Showing 7 open source projects for "want"

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  • 1
    Scooter

    Scooter

    Interactive find and replace in the terminal

    Scooter is an interactive find-and-replace terminal UI app. Search with either a fixed string or a regular expression, enter a replacement, and interactively toggle which instances you want to replace. You can also specify a regex pattern for the file paths you want to search. If the instance you're attempting to replace has changed since the search was performed, e.g. if you've switched branches and that line no longer exists, that particular replacement won't occur: you'll see all such cases at the end.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    bottom

    bottom

    Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor

    ...By default, bottom is somewhat like a dashboard - a bunch of different widgets, all showing different things, and they all cram together to fit into one terminal. If you instead just want to see one widget, maybe you want to look at a graph in more detail, for example, you can "expand" the currently selected widget using the e key, which will hide all other widgets and make that widget take up all available terminal space. To allow for widget-specific keybindings and expansion, there is the idea of widget selection in bottom, where you can focus on a specific widget to work with it. ...
    Downloads: 5 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3
    pastel

    pastel

    A command-line tool to generate, analyze, convert and manipulate color

    ...To get more information about a specific subcommand (say mix), you can call pastel mix -h or pastel help mix. Many pastel commands can be composed by piping the output of one command to another. You can also explicitly specify which colors you want to read from the input.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 4
    Onefetch

    Onefetch

    Git repository summary on your terminal

    ...It automatically detects open source licenses from texts and provides the user with valuable information like code distribution, pending changes, number of dependencies (by package manager), top contributors (by number of commits), the size on disk, creation date, LOC (lines of code), etc. Onefetch can be configured via command-line flags to display exactly what you want, the way you want it to: you can customize ASCII/Text formatting, disable info lines, ignore files & directories, and output in multiple formats (JSON, Yaml), etc.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 5
    fd

    fd

    A simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to 'find'

    ...First, to get an overview of all available command line options, you can either run fd -h for a concise help message or fd --help for a more detailed version. fd is designed to find entries in your filesystem. The most basic search you can perform is to run fd with a single argument: the search pattern. Instead of just showing the search results, you often want to do something with them. fd provides two ways to execute external commands for each of your search results: the -x/--exec option runs an external command for each of the search results (in parallel), or the -X/--exec-batch option launches the external command once, with all search results as arguments.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 6
    Install Nothing

    Install Nothing

    A terminal application that simulates installing things

    ...It’s designed for simplicity and safety, doing nothing destructive or permanent on your system while still delivering a satisfying illusion of intense computing activity. Users can configure its behavior to include or exclude specific fake stages, so the output can be tailored to the experience they want.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 7
    Spotify TUI

    Spotify TUI

    Spotify for the terminal written in Rust

    A Spotify client for the terminal written in Rust. The binary executable is spt. For those on Arch Linux, you can find the package on AUR. spotify-tui needs to connect to Spotify’s API in order to find music by name, play tracks etc. After accepting the permissions, you'll be redirected to localhost. If all goes well, the redirect URL will be parsed automatically and now you're done. If the local webserver fails for some reason you'll be redirected to a blank webpage that might say something...
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
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