Using the console, you have to cd
your way through all your directories, which thanks to autocompletion, can be a relatively fast. However, sometimes you have to work with very deep folder structures, with not autocompletion-friendly folder groups and processes that require you to navigate them a lot. As this has been my case for the last few months, I finally decided to make a tool to solve this and reduce the amount of keystrokes spent in cd
navigation.
This tool is a small bash function called ws
, short for workspace. You can find it here. Paste it at the end of your ~/.bashrc
or your source file of choice to use it.
Description and usage
For ws
, a workspaces is a set of directories, each one associated to a numeric ID. You can define as many workspaces as you want, and activate different ones for each open terminal.
Some examples will be more illustrative than any wall of text:
# Create the workspace itself
$ ws -s my_workspace
# Populate it with directories
$ cd /path/to/foo/dir
$ ws -a
$ cd /path/to/bar/dir
$ ws -a
$ cd /path/to/baz/dir
$ ws -a
# Check the directories in your workspace
$ ws -l
Workspace my_workspace:
1 /path/to/foo/dir
2 /path/to/bar/dir
3 /path/to/baz/dir
# Move to a directory in your workspace
$ ws 2
/path/to/bar
# See a list of available workspaces
# The active one is marked with >
$ ws -s -l
Workspaces:
- default
> my_workspace
# Remove a directory from a workspace
$ ws -r 2
$ ws -l
Workspace my_workspace:
1 /path/to/foo/dir
2 /path/to/baz/dir
# Remove a workspace
# If it is the current, then the default one is activated
$ ws -s -r my_workspace
$ ws -s -l
Workspaces:
> default
The only downside is that you'll have to remember the IDs of each directory to use it fluently, but this shouldn't be a problem if you end up using it a lot. Also, remember to check that you are using the correct workspace before you start to work; it will remember it if the tty
is the same.
Tell me in the comments if you found it useful!
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