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.
wat
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A list of new(ish) command line tools – Julia Evans
Some time ago I have in fact written a small utility based on fzf that solves this problem by letting you comment aliases in your shell config file and fuzzy-search through them:
https://github.com/nmaggioni/wat - Which Alias To...?
The tag system is especially useful to me when I know the general concept I'm after but don't remember the exact wording of the command.
- Show HN: Wat – “Which Alias To?”, an fzf alias finder
lf
- Use Midnight Commander like a pro (2015)
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Yazi: Fast terminal file manager based on async I/O
I've tried using LF in the past, but it didn't stick. Will definitely give this a go, as I'm trying to move to an pure terminal workflow as closely as possible.
https://github.com/gokcehan/lf
- Ytree; a Unix Filemanager
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What are the best open source tools to easily navigate directories from the command line?
Hi. fff, lf, clifm Won't say they're best or not, rather interesting and maybe worth looking at. Looked up for the z in termux's repos and it's called "zoxide" there.
- Switching from unix - Is there a plugin or something similar to Ranger or NNN?
- NvimTree vs NeoTree
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LF filemanager is awesome - so is zsh, which I want to migrate to. But in bash and fish, you can make a function so when quitting LF, you end up in the dir you were in in LF. can't find something similar for zsh
in the Github page for lf under etc, you can find instruction for making such a function for bash and fish.
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What is the process of requesting for a package to be added to the official repos?
I recently discovered an amazing terminal file manager (lf). The package is available for most mainstream distros but not for openSUSE.
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What are your programs missing from the official Fedora repos?
For me, the main program missing is "lf" the ranger inspired terminal file manager. 5000 stars on Github, packaged in the official repos for basically anything under the sun except Fedora and a key part in my day-to-day workflow. https://github.com/gokcehan/lf
- kitty with lf pdf preview
What are some alternatives?
dive - A tool for exploring each layer in a docker image
ranger - A VIM-inspired filemanager for the console
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
nnn - n³ The unorthodox terminal file manager
Spruce - A BOSH template merge tool
ueberzug - ueberzug is a command line util which allows to display images in combination with X11. The user is expected to have knowledge of theoretical computer science. https://github.com/seebye/ueberzug/wiki/Troubleshooting/119e30f331799b30fb9594db29740685cb09425b
navi - An interactive cheatsheet tool for the command-line
mpv-image-viewer - Configuration, scripts and tips for using mpv as an image viewer
jq - Command-line JSON processor [Moved to: https://github.com/jqlang/jq]
lfm
tig - Text-mode interface for git
xplr - A hackable, minimal, fast TUI file explorer