peco
pyp
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peco
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14 Awesome CLI Tools for Modern Software Developers
Think of peco as a realtime grep.
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Best Developer Setup (Fish Shell & NeoVim & VSCode Ext. Pack )
peco - Interactive filtering
- Simplistic interactive filtering tool: peco
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9 Command-Line Tools to Go to Infinity & Beyond
5. Peco
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This 9 Coolest CLI Tools that i found this week
Link : https://github.com/peco/peco
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Show HN: History suggest box for your shell
How does this differ from Peco[1]?
[1]: https://github.com/peco/peco
pyp
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Modern Linux Tools vs. Unix Classics: Which Would I Choose?
> I too can never remember jq syntax when I need to. I usually just end up writing a Python script
Same here! That's why for small things I made pyxargs [1] to use python in the shell. In another thread I also just learned of pyp [2] which I haven't tried yet but looks like it'd be even better for this use case.
[1] https://github.com/elesiuta/pyxargs
[2] https://github.com/hauntsaninja/pyp
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Shshsh is a bridge connects Python and shell
I have bookmarked/tried so many Python/Shell mashups over the years.
IMHO the following is about the only one that's tasteful and not going off the deep end: https://github.com/hauntsaninja/pyp
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Easily handle CLI operation via Python instead of regular Bash programs
I wrote a similar tool a while back that lets you create your own "magic" variables. I use `f` all the time! https://github.com/hauntsaninja/pyp#pyp-lets-you-configure-y...
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A Tour of the Oil Language
Thank you for the extensive and thoughtful comment! This does help clarify your approach quite considerably. I wonder, since you are hoping to attract collaborators, whether there is some kind of formal spec for the language somewhere? For example, you mentioned parallel efforts: suppose I wanted to write a port to pure C; is there any way, short of reading every one of your posts and trying to contain the whole language in my head at once, for me to know exactly what I need to implement?
Something I've been trying to figure out: what is the exact relationship at present between OSH and Oil? When you say "OSH" do you mean the language, or the shell itself "oil shell"? If Oil is not something I can download, why exactly does that `const v = max(1, 2)` statement work in osh? It's clearly not just a Bash implementation, it's got other features. Is that a subset of Oil's features? Which subset?
Since you're also interested in other shells, you might have a look at pyp [1]. It captures a lot of the way I personally would like to use some future shell. If the features of pyp were integrated into the shell itself, you wouldn't need an external command, you could just (for example) pipe the output of one program into a python-like statement that mangles the incoming strings in some way, and pipe that out to some xargs-like program to use in a subshell. (The fact that you apparently can't use the pipe in what Xonsh calls "Python mode" is for me the central limiting feature of that shell.)
[1] https://github.com/hauntsaninja/pyp
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9 Command-Line Tools to Go to Infinity & Beyond
9. Pyp
What are some alternatives?
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
InquirerPy - :snake: Python port of Inquirer.js (A collection of common interactive command-line user interfaces)
go-sitemap-generator - go-sitemap-generator is the easiest way to generate Sitemaps in Go
DALLE-pytorch - Implementation / replication of DALL-E, OpenAI's Text to Image Transformer, in Pytorch
go-cron - A simple Cron library for go that can execute closures or functions at varying intervals, from once a second to once a year on a specific date and time. Primarily for web applications and long running daemons.
Pawky - The Python version of awk
ngrok - Unified ingress for developers
shyaml - YAML for command line
csvtk - A cross-platform, efficient and practical CSV/TSV toolkit in Golang
deep-daze - Simple command line tool for text to image generation using OpenAI's CLIP and Siren (Implicit neural representation network). Technique was originally created by https://twitter.com/advadnoun
godropbox - Common libraries for writing Go services/applications.
Command-line-text-processing - :zap: From finding text to search and replace, from sorting to beautifying text and more :art: