to shell" to install projects
cs
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Ripgrep is faster than {grep, ag, Git grep, ucg, pt, sift}
That’s one of the reasons I made this actually https://github.com/boyter/cs
I wanted and boolean syntax mixed with fzf instant search. It’s not as fast as ripgrep of course but it’s not solving the same problem.
- Sourcegraph is no longer Open Source
- codespelunker
- cs: command line codespelunker or code search written in Go
- codespelunker (cs) A command line search tool. Allows you to search over code or text files in the current directory either on the console, via a TUI or HTTP server, using some boolean queries or regular expressions.
- Show HN: Codespelunker a command line search tool
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Lmgrep: Lucene-based grep-like utility
Neat. This is similar to a tool I have been working on (but need to finish off) as I saw the same issue.
Except rather than build an index I brute forced the search each time. For most repositories it’s fast enough even with ranking.
https://github.com/boyter/cs For those interested it’s still very WIP with noticeable issues in TUI mode.
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Ask HN: What Are You Working On?
A few things.
An implementation of bitfunnel search in Go which I plan to put into searchcode.com at some point once I get all the issues resolved and if performance is acceptable
A command line search tool which brute forces with search ranking https://github.com/boyter/cs/ mostly for code but works pretty well for other things as well
Atlassian Confluence Cloud plugins. Mostly out of personal interest and because there appears to be a good marketplace to produce mostly passive income there.
What are some alternatives?
basher - A package manager for shell scripts.
git-peek - git repo to local editor instantly
sourcegraph-release-train - Sourcegraph Opensource build
dcs - Debian Code Search (codesearch.debian.net) is a search engine that searches through all the 130 GB of open source software that is included in Debian. Supports regular expressions!
hound - Lightning fast code searching made easy
livegrep - Interactively grep source code. Source for http://livegrep.com/
ctoc - Count Tokens of Code (forked from gocloc)
lucene-grep - Grep-like utility based on Lucene Monitor compiled with GraalVM native-image
bpkg - Lightweight bash package manager