pushb | dotfiles | |
---|---|---|
1 | 3 | |
57 | 28 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.1 | |
over 1 year ago | about 2 months ago | |
Rust | Shell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Do What The F*ck You Want To Public License |
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.
pushb
-
How to navigate directories faster with Bash (2015)
If you frequently need to switch to and from several git branches, pushb and popb are useful commands.
https://github.com/pwoolcoc/pushb
dotfiles
-
The bash book to rule them all
> An interactive shell can be a login-shell or a non-login-shell.
A shell can be login and non-interactive.
This happens e.g when starting a session from a X session manager. Subsequently a terminal such as Xterm starts non-login interactive sessions.
Similarly doing ssh starts a non-interactive login shell.
> However, bash behaves like an interactive non-login shell in this case and reads `bashrc`.
IIRC nope: distros such as Debian often have bashrc source bash profile (or the other way around, I can't recall) which has me irate to no end+. They even have some TTY dependent stuff in profile which spits out some error in some cases when no TTY is allocated because heh not interactive.
+ I took great length to have my rc and profile properly separated because it's that much faster not to source the unneeded stuff. https://github.com/lloeki/dotfiles
-
A Dotfile History
Got a similar repo: https://github.com/lloeki/dotfiles
A couple of differences though.
- there's a setup script to do the basic symlinks, automatically from the files in the "home" subdir by prepending the names with .
- then for shell stuff everything is sourced from either shell, bash, or zsh subdirs, all in modular files
- shell dir content is autoloaded based on +x
- there are polyfills for bash that makes it more zsh-like (stuff like precmd)
- each shell module tests for tool presence and is a noop or sets up a fallback when the tool is not available, so I can clone this on any system and have it still work, gracefully degrading down to zero deps except the shell itself
- it also attempts to provide a uniform experience across bash versions and OSes (darwin, linux)
- prompt is minimal (workdir, dirname only, not the full path), increases with detail progressively and in a hierarchical order (root if root, host if ssh, workdir, vcs branch if in repo, vcs status as symbols if nonempty, venv name if virtualenv, "nix" if in nix shell)
- How to navigate directories faster with Bash (2015)
What are some alternatives?
bashmarks - Directory bookmarks for the shell
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
hstr - bash and zsh shell history suggest box - easily view, navigate, search and manage your command history.
nnn - n³ The unorthodox terminal file manager
goat - POSIX-compliant shell movement boosting hack for real ninjas (aka `cd x` and `cd ...`)
ohmyzsh - 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,300+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
zoxide - A smarter cd command. Supports all major shells.
oil - Oils is our upgrade path from bash to a better language and runtime. It's also for Python and JavaScript users who avoid shell!
ranger - A VIM-inspired filemanager for the console