xplr
ngs
xplr | ngs | |
---|---|---|
104 | 94 | |
3,952 | 1,367 | |
- | 2.8% | |
8.3 | 3.0 | |
4 days ago | 15 days ago | |
Rust | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
xplr
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Which is Best TUI file manager
I use xplr and like it very much.
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Midnight Commander is MIA; any command line based twin pane file manager recommendations?
xplr
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[Projet] PIC š·
PIC stands for Preview Image in CLI, I think this should be explicit enough. I first made it because I needed a way to display images in the terminal (for an xplr plugin), but the more I worked on it, the better it got, as of now I have implemented 4 different ways to preview images (I couldn't find other ones), some can even display GIFs!
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Telegraph and the Unix Shell
Certain file managers like xplr allow for more advanced terminal UX. Check out the video on https://xplr.dev/ and you can see something like a live/interactive ls that allows toggling arguments (instead of running multiple commands and pushing previous stdout further into the past).
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xplr v0.20.0 - what's new?
xplr version 0.20.0 was released last week. If you haven't already, go ahead and install the latest version. This post will try to break down the changelog in the release in an easy-to-digest manner, looking through the perspective of different user groups.
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ranger-like three pane layout for xplr file explorer written in rust
Tool: https://xplr.dev
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Ask HN: Is it still possible to live in a terminal?
The Vim/Neovim ecosystem has gotten unbelievably better over the last 5-10 years. "Living in the terminal" for core development work is IMO better than pretty much anything else out there; my Neovim setup has a modern plugin manager; an IDE-like experience with fast autocompletion as I type, goto definition, and automated refactor support; and a side-drawer file browser navigable with Vim motions. It feels like an IDE, except that it launches in ~100ms and has ultra-low typing latency. Using it with tmux panes means I can have various drawers and panes with a series of full, incredibly fast terminals wherever I want, with long-running tasks like automated test watching/running while I edit code placed wherever I want around the editor panel. Not to mention the Cambrian explosion of "modern" terminal tooling getting built, like xplr [1], hyperfine [2], httpie [3], etc.
That being said, I think "living in the terminal" for general purpose computing, like browsing the web or talking to your coworkers, has been in a kind of frozen standstill while the rest of the world has moved on. I think it isn't worth trying to push non-dev work into the terminal currently.
1: https://github.com/sayanarijit/xplr
2: https://github.com/sharkdp/hyperfine
3: https://github.com/httpie/httpie
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LF, NNN or ViFM?
a terminal file manager built in rust I just heard about
- xplr released with built-in fuzzy search based on skim v2 algorithm
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how to rm -rf ~/Desktop permanently?
I tried using nnn but didn't find it easy to adopt, now I'm looking at https://github.com/sayanarijit/xplr
ngs
- Next Generation Shell ā a modern programming language for DevOps
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Ask HN: Show me your half baked project
Next Generation Shell. As a shell, it's a programming language and a UI. Half baked: programming language - pretty much done, we use it at work; UI - just starting to work on.
Ananlysis of what's wrong with current shells' UIs and how to fix it - https://blog.ngs-lang.org/2023/09/30/ui-in-ngs/
Project - https://github.com/ngs-lang/ngs
Any help would be appreciated of course :)
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AWS while being great at the underlying services, had by far the worst user experience ever existed on a platform at that scale
The plan for UI is at https://github.com/ngs-lang/ngs/wiki/UI-Design
- NGS v0.2.16 is out
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How NGS started? ā Next Generation Shell
The site is at https://ngs-lang.org/
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Next Generation Shell
Project: https://github.com/ngs-lang/ngs
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I'm trying to switch from Python to Lua so I can get into game development... where do I start?
There are number of new ones coming out ...and I'm curious of https://github.com/ngs-lang/ngs. As a language nerd, have you seen that?
- Monthly 'Shameless Self Promotion' thread - 2023/01
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Telegraph and the Unix Shell
Thanks, took a note - https://github.com/ngs-lang/ngs/issues/621
- Building a simple shell in C ā Part 3
What are some alternatives?
nnn - nĀ³ The unorthodox terminal file manager
nushell - A new type of shell
broot - A new way to see and navigate directory trees : https://dystroy.org/broot
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!
lf - Terminal file manager
fx - Terminal JSON viewer & processor
ranger.vim - Ranger file manager for Vim
ohmyzsh - š 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.
nnn.vim - File manager for vim/neovim powered by nĀ³
ShellCheck - ShellCheck, a static analysis tool for shell scripts
joshuto - ranger-like terminal file manager written in Rust
bashly - Bash command line framework and CLI generator