trurl
st
trurl | st | |
---|---|---|
8 | 46 | |
2,957 | 8 | |
0.7% | - | |
8.0 | 5.9 | |
15 days ago | 2 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT 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.
trurl
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Show HN: Just F-Ing Ping
Seems like an excellent use case for trurl [1], a tool built on curls url parsing functions (which can presumably handle any weird url format you throw at it), though I'm not sure how well packaged/available it is.
[1]: https://github.com/curl/trurl
- trurl - a command line tool for URL parsing and manipulation
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Track HN: Survival Rate of 120,396 Show HN Stories (June 2023)
bagder (of curl) also made trurl to address URL manipulation:
https://github.com/curl/trurl
- New tool from curl creator - trurl - command line tool for URL parsing and manipulation
- trurl - Command line URL parser, from the creator of cURL
- New tool from curl creator – trurl – for URL parsing and manipulation
- Trurl: Command line tool for URL parsing and manipulation
st
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Autodafe: "freeing your freeing your project from the clammy grip of autotools."
> you need to "edit your makefile". That isn't going to work for distributions
Is it not? [st] requires exactly that. And distros seem to have no issues shipping it.
[st] https://st.suckless.org/
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Tabby: A terminal for a more modern age
I am fundamentally and ideologically opposed to using a terminal emulator implemented in electron.
If you feel similarly, then you might enjoy https://st.suckless.org/
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How to make simple terminal transparent
You can use different forks of the ST. I, for example, use this one, already with the necessary patches https://github.com/mrdotx/st
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[sowm] My first time using linux!
kiss with kiss-xorg, nsxiv, st, dmenu with script, tewi, fet.sh
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Warp? A terminal behind login popup
My journey of using terminal emulators began together with my introduction to Linux about 7 years ago. GNOME terminal was my first as it came pre-installed on Ubuntu, my first Linux distribution. Since then, I've had the opportunity to explore and utilize a range of terminal emulators, including Alacritty, Kitty, st, Konsole, xterm, and most recently iTerm2. It's been interesting to experiment with these different emulators, each offering its unique features (or similar however with each with personal touch), user interfaces, and performance benchmarks. Just the other day, a new terminal emulator caught my attention: Warp Terminal. My curiosity won, and Warp was downloaded, this short blog are my thoughts about Warp terminal. At the moment there is only support for macOS, however linux and windows builds are on the way.
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[dwm] Beginning on linux desktop, first ricing
Terminal : st
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XTerm: It's Better Than You Thought (2021)
For those looking for a minimal VT100 terminal emulator without the legacy baggage of Xterm, I highly recommend checking out Suckless Software’s st: https://st.suckless.org/
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circles.nvim - v2.0.1
That last reference builds off of the work of the other two. It also breaks down how NOT modern Xterm is, but, if I've read it correctly, it confirms that its input latency is low compared to all other tested terminal emulators, including Alacritty and ST, which humorously and justifiably thrashes Xterm on its homepage for being a bloated program. Its not a good choice for everyone: it has poor right-to-left text and Unicode support, making working with Chinese, Arabic, and other alphabets not great, I've read.
- Are there any resources you would recommend for someone trying to make a terminal emulator in C and x11?
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Which terminal do you usually use?
ST is a favorite of some fervent minimalists. I do not think you would like it.
What are some alternatives?
unfurl - Pull out bits of URLs provided on stdin
alacritty - A cross-platform, OpenGL terminal emulator.
urler - trurl is a command line tool for URL parsing and manipulation. [Moved to: https://github.com/curl/trurl]
kitty - Cross-platform, fast, feature-rich, GPU based terminal
pguri - uri type for PostgreSQL
tmux-powerline - ⚡️ A tmux plugin giving you a hackable status bar consisting of dynamic & beautiful looking powerline segments, written purely in bash.
urlgen - A script that generates URL variations to test URL parsers with
termite - Termite is obsoleted by Alacritty. Termite was a keyboard-centric VTE-based terminal, aimed at use within a window manager with tiling and/or tabbing support.
JSMN - Jsmn is a world fastest JSON parser/tokenizer. This is the official repo replacing the old one at Bitbucket
st-flexipatch - An st build with preprocessor directives to decide which patches to include during build time
Down - Blazing fast Markdown / CommonMark rendering in Swift, built upon cmark.
libxft-bgra - A patched version of libxft that allows for colored emojis to be rendered in Suckless software (dmenu/st/whatever).