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@sts10
sts10 / rust-command-line-utilities.markdown
Last active July 27, 2024 18:00
A curated list of command-line utilities written in Rust

A curated list of command-line utilities written in Rust

Note: I have moved this list to a proper repository. I'll leave this gist up, but it won't be updated. To submit an idea, open a PR on the repo.

Note that I have not tried all of these personally, and cannot and do not vouch for all of the tools listed here. In most cases, the descriptions here are copied directly from their code repos. Some may have been abandoned. Investigate before installing/using.

The ones I use regularly include: bat, dust, fd, fend, hyperfine, miniserve, ripgrep, just, cargo-audit and cargo-wipe.

  • atuin: "Magical shell history"
  • bandwhich: Terminal bandwidth utilization tool
@rouzbeh84
rouzbeh84 / pair-programming.md
Last active April 6, 2023 21:24
resources for pair programming remotely and on site

Guide Page

To start using this site you need to have a GitHub account to sign in. Once signed in it will create your profiles information based on your GitHub account and return you to your brand new profile page. Click the profile editor button to enter in if you want to be a student, partner or teacher. You should also enter in what skills you have and what skills you are looking to learn on this page.

Once you have your profile how you like it, head on over to the search page to look for what you want to use on your next project and what kind of partner you are looking for. After hitting the search button we will find the very best matches for you to begin your pair programming journey!


What is Pair Programming?

@lornajane
lornajane / mac.md
Last active July 27, 2024 18:47
Keyboard Only OS X

Keyboard-only Mac Cheatsheet

Hi, I'm Lorna and I don't use a mouse. I have had RSI issues since a bad workstation setup at work in 2006. I've tried a number of extra hardware modifications but what works best for me is to use the keyboard and only the keyboard, so I'm in a good position and never reaching for anything else (except my coffee cup!). I rather unwisely took a job which required me to use a mac (I've been a linux user until now and also had the ability to choose my tools carefully) so here is my cheatsheet of the apps, tricks and keyboard shortcuts I'm using, mostly for my own reference. Since keyboard-only use is also great for productivity, you may also find some of these ideas useful, in which case at least something good has come of this :)

Apps List

There's more detail on a few of these apps but here is a quick overview of the tools I've installed and found helpful

Tool Link Comments
@dedy-purwanto
dedy-purwanto / gist:11312110
Created April 26, 2014 05:00
Bulk remove iTerm2 color schemes.
# There was a day where I have too many color schemes in iTerm2 and I want to remove them all.
# iTerm2 doesn't have "bulk remove" and it was literally painful to delete them one-by-one.
# iTerm2 save it's preference in ~/Library/Preferences/com.googlecode.iterm2.plist in a binary format
# What you need to do is basically copy that somewhere, convert to xml and remove color schemes in the xml files.
$ cd /tmp/
$ cp ~/Library/Preferences/com.googlecode.iterm2.plist .
$ plutil -convert xml1 com.googlecode.iterm2.plist
$ vi com.googlecode.iterm2.plist
@drj42
drj42 / org-mode-reference-in.org
Created February 6, 2012 23:53
This is a cheat sheet for Emacs org-mode... in org-mode format!
@coldnebo
coldnebo / Default (OSX).sublime-keymap -- User
Created February 3, 2012 16:21
Sublime Text 2 fix for OSX home/end keys
{ "keys": ["home"], "command": "move_to", "args": {"to": "bol"} },
{ "keys": ["end"], "command": "move_to", "args": {"to": "eol"} }