.dotfiles | ddgr | |
---|---|---|
11 | 25 | |
11 | 2,860 | |
- | - | |
8.8 | 5.3 | |
6 days ago | 13 days ago | |
Shell | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
.dotfiles
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What video(s) really demonstrates how effective and helpful vim can be?
Here are my dotfiles for reference.
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Syntastic vs ALE vs CoC
If ALE does not already have an integration for a linter or an LSP, I can simply define my own custom integration.
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Clickable URLs?
But, for me, I find a mouse-free workflow to be better suited for tmux. I have this keybinding to capture content of the current pane, grep for URLs, filter them through fzf, then finally pass the results to open:
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[Gtk, Gvim] Dark/light
I have something similar in my ~/.vim/vimrc:
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How to get shellcheck working?
I usually set makeprg and errorformat in ~/.vim/after/compiler/*.vim and set the compiler as well as other file type-specific options in ~/.vim/after/ftplugin/*.vim , like
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Open Local Files and Line Numbers in GitHub and GitLab From Shell or Vim
If you liked this guide, you may find more useful/interesting things in my vimrc and/or in my custom git subcommands.
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Print Git Status in Your Tmux Statusbar
Similar to how you can print any information in a .bash_prompt via custom bash functions, so too can we implement a function that is invoked as a git sub-command via aliases.
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"How to do what 90% of plugins do in vanilla vim" - what are some of the 10% plugins?
Check out my vimrc for more examples of vim-native implementations of some common plugins.
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How To Get Make Target Tab Completion in Vim
For more vim goodies, check out my vimrc.
- Your most frequently used mapping
ddgr
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Add Link to selection without using the browser
Using the shell commands plugin and ddgr, I managed to create a nice trick, which allows you to add the link to selected text without having to google it (hard to describe, but the gif should give you the idea). Here is how it works: - install the shell commands plugin https://obsidian.md/plugins?id=obsidian-shellcommands - install ddgr https://github.com/jarun/ddgr - add the following code as shell command: bash query="{{selection}}" link=$(ddgr --num=1 --json "$query" | grep "url" | cut -d'"' -f4) mdlink="[$query]($link)" echo -n "$mdlink" - in the settings for that shell command, set the stdout to "current file: caret position" - you are good to go. (Maybe give it a hotkey)
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Chatgpt is pretty nice for terminals, one of the biggest reason you leave the terminal is to look stuff up on the web, which you can now do easily from CLI
search from the CLI is hardly new.. some examples by jarun: - google: https://github.com/jarun/googler - duckduckgo: https://github.com/jarun/ddgr
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 3 April 2023
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What video(s) really demonstrates how effective and helpful vim can be?
Leveraging filter commands (i.e. :!) to easily/quickly manipulate lines or entire buffers/files. For example, :!date will run the external date and show you results, but :.!date (which is done by typing !! then date will run the external date command and put the result on the current line. But, also, if you have the word date on a line, then you can run :.!bash (which is done by typing !! then bash), which will execute the command date and replace the current line with the result. There are infinite uses for this, like :!sort (for sorting text), :!column -t (for aligning/tabulating text), :!awk for text manipulation, :!ddgr duckduckgo cli, ...etc
- ddgr: DuckDuckGo from the terminal
- What happened to jarun/googler GitHub repo?
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This might be a repost but I was wondering if on there was a program (linux debian based) that would allow you to make searches on youtube for videos (preferely based on mpv) kinda line ani-cli for gogoanime ? (or if there's a way to repurpose ani-cli to search on youtube)
I like ddgr https://github.com/jarun/ddgr. Duckduckgo for the terminal. googler (https://github.com/jarun/googler) was great but google seem to have crippled it, at least for me. ddgr --site youtube.com QUERY .... You can use the builtin URL handler, or the JSON output, to pass the URL to a video player like mpv. yt-dlp is required for mpv to launch the video from URL.
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I dare you
Here is link number 1 - Previous text "Yes"
- Googler archived
What are some alternatives?
gitmux - :computer: Git in your tmux status bar
pup - Parsing HTML at the command line
debug - Debugging functionality for Ruby
ytfzf - A posix script to find and watch youtube videos from the terminal. (Without API)
editorconfig-vim - EditorConfig plugin for Vim
googler - :mag: Google from the terminal
vim-shellcheck - Vim wrapper for ShellCheck, a static analysis tool for shell scripts.
tuxi - Tuxi is a cli assistant. Get answers of your questions instantly.
dotfiles - There is no place like ~/
cordless - The Discord terminal client you never knew you wanted.
vim-fugitive - fugitive.vim: A Git wrapper so awesome, it should be illegal
wee-slack - A WeeChat script for Slack.com. Supports threads and reactions, synchronizes read markers, provides typing notification, etc..