Power Up Your Command Line, Part 3
Darren Burns
Posted on January 7, 2019
This is part three of the Power Up Your Command Line series. In this article, I’ll showcase five utilities that make common problems a little easier to solve using the command line.
This post was originally published on my blog.
tig
, for interactively browsing your git repo
tig
(GitHub) is an excellent way to browse your Git repository using an interactive interface, without leaving the command line.
tig
is simple and intuitive to use, and has different views for things like your stash, staging area (which it lets you quickly alter), logs, and so on.
Thanks for Renato Suero (@renatosuero) for introducing me to tig
on DEV.
Installing tig
- On macOS with (Homebrew):
brew install tig
PathPicker (fpp
), for quickly selecting files
PathPicker (GitHub) is a library by Facebook for quickly selecting files on the command line. The animated example below is taken from the PathPicker documentation.
From the PathPicker website:
PathPicker accepts a wide range of input -- output from git commands, grep results, searches -- pretty much anything. After parsing the input, PathPicker presents you with a nice UI to select which files you're interested in. After that, you can open them in your favorite editor or execute arbitrary commands.
Thanks to Nikolay Dubina (@nikolayid) for suggesting this utility.
Installing PathPicker
- On macOS with (Homebrew):
brew install fpp
tldr
, for practical examples of how to use CLI tools
tldr
(GitHub) lets you quickly access practical examples (simplified, “tl;dr” versions of man pages) of how to use command line tools.
The examples are maintained by the community in the tldr
GitHub repository.
Installing tldr
- With npm (recommended):
npm install -g tldr
- On macOS with (Homebrew):
brew install tldr
gron
, for exploring JSON
gron
(GitHub) transforms JSON text into discrete assignments, to make it easier to find what you need. I particularly like using it for interactively exploring APIs in combination with fzf
(mentioned earlier in this series):
You can also use gron
to help you transform JSON objects (examples). This isn’t the main use-case of gron
though, and you’d probably be better served using a purpose built tool like jq
for such things.
Installing gron
- On macOS with (Homebrew):
brew install gron
thefuck, for quickly correcting command line typos
If you mistype a command, type fuck
(GitHub) and you’ll be given a list of corrections to choose from.
The name of the command is unfortunately slightly NSFW, so you may wish to alias it to something else.
Installing thefuck
- On macOS with (Homebrew):
brew install thefuck
Bonus: explainshell, for explaining shell commands
If you’re in the situation where you already have a complex shell command and want to understand what it does without browsing man
or tldr
pages, you can use explainshell:
Conclusion
Hopefully you found something on this page that interests you! If you’re interested in more content like this, follow me on Twitter and on DEV.
Posted on January 7, 2019
Join Our Newsletter. No Spam, Only the good stuff.
Sign up to receive the latest update from our blog.