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bashtickets reviews and mentions
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Ask HN: What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
A nice terminal-based ticketing system. https://github.com/tpapastylianou/bashtickets
v2 on master is as simple as it gets, but still incredibly functional; my team is dogfooding the hell out of it at work.
v3 on the "commandbased" branch is a total rehaul on the works, hoping to make this a more traditional/complete package, with a command-based interface (i.e. similar to how git works)
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Minimal Viable Programs – Joe Armstrong – Erlang and Other Stuff
I created something similar when I had to work in an extremely resource-constrained project (we could only work by ssh'ing to a server with no graphical utilities, and no internet access other than ssh). It has worked like a charm, and I would find it difficult to go back to anything else for ticket management now. I use this for 'in-project tickets/milestones' and leave stuff like github issues for 'external' issues by users.
Here it is on github for anyone who's interested: https://github.com/tpapastylianou/bashtickets
My tool is slightly less minimal than the one in the article, but essentially the same philosophy. Everything is a local file following a simple but fixed template, so that they can be grepped / manipulated if necessary. It plays very well with versioning, and supports milestones and 'advanced queries' as pre-made scripts. Obviously, since the tickets/milestones are simple text, it should be fairly straightforward to write your own queries if you know a bit of bash (or any other language you prefer, obviously).
In fact, this little system has worked so well, that I have recently been trying to convert it to a nice, portable, "command-based" tool, i.e. the way git works; bashtickets init (or just bt init) initialises a ticket repository, bt new ticket creates a new ticket, bt list lists open/closed tickets, or active/completed milestones etc. There's nothing wrong with the original, of course, except for the fact that it's a bit ugly to have a bag of scripts in each ticket repository you want to manage. A command-based interface simply makes it look a bit more 'modern', and clean, putting any pre-made scripts and 'template' files out of sight for peace of mind. This is still very much under development, but please see the "commandbased" branch if interested. I'd be very open to feedback :)
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The primary programming language of bashtickets is Shell.
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