exa | tokei | |
---|---|---|
129 | 30 | |
23,340 | 10,352 | |
- | - | |
3.5 | 8.0 | |
12 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
exa
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A ‘Software Developer’ Knows Enough to Deliver Working Software Alone and in Teams
It depends on the scale of the project but man, if you can't build a simple CRUD app in your preferred stack and deploy it in some fashion (even if it's just a binary posted on some website, kinda like Exa) then that's just disappointing...
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Which 2nd language should I learn?
Can compile to a single binary to build tools like exa
- Exa Is Deprecated
- ls -l IN COLOR!
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What's your favorite Go architecture for a new micro-service? Here's mine...
Try https://github.com/ogham/exa and exa -T -L2 command . It will generate a good folder structure tree to update the question
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macOS Command-Line Tools You Might Not Know About
Some of us don't want all of GNU's utilities; just on an as-needed basis. They're not as needed as they once were.
Many of these utilities have been rewritten in Rust and have more modern features.
For example, instead of ls, I use exa [1]. Or ripgrep [2] instead of grep.
[1]: https://github.com/ogham/exa
[2]: https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep
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List of apps I use every day - Version 2023
fish: A very fast shell with various customization options to streamline daily commands. I discovered it through this post by @caarlos0, where he provides more details about performance and the differences between fish and zsh. Additionally, I use some CLI utilities like delta, exa, and ripgrep. Here's my dotfiles for fish.
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Ls with icons
Hi! I use this: https://the.exa.website, and the package to this: https://archlinux.org/packages/extra/x86_64/exa/
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Everything I Installed on My New Mac
I still use exa for listing files in the terminal. It's a modern replacement for ls with a lot of useful features. With icons, colors, and git integration, it makes listing files much nicer.
tokei
- XAMPPRocky/tokei: Count your code, quickly
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The Linux Kernel Prepares for Rust 1.77 Upgrade
So If we would only count code and not comments, it is only 9489 LoC Rust. Which would be about 0.03% and if we take all lines and not only LoC it would be around 0.05%
[0] https://github.com/XAMPPRocky/tokei
[1] https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/b401b621758e46812da...
- Tokei: Display statistics about your code, quickly
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SOOOO many Errors when upgrading
thirdly: found this (https://github.com/XAMPPRocky/tokei) and wanted to analyze languages used on my system, didn't see a package manager (apt) for it that I had. So i installed cargo via apt-get rustup. Added the bin folder to $PATH via PATH=$PATH:~/.cargo/bin. But did not make it permanent. And stupidly rand tokei on "/", realizing how long and unhelpful that would be killed it. Then ran it in a dump folder with some very nested repo dumps, and tons of wolfram.nb files. After killing that too, and attempting to kill via system monitor. Still have two of those as zombie processes.
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What "nice-to-have" CLI tools do you know?
tokei
- How long is your neovim config?
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How do you name your crates?
For what it's worth, tokei seems to be named after tokei.
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[media] Onefetch v2.13 is typically 2x faster and now supports ~100 programming languages
BTW, for more info on how it is done, you can check out tokei which is the library use by onefetch for code statistics.
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Pytokei: a python binding for rust's tokei
With pytokei you can count code quickly using all the power from tokei, but from python.
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Rust Easy! Modern Cross-platform Command Line Tools to Supercharge Your Terminal
Tokei is a nice utility to count lines and stats of code. It is very fast, accurate, and has a nice output. It supports over 150 languages and can output in JSON, YAML, CBOR, and human-readable tables.
What are some alternatives?
lsd - The next gen ls command
cloc - cloc counts blank lines, comment lines, and physical lines of source code in many programming languages.
colorls - A Ruby gem that beautifies the terminal's ls command, with color and font-awesome icons. :tada:
coreutils - Cross-platform Rust rewrite of the GNU coreutils
fish-shell - The user-friendly command line shell.
uwc
fd - A simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to 'find'
trust-dns - A Rust based DNS client, server, and resolver [Moved to: https://github.com/hickory-dns/hickory-dns]
rrun - minimalistic command launcher in rust
bat - A cat(1) clone with wings.
habitat - Modern applications with built-in automation