Open Source Rust Source Code Analysis Tools

Rust Source Code Analysis Tools

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  • 1
    BAT

    BAT

    A cat(1) clone with syntax highlighting and Git integration

    A cat(1) clone with syntax highlighting and Git integration. By default, bat pipes its own output to a pager (e.g. less) if the output is too large for one screen. If you would rather bat work like cat all the time (never page output), you can set --paging=never as an option, either on the command line or in your configuration file. If you intend to alias cat to bat in your shell configuration, you can use alias cat='bat --paging=never' to preserve the default behavior. Even with a pager set, you can still use bat to concatenate files. Whenever bat detects a non-interactive terminal (i.e. when you pipe into another process or into a file), bat will act as a drop-in replacement for cat and fall back to printing the plain file contents, regardless of the --pager option's value. Use bat --list-themes to get a list of all available themes for syntax highlighting.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    navi

    navi

    An interactive cheatsheet tool for the command-line

    navi allows you to browse through cheatsheets (that you may write yourself or download from maintainers) and execute commands. Suggested values for arguments are dynamically displayed in a list. it will spare you from knowing CLIs by heart. It will spare you from copy-pasting output from intermediate commands. It will make you type less. It will teach you new one-liners. It uses fzf, skim, or Alfred under the hood and it can be either used as a command or as a shell widget (à la Ctrl-R). There are multiple ways to use navi. For example, by typing navi in the terminal, which you have access to all possible subcommands and flags, or as a shell widget for the terminal, the shell history is correctly populated (i.e. with the actual command you ran instead of navi) and you can edit the command as you wish before executing it. You can also use it as aliases, as a shell scripting tool, and as an Alfred workflow.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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