1 3663 36.6337% g
2 938 9.38094% cd
3 534 5.34053% igs # inall git status (runs 'git status' in each dir in pwd)
4 516 5.16052% ..
5 277 2.77028% vim # <3
6 258 2.58026% ls
7 216 2.16022% <redacted> # company build command, aliased to be 2 letters :)
8 200 2.0002% ws # alias to cd to my workspace dir
9 175 1.75018% <redacted> # company workspace information command, aliased to be 2 letters
10 167 1.67017% ag # the silver searcher > (grep or awk or find)
Geek. Polyglot. Developer. Tolkienian. Westerosi. Trekkie. Loves Epic Fantasy and OSS. Evangelical Atheist. Open for Chats, Rants and Chants. Draws comics at Insta @abhnvkmr | https://abhnv.dev
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Bachelor of Technology (Computer Science and Engineering)
Thanks. I've found that autojump and the like are too non-determistic to be reliable.
ripgrep is missing two very critical features: -G (--file-search-regex) and the ability to grep gzip'd files. The ripgrep vim plugin is also sub-par to ag's.
ripgrep is certainly faster, but they're both so fast their difference is often in ms.
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No surprise here. git, cd, ls, vim, build, search
You might want to look into autojump or autojump-rs to quickly jump to your workspace directories.
Also, ripgrep is a competent (not drop-in though) alternative to ag/grep.
Thanks. I've found that autojump and the like are too non-determistic to be reliable.
ripgrep is missing two very critical features: -G (--file-search-regex) and the ability to grep gzip'd files. The ripgrep vim plugin is also sub-par to ag's.
ripgrep is certainly faster, but they're both so fast their difference is often in ms.