I used to use lazygit as a replacement for Gitkraken, but in the end I missed too much all the features and the simplicity of use of it. Even if it takes 1,5G of RAM...
I have used GitKraken before, but after a while I realized that I'm not a "git power user" so my needs for the GUI are very basic. When I saw lazygit I said "that's it, that's all I need".
Coding for 20 years | Working for startups for 10 years | Team leader and mentor | More information about me: https://thevaluable.dev/page/about/
Twitter: @Cneude_Matthieu
I spend most of my time editing files so.
tmux
nvim
(neovim)Other often and not so often.
pnpm to replace npm.
task. A task runner I use for my personal projects.
exa as an alias of
ls
because of pretty colors and their integration with git.nnn as my file manager.
lazygit for when I need a GUI for git but I really don't want to use a GUI.
lynx
a text-based browser for really quick search. To make it more comfortable I have this funny things in my .zshrcSince we are sharing dotfiles, here is mine.
I used to use lazygit as a replacement for Gitkraken, but in the end I missed too much all the features and the simplicity of use of it. Even if it takes 1,5G of RAM...
I have used GitKraken before, but after a while I realized that I'm not a "git power user" so my needs for the GUI are very basic. When I saw lazygit I said "that's it, that's all I need".
Nice! I'm also using Neovim and tmux, with Zsh as shell.
I didn't know
task
, looks pretty cool! It's true that I'm a bit lost in my Makefiles sometimes :DI always wanted to use a text browser for quick search, your scripts look cool for that too. Thanks!
Hope you find something useful.
Using tmux + neovim + lynx is definitely something interesting.