This is indeed a very good option to have when you make a command line tool.
Very fun an impressive experiment of making a Wayland compositor rendering in the terminal with surprising refinements. Now it feels totally useless too of course.
This is indeed a nice way to setup some new habits on the command line.
A nice glimpse into the maze of the escape codes on the terminal.
Or why even the core git developers don't really use the defaults. This piece gives good knobs to play with in order to have a nicer experience.
An alternative to the venerable sudo coming with systemd. Looks like it has interesting properties.
Interesting ideas for terminal emulators and shells. Maybe will make their way in other software.
Nice set of advices. There are interesting things to do on the command line with more JSON output. It needs to be easy to work with though.
Looks like a nice tool to backup and restore emails. Probably to check out next time you migrate your emails to another server.
Looks like an interesting Git user interface. I'll take it out for a spin.
Looks like a nice way to automate the creation of changelogs.
Plenty of good tips in there. I knew quite a few, but there are a few nuggets that I'll test drive I think.
Interesting tool for file type detection. Seems very accurate too.
Looks like another nice grep alternative. This one keeps its command line interface compatible with grep which is nice, not the case for other alternatives and that turns out to be my main gripe with them.
Interesting terminal oriented tool to interacting with LLM. Let you choose to self-host or run locally.
Good food for thought to design CLI interfaces.
Good list of tips and aliases. Might inspire a few changes in your setup.
Looks like a very good tool for handling JSON files. Might come in handy next to jq... maybe it'll replace jless.
OK, I admit I missed the introduction of this flag in strace as well. Super interesting, it can definitely be useful.
Looks like a neat tool for the less common commands you still need to reach easily.
Looks like a nice tool. Should complete nicely my trusty lnav for unsupported formats.
Looks like an interesting tool for diffing binary data.
This can come in handy for automated tests which need to be ran from within a shell.
Looks like an interesting tool to manage developer environments.
Know your tools. Those are useful to check network uses.
Might come in handy when Filelight is not available, I could see myself using this over SSH connections.
Interesting little tool, can come in handy.
There's a new grep alternative in town. Looks really fast and has an interesting interactive mode. Definitely something to check out.
Looks like a smart and interesting little tool. I definitely needed something like it more than once.
Looks like an interesting tool to try. History is an important part of the shell experience.
This looks interesting, I especially like the fact that it's easily encrypted, definitely a good thing regarding secrets. Now I wonder if that's easy to couple with direnv...
Oh, that looks very interesting. I'd definitely have use for this. I tend to manage several aws or ssh configs per customers and it's not always easy to deal with. This could lead to a nice separation.
A love letter to Makefiles. A couple of interesting tricks in there.
Interesting little tool. I usually use make for this kind of things, but it seems to bring some benefits for non build tasks.
OK, that looks like shell history on steroids. Definitely something I will try out.
Very interesting musing about the UX divide between GUI and CLI/text and how this could be approached to have both interacting better.
OK... didn't know about zmv. This looks really cool, I'll add it to my tool belt.
This looks interesting. Definitely something to add to the tool belt. Coupled with jq this becomes very powerful.
Very neat trip back in history. Ever wondered what happened in your terminal? This explains it well.
Good list of interesting CLI tools. I adopted quite a few of them, there are more I'd like to evaluate.
This is a good primer of an essential tool in our box.
A good reminder to use the right tool for the task. Sometimes all you need is really a POSIX shell with a couple of well optimized tools.
Looks like a very interesting tool, in particular for security purposes.
A collection of nice CLI tools. Got some of them already, still there are a few more which look interesting.