Ellie Huxtable
Posted on April 14, 2020
Recently I've been taking a look at replacements for common command line tools (and coreutils) - ls
, cat
, find
, grep
, etc. I don't really have many issues with the older tools, but I like shiny things. Turns out, people have been rewriting a lot of them in Rust
lsd
lsd is a replacement for ls
. It adds some nice colours and icons to your output, like:
exa
exa is also an ls
replacement! It's fairly similar from what I can see, though it doesn't do the fancy font icons. However, it does display some info from Git, and has some other features. Both are worth looking at imo.
u/milliams and @hoop33 have pointed out that exa will do icons with the
--icons
flag!
bat
bat is like cat
, but with colours, line numbers, and a few other things. It has syntax highlighting, shows git changes, and also automatically pages with less
(which I love).
Sure, cat
is intended to con*cat*enate files, but it's also really commonly used to just dump a file to your terminal. bat
does that, and makes it pretty :D (it can concat too)
ripgrep
ripgrep is one of the first I installed! It searches code really, really nicely. .gitignore
is followed by default, it recurses files and directories by default, and it's very fast. I think the output looks pretty nice too!
There are a few alternatives here, but this is the only one I've used
fd
fd is like find, but in my opinion more convenient. fd .py
is fast to type, and fd
is also very fast to run. By default .gitignore
is followed – a trend I'm very much liking. Regex is supported, and the output has colour!
dust
dust is a tool I only found very recently, but it tries to make du
nice. By default I don't find the output of du
to be very helpful, and it's usually combined with at least -h
, and maybe some sort
as well.
dust
will automatically sort, create graphs, and generally answer the "how the hell am I out of disk space already" question. For when the answer isn't docker images, anyway.
coreutils
Not something I'm using, but there's an attempt to rewrite all of coreutils in Rust going on over here. It's pretty cool and worth a look
That's pretty much it for now! If you have any other suggestions, feel free to contact me on Twitter, or via email
Posted on April 14, 2020
Join Our Newsletter. No Spam, Only the good stuff.
Sign up to receive the latest update from our blog.
Related
November 7, 2022