tty-spinner
Tmuxinator
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tty-spinner | Tmuxinator | |
---|---|---|
- | 44 | |
422 | 12,416 | |
- | 0.9% | |
5.1 | 6.8 | |
15 days ago | 19 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | 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.
tty-spinner
We haven't tracked posts mentioning tty-spinner yet.
Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
Tmuxinator
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Automating the startup of a dev workflow
Well, I now use tmux and tmuxinator. I have had many failed tmux attempts over the years, but I'm firmly bedded in now.
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Kera Desktop: open-source, cross-platform, web-based desktop environment
I once bought a 32 core ThreadRipper and tried to get along with using a cheap £200 Windows 10 laptop to remote into the threadripper while in coffee shops and use the ThreadRipper to do my work.
The £200 Windows 10 laptop wasn't powerful enough, it was too laggy. Even on Wifi.
I love the idea of the X11 protocol. And I still love the idea of a web desktop. Something that is supremely well integrated and allows me to move workloads between client and server seamlessly. This idea I really like. The ability to outsource computation and storage seamlessly. A process can be moved between machines seamlessly.
This could be modelled in Javascript and promises that can be sent around. Microservices in the desktop environment.
I looked at tools that would bring up tmux sessions with everything preloaded. (https://github.com/tmuxinator/tmuxinator)
ScrapScript has very good ideas in this area of distributing dependencies and storage. (https://scrapscript.org/) There is also val town.
I never use KDE Plasma widgets or the sidebar widgets that Mac provided.
There is so many exciting ideas that could be tried out but I worry they're all too big ideas to be implemented.
- Tmuxinator – manage tmux sessions easily
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How to save workspaces?
tmuxinator
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Getting Started with Tmux
I use https://github.com/tmuxinator/tmuxinator for my workspaces. Doesn't save ad-hoc layouts, but usually I find one layout that works per project, then create a tmuxinator config for it, so after reboot, it's a short "tmuxinator start $my-project" away to get back to how I want it to be.
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Is tmux appropriate for automation in a script?
you might be interested in: https://github.com/tmuxinator/tmuxinator
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A Quick and Easy Guide to Tmux
I’ve become a huge fan of tmuxinator. Incredible tool for defining templates for tmux.
- Decision to Vim - #2. vim repo and vimtutor, hammerspoon
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zoom only one side of the window?
I doubt that would be possible with tmux's built-in zoom functionality (if it is, I'm not aware). You can use tools such as tmuxinator to create cusotm layouts, but I think "zoom" in tmux means "cover the whole window"
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Been there, done that
mprocs looks pretty cool. In the past I've used Tmuxinator or Tmuxp configs for stuff like that.
What are some alternatives?
tty-progressbar - Display a single or multiple progress bars in the terminal.
tmuxp - 🖥️ Session manager for tmux, build on libtmux.
Pastel - Terminal output styling with intuitive and clean API.
awesome-tmux - A list of awesome resources for tmux
Terjira - Terjira is a very interactive and easy to use CLI tool for Jira.
teamocil - There's no I in Teamocil. At least not where you think. Teamocil is a simple tool used to automatically create windows and panes in tmux with YAML files.
tty-prompt - A beautiful and powerful interactive command line prompt
edex-ui - A cross-platform, customizable science fiction terminal emulator with advanced monitoring & touchscreen support.
circleci-cli - :cyclone: CLI client / command line tool for CircleCI
XDG - A XDG Base Directory Specification implementation.
zellij - A terminal workspace with batteries included