Browse free open source Haskell Terminals and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Haskell Terminals by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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  • 1
    tetris

    tetris

    A terminal interface for Tetris

    A terminal interface for Tetris. Installation on MacOS and Linux is outlined below. Windows support is questionable, but you can try to install from source. The default game is run by simply executing the tetris command. If the unicode characters look a bit wonky in your terminal, you can also run. People seem to have varying levels of success with the linux binary. Please note that it is compiled dynamically and hence should not be expected to work on most distros. This code is built on top of brick which makes building terminal user interfaces very accessible.
    Downloads: 9 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    Matterhorn

    Matterhorn

    A feature-rich Unix terminal client for the Mattermost chat system

    Matterhorn is a terminal client for the Mattermost chat system. We provide pre-built binary releases for some platforms. Please see the release list to download a binary release for your platform that matches your server version. When you run Matterhorn you'll be prompted for your server URL and credentials. To connect, just paste your web client's Mattermost URL into the Server URL box and enter your credentials. See the Matterhorn User Guide on the details for providing each kind of supported credentials. For most of our binary releases, no additional packages need to be installed; they should just work out of the box. But here are some additional requirements that may apply for your platform. Matterhorn version strings will be of the form ABBCC.X.Y where ABBCC corresponds to the lowest Mattermost server version expected to be supported by the release. For example, if a release supports Mattermost server version 1.2.3, the ABBCC portion of the matterhorn version will be 10203.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3
    Unused

    Unused

    A command line tool to identify unused code

    Unused identifies unused code in Rails, Phoenix, and other types of applications, improving developer productivity. By default, unused leverages a different memory allocator called mimalloc. For my local benchmarks, it speeds up execution by a significant amount (which is documented in the commit introducing mimalloc), but currently runs into sporadic issues on Apple M1 devices. If you run into issues with segmentation faults, consider reinstalling unused with the stock Rust allocator. It is strongly recommended you install Universal Ctags to generate tags files. Universal Ctags supports more languages and has native parsers for a good number of them, resulting in faster tags generation time.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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