zsh-bench | http.cat | |
---|---|---|
24 | 69 | |
494 | 2,707 | |
- | 1.6% | |
4.1 | 7.4 | |
6 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Shell | TypeScript | |
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.
zsh-bench
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Oh My Zsh
Someone's made a benchmarking system for zsh: https://github.com/romkatv/zsh-bench#premade-configs
Of course, their config is the best according to the benchmark (and ohmyzsh is the slowest option), but DIY configs are also covered, particularly possible performance optimizations.
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Faster Shell Startup with Shell Switching
Unfortunately, running exit is not a great strategy for running benchmarks. For zsh specifically, plugin managers are optimized for fast exit.
romkatv did a great write-up and benchmark within the context of zsh[0]. It's a great read.
[0] https://github.com/romkatv/zsh-bench#how-not-to-benchmark
- Dynamic Aliases and Functions in Zsh
- Benchmark for interactive zsh – plugins, frameworks and plugin managers
- zsh-smartcache: another evalcache but can update the cache
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Announcing Spaceship v4.0 — a customizable Zsh prompt with asynchronous rendering
Given the addition of async rendering in the latest release of spaceship, I wasn't sure whether I should include performance in the list of features found in powerlevel10kbut but not in spaceship. I used zsh-bench to benchmark powerlevel10k on my laptop running on battery (I'm writing this on a train) with a config that makes powerlevel10k looks similar to spaceship. I simply ran p10k configure and chose what looked most similar: Lean Style, UNICODE, 256 colors, two lines, etc. Here are the benchmark results:
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7x slowdown when modify $fpath and add completion script
Obligatory link since you are engaging in profiling interactive zsh: https://github.com/romkatv/zsh-bench.
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What is the best plugin manager in your opinion?
1.) It's fast. Like, really fast. 1.) It supports deferred loading via zsh-defer 1.) It supports local plugins as well as ones hosted via a git provider (aka: GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket, etc) 1.) The codebase is simple and easy to understand and contribute to 1.) It supports git branches (with tag/shas on the roadmap) 1.) It supports partial plugin loading such as loading Oh-My-Zsh plugins and Prezto modules without loading the whole framework. 1.) There's an easy migration path from legacy plugin managers like Antigen/Antibody. 1.) Plugins are managed via a simple plugins file that makes it easy to share your config with others. 1.) And lots more
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Zsh significantly faster when sourced from bash with bash as default shell
In any case, slow zsh startup is always caused by whatever you put in zsh startup files and it's always possible to reduce zsh startup to imperceptible levels without sacrificing any functionality by editing said startup files. There is a bit of info on interactive zsh performance at https://github.com/romkatv/zsh-bench.
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Zpy is a simple zsh plugin manager written in python that don't add to the shell startup time.what to y'all think?
Why is this a good thing? Is this a proxy for performance? If so, you can measure performance directly with zsh-bench. This way you can describe the advantage in terms that have real value to end users. For example, you can say that the first prompt appears N milliseconds faster when using Zpy than if you were using something-else.
http.cat
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Ask HN: Happy 404 Day. Whats your favorite 404 error page?
Cats for other HTTP status codes can be found (or not found :-)) one level up
https://http.cat
- HTTP Area Codes
- Lidando com exceções: como fazer erros práticos e elegantes no Express js
- HTTP Cats
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What I've learnt in 1 month of programming
Whenever we request data or services from a server, it can respond with status codes represented by numbers. You've probably heard of "404" which means "not found", but there are others like "201 - Created" and "500 - Internal Server Error." During one of my mentoring sessions, I was given a website that showcased all these status codes with kitten memes and a brief description. It was fantastic and helped me grasp each one of those statuses better.
- Entendendo os códigos de status HTTP: Um guia teórico para desenvolvedores
- HTTP Status Dogs. Hypertext Transfer Protocol Response Status Codes. and Dogs
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NestJS tip: how to inject multiple versions of the same provider into one module (e.g.: many Axios instances)
import { Module, OnModuleInit } from '@nestjs/common' import { HttpModule, HttpService } from '@nestjs/axios' import { CatApi } from './cat-api.service' @Module({ imports: [ HttpModule.register({ // line A timeout: 1_000, maxRedirects: 2, baseURL: 'https://http.cat', }), ], providers: [ { provide: CatApi, useExisting: HttpService, // line B } ], exports: [CatApi], // line C }) export class CatApiModule implements OnModuleInit { constructor(private readonly httpService: HttpService) {} onModuleInit() { this.httpService.axiosRef.defaults.headers.common['Accept'] = 'application/json' } }
- I'm a Teapot
- 15 May 2023 - Daily Chat Thread
What are some alternatives?
fisher - A plugin manager for Fish
httpstatuses - A directory of HTTP Status Codes and code references
zinit - 🌻 Flexible and fast ZSH plugin manager
hiddentools - ✨ Discover a wide collection of unique tools
sheldon - :bowtie: Fast, configurable, shell plugin manager
rockstar - The Rockstar programming language specification
powerlevel10k - A Zsh theme
purest - REST API Client Library
zsh4humans - A turnkey configuration for Zsh
just-api - :boom: Test REST, GraphQL APIs
oh-my-fish - The Fish Shell Framework
curriculum - The open curriculum for learning web development