wsjq
mcfly
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wsjq | mcfly | |
---|---|---|
2 | 49 | |
13 | 6,545 | |
- | - | |
6.8 | 7.2 | |
about 1 month ago | 25 days ago | |
jq | Rust | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | MIT License |
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wsjq
- Zq: An Easier (and Faster) Alternative to Jq
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An Introduction to JQ
jq is unsurprisingly Turing complete, so I wrote a Whitespace interpreter[0] in jq. It is able to handle real-time I/O by requesting lines on-demand from stdin, which is the main input source, with `input` and outputting strings in a stream.
With a relatively large jq program like that, it is critical that the main recursive loop run efficiently, so it's annoying that there's no way to detect whether tail call optimization was applied, other than benchmarking. It would also be nice if object values were lazily evaluated so that it would be possible to create ad hoc switches.
[0]: https://github.com/andrewarchi/wsjq
mcfly
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Fly through your shell history
It is a custom pretrained NN with very few nodes, the full source code is here: https://github.com/cantino/mcfly/blob/master/src/network.rs
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Cdpath: Easily Navigate Directories in the Terminal
I've had a great time using McFly (https://github.com/cantino/mcfly) for going through my command history. It prioritizes showing commands that were previously run in your current directory!
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fish-shell: the user-friendly command-line shell
I end up installing mcfly (https://github.com/cantino/mcfly) in all my shells, and it works great in fish as well.
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Linux terminal user
You should try https://github.com/cantino/mcfly, it replaces the Ctrl r bind for fuzzy-search-style patter matching, that you can see all the similar commands and then select the one you want, it has been on all my machines ever since I've learnd of it
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Atuin replaces your existing shell history with a SQLite database
There's also McFly which does the same thing.
https://github.com/cantino/mcfly
I've only used McFly and found it to be pretty great. My only complaint is the default search mode is SQL strings, so you have to use `%` for wildcards. I wish it was a more forgiving, less exact search.
Has anyone used both and could compare them?
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Fulfilling a reader's request for my “dot files”
If you like searching your Bash history with fzf, you're gonna love McFly: https://github.com/cantino/mcfly
- Mcfly: Fly through your shell history. Great Scott
- Linux Kernel 6.2 issue · Issue #333 · cantino/mcfly
- Happens too often
- Advice to be more efficient with the terminal?
What are some alternatives?
kubectl-jq - Kubectl plugin that works like "kubectl get" but runs everything through a JQ program you provide
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
rb - Turns Ruby into a versatile command line utility
atuin - ✨ Magical shell history
json-logs - A tool to pretty-print JSON logs, like those from zap or logrus.
zsh-histdb - A slightly better history for zsh
howto - Documenting useful things, lest I forget, and sharing is caring
antigen - The plugin manager for zsh.
gron - Make JSON greppable!
modern-unix - A collection of modern/faster/saner alternatives to common unix commands.
jid - json incremental digger
zoxide - A smarter cd command. Supports all major shells.