Try out Proton Mail, the secure email that protects your privacy: proton.me/mail/TheLinuxEXP
@FrankCastiglione9 ай бұрын
Soon I'll try. I tested Tutanota/Tutamail but I didn't like user interface. Proton Mail looks good.
@rhalloff9 ай бұрын
I'm a huge Proton Fan. I used most of their apps.
@guandulin9 ай бұрын
I do use proton, I am still waiting for the drive Linux app.
@user-hl7ic7wc1r9 ай бұрын
Proton gave recovery email addresses to authorities. You might as well use gmail
@eb37fnrcty199 ай бұрын
@@user-hl7ic7wc1r source please? might help us out
@defekT13129 ай бұрын
Just started to watch this and I already want to Say: Yes please more of this. Community recommendations are always the best because it's real life experience and no advertising.
@haplozetetic95199 ай бұрын
Agreed. Learning Linux back in '98 or '99 was a real slog. I missed so many things that would have made it a lot easier much sooner with some suggestions.
@cexeodus9 ай бұрын
for real
@ClokworkGremlin9 ай бұрын
Picked up my first Linux malware experience, so that was fun.
@haplozetetic95199 ай бұрын
@@ClokworkGremlin So far, I've been lucky regarding malware (so for as I know). I did, however find someone hacking into my system when I was still new to Linux, but that's to be expected when I was ignorant and ran as root.
@cexeodus9 ай бұрын
@@ClokworkGremlin Youre not alone, man im tracking down 8 critical vulns in two recent kernel versions
@foji-video9 ай бұрын
only use brew if you dont find the package in your repo. Brew can break dependencies, or install non-functional stuff because of different versions. Your own distro package manager has the right versions
@cameronbosch12139 ай бұрын
Correct. I was just about to say that! I know btop (for example), is in the *extra* arch repo. Obviously, if it's available in your distros repos (or even in the AUR on Arch), I'd recommend installing it from there to avoid dependency hell.
@jaumesinglavalls54869 ай бұрын
I only has brew install on mac os, any other os, is not using it, in linux if I don't find the package, simply I build it from code, usually is pretty quick, install some deps, and make build, then add some soft-link into the path, and wala! is there.
@johnandmegh9 ай бұрын
And if it's not in the native (deb/rpm) format, using something like Distrobox or Snap is a far superior alternative
@owmylehg78119 ай бұрын
Agreed. Basically all of these were in the Extra repo in Arch. And the few that weren't were in the AUR. A lot of these are super common as well, so you probably won't need brew for any of them.
@Logan5Greye9 ай бұрын
Homebrew is a necessity on macs. The search results from their appstore are a mess.
@sbrl9 ай бұрын
tldr-pages maintainer here. Thanks for featuring us! ✨ (psst, we're always looking for more contributors :P)
@markcoren28429 ай бұрын
tldr single-handedly doubled my command line productivity. I can't thank you all enough for all your amazing work!
@sbrl9 ай бұрын
@@markcoren2842 heh, glad we could help!
@aronflip40218 ай бұрын
what language is it written in. I am proficient in Rust so perhaps I could help
@sbrl8 ай бұрын
@@aronflip4021 Hello! All our pages are in Markdown! We have many clients in many different languages - including a Rust client. We'd love you to help us and/or our community-supported clients out :D
@duckmeat46747 ай бұрын
@@aronflip4021Did you look at their repo?
@nmetal059 ай бұрын
zellij is an arabic word which actually means the style of mosaic tilework made from individual tiles ,its very common to be on walls ,floors,and ceilings as decorations in homes ,especially in my hometown Morocco ,so it's definitely a good name choice
@davguev9 ай бұрын
Ohh, I thought it was Dutch. Good to know!
@medilies5 ай бұрын
I'm Algerian and always found funny how the word makes me think of the actual Zelij XD. Thank you for the confirmation.
@legitt60939 ай бұрын
If you're using an Arch-based distro, you can find all of the mentioned programs in the regular (not AUR) repos (also, no need for Homebrew :))
@__Brandon__8 ай бұрын
And using brew can seriously break your install. Don't mix package managers because the quickest repair is generally a reinstall
@Alex-ce1ol9 ай бұрын
FYI, you don't need Atuin to search your bash history. Just press CTRL+R and start typing, then press CTRL+R again as needed to cycle through the matches.
@cattom449 ай бұрын
That's what I immediately thought.
@51n799 ай бұрын
Also just typing the keyword "history" gets overlooked.
@howling-wolf9 ай бұрын
I like to use the fzf integration that replaces the standard ctrl+r search with a small window that shows results from your hist based on what you type. Search powered by fzf. Use up/down to move through the list
@wesgould19 ай бұрын
Even better than that... use fzf with control r so you get fuzzy finding with that. No need for atuin at all. # CTRL-/ to toggle small preview window to see the full command # CTRL-Y to copy the command into clipboard using pbcopy export FZF_CTRL_R_OPTS=" --preview 'echo {}' --preview-window up:3:hidden:wrap --bind 'ctrl-/:toggle-preview' --bind 'ctrl-y:execute-silent(echo -n {2..} | pbcopy)+abort' --color header:italic --header 'Press CTRL-Y to copy command into clipboard'"
@OffGridAussiePrepper9 ай бұрын
he already knows this, he told us in a previous vid maybe 1 year ago
@ShiziKroc9 ай бұрын
I recommend NCDU, it's more interactible for space usage analysis
@CelsoAndradeDev9 ай бұрын
I agree
@terryriley64109 ай бұрын
diskonaut is also pretty good and it has a progressive display that updates a filegraph while scanning where ncdu only shows the results when it's finished with scanning.
@breno_68889 ай бұрын
same
@terryriley64109 ай бұрын
diskonaut is also good
@__mrmino__9 ай бұрын
Have you tried gdu? It's just _so much faster_
@bennypr0fane9 ай бұрын
Please definitely make more of these "best tools for x"-style recommendation videos, I always find super helpful stuff when you recommend things!
@barbiefan38749 ай бұрын
always prefer installing packages via your distro's package manager, if the package is there
@TheLinuxEXP9 ай бұрын
Not necessarily. Your distro might have old versions of these, missing useful features
@NameUserOf9 ай бұрын
@@TheLinuxEXP git release versions. For most of the tools they have nice install explanation and those tools aren't huge like LibreOffice so compiling them is pretty fast. Trusting Homebrew is like trusting PPA, not a very good thing. I also support the idea of trusting repos from distro and if you absolutely need something fresh then next stop would be the devs themselves(usually git, sometimes they already have binaries as well).
@OPguy109 ай бұрын
i'd rather have old software than broken packages
@johannesrodt2909 ай бұрын
Use nix instead
@fabiandrinksmilk62059 ай бұрын
@@TheLinuxEXPHomebrew could provide problems with dependencies, which Nix does not. nix-env is a pretty elegant alternative to Homebrew.
@ivanmaglica2649 ай бұрын
mc - Midnight Commander - modern Norton Commander replacement. I cant live without it, saves literally hours a week
@zyghom9 ай бұрын
1000000% agreed, every distro I install or container I always start with: "sudo apt install htop mc"
@24hhhhours9 ай бұрын
I prefer ranger
@BobOgden19 ай бұрын
This
@ADHJkvsNgsMBbTQe9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the advice.
@Teaman3139 ай бұрын
😲 MC is still around?!
@Goose.wox.29 ай бұрын
8:26 i personally use ncdu because i find it more easy to read and navigate
@brazenbull369 ай бұрын
love ncdu
@vighneshmallampally66279 ай бұрын
Me too ✋
@oWeRQ6669 ай бұрын
Dua and broot interesting too, but not in repos
@ordinosaurs9 ай бұрын
Just proposed it, hadn't found your message yet. Yes, ncdu is a lifesaver.
@PanduPoluan9 ай бұрын
Ahh I see that CLI tools I use have been mentioned: btop, eza, bat ... What's not mentioned: - rg (ripgrep = faster grep alternative) - fd (faster file finder) - ncdu (an alternative to dust) - iftop (network traffic monitoring) - zsh + oh-my-zsh
@nobodynogroup9 ай бұрын
You can press control-r to reverse search your bash history in vanilla bash and if you press control-r again it will go to the next result
@JamesFirth-v9 ай бұрын
Fzf also has the ability to replace the control r search in some shells like zsh which is my favourite way to use it
@NostraDavid29 ай бұрын
Fzf enables me to choose a branch in git, instead of having to do a git branch -a first. Don't have the command by hand, otherwise I would've shared.
@thedoofguy57079 ай бұрын
Midnight Commander. It's hands down the best file manager for terminals. Flexible, powerful, and always there when you need it.
@gg-gn3re9 ай бұрын
lf (made in go) is better, far better than ranger, far better than nnn and better than midnight commander
@thichquang10119 ай бұрын
vifm is pretty cool also
@phillipanselmo85402 ай бұрын
yazi makes all other terminal file managers obsolete
@collinslagat34589 ай бұрын
Zoxide as a replacement or complement for *cd* command.
@terryriley64109 ай бұрын
yes. never going back to cd.
@paultapping95107 ай бұрын
one of the first things I install, I like it so much I've aliased cd to it
@Eagledelta39 ай бұрын
Just as a heads up - FZF is available in most, if not all, distros. So you can just install it from there. Also, like atuin, FZF can search your command history with CTRL+R.
@nuligebla11739 ай бұрын
or you could just press CTRL+R under normal bash and... what do you know, the same behavior!
@opfipip37119 ай бұрын
@@nuligebla1173 fzf + CTRL+R is sooo much better than bashs default CTRL+R. It sorts results sensibly, ignores typos and shows you a couple of results at once. Especially together with setting up your history to grow indefinity, it can be incredibly useful to find "that command pipeline using a tool that was named somewhat like ... that i used to auto-sort my music collection a few years ago" in a few secs.
@sethmclean83349 ай бұрын
@bla1173 except without the fzf search algo
@dhvcc81829 ай бұрын
@@nuligebla1173 not the same at all, fzf search does fuzzy finding from wherever in the command, while default makes you type out the start of the command perfectly, plus I don't remember a way of easily going through similar commands in a search (very usefull with docker/kubectl), been using only for history search for a long time. Although I use quite a lot of commands from this video - fzf is the most needed one for me personally
@pesopes9 ай бұрын
@@nuligebla1173the advantage of using CTRL+R with fzf is (like the name suggests) fuzzy finding
@halfsourlizard93199 ай бұрын
Why on earth would you use brew unless you're stuck using a Mac?!?
@circular_logic62179 ай бұрын
For me it's pragmatism, if I can't get it on a native package or Flatpak etc then I prefer Brew over a repo clone. That way I can update these tools more easily than a clone. In addition, a lot of the post-install scrips automate away all the readme steps so you save a little bit of time.
@halfsourlizard93199 ай бұрын
@@circular_logic6217 If a package isn't in the main Arch repos or the AUR, does it even exist?
@__Brandon__8 ай бұрын
But for something like btop it doesn't make sense. All of the dependencies get installed with brew and your system package manager doesn't know about it. Later it can causes dependency conflicts that are pretty hard to fix. Generally it's just easier to start over if you break yourself by using two package managers at the same time
@phillipanselmo85402 ай бұрын
@@circular_logic6217just use nix
@jaumesinglavalls54869 ай бұрын
One tool, I use a lot is call thefuck, I think I didn't get time to see the form to add it, (and pretty sure it won't be in this video if it had) thefuck is a command that allows you rectify your last command, if you ever writed bim when you wished to write vim, run fuck, and he will propose you the correct command. (Not allways works, but in general I love it and use it every day)
@TheNotSoChibiRobo9 ай бұрын
Seems very useful, also the best name for a command xD
@hugofontes57089 ай бұрын
caught my interest but how is it different from just pressing up and editing the last command I sent? EDIT: looked it up, it actually makes the correction for you to confirm and suggests a list in case it ambiguity. Added!
@jaumesinglavalls54869 ай бұрын
@@hugofontes5708 well, when he detects it well, you avoid the editing, I use it usually to transform the git push to git push -u origin xxx,
@daveyhodge9 ай бұрын
Alias to drat for a family friendly version
@moarjank9 ай бұрын
LOL! alias drat=fuck Best line in a bash profile so far 😂
@ErrorMessageNotFound9 ай бұрын
s-tui is a command line tool I use pretty often. It's a front-end for stress but also a very detailed cpu monitor. It shows core utilization, temperatures, power, frequency etc. Very useful stuff.
@ErrorMessageNotFound9 ай бұрын
You can stress your cpu in various ways, check if it's performing like it's supposed to, see if your cooling is adequate, etc.
@NameUserOf9 ай бұрын
yazi - file manager. Very quick and development is alive and fast as well. fd(fd-find) - find replacement, most of the time much faster and easier to use.
@changingmyselff9 ай бұрын
oh, yesss, yazi is amazing
@PanduPoluan9 ай бұрын
Ah, there's something I need to try! (yazi) And I agree with you about fd !!
@ferdynandkiepski50269 ай бұрын
It wasn't mentioned in the video but you can use fd-find by sharkdp to replace find. It is faster, the normal command for it is fd, and it's behaviour is slightly different (i prefer it) but can be set to be identical with the proper options. You can use it for the input into fzf, to make it faster.
@df-salaz4 ай бұрын
I will note that at 6:55 when you suggest checking if hardware acceleration is enabled, the place you checked will show "true" even if it is not functional! On Arch and some other distros, you will have to manually install a package for your platform to enable hardware acceleration. You can then check if it's actually enabled and functional on Firefox's "about:support" page.
@cameronbosch12139 ай бұрын
For me, btop is a great utility, as is nmtui for setting up network connections without a DE for systems that don't have a graphical app for this purpose, like ones that use tiling Wayland compositors or window managers.
@PaulG.x9 ай бұрын
I suppose you run whatthefuck for the help page?
@madbradfreeman9 ай бұрын
Absolutely I second tldr. Extremely handy for reminding you of the options people actually use. My favorite terminal is Terminator. It's quick, customizable, and easy to splitscreen. Oh, and ddate, of course. Thanks for the tips!
@realname56309 ай бұрын
I'd like to suggest a video idea about terminal keyboard shortcuts like ctrl+c, ctrl+d etc, and also a video about different shells like zsh
@lritzdorf9 ай бұрын
In a similar vein to grub-reboot, you can easily reboot to your BIOS/UEFI on systemd distros (i.e. almost all of them). The relevant command is "systemctl reboot --firmware"
@oalfodr9 ай бұрын
I loved the format of this video. I knew about all of the mentioned programs (apart from shell history search one that is not even appealing to me since fzf does that already), but I welcome the opportunity to find about new tools in some of the next episodes. Some of my favorite tools are: nvim, rsync, lf - file manager, jq - JSON procesor, ffmpeg, imagemagick, neomutt, awk...
@treeoflifeenterprises9 ай бұрын
awk is a favourite, its, great with grep, cat and head or tail when scraping info from a file into a variable.
@averagejoey20006 ай бұрын
you're an old school unix guy aren't you
@treeoflifeenterprises6 ай бұрын
@@averagejoey2000 well my first intro was to unix in 92, though i've been rocking slackware linux ever since redhat went non-free, before fedora came out.
@trs51279 ай бұрын
You releasing videos is kinda becoming an occasion at this point. I keep checking your channel everytime I open KZbin to see if there's a new video lmao. So much great content!
@TheLinuxEXP9 ай бұрын
Hahaha I try to stick to 2 per week, but I missed on last week as my wisdom teeth were acting up…
@trs51279 ай бұрын
@@TheLinuxEXP hey man, thanks for the reply. And chill out about the schedule. Health above everything else. I know that whenever the video does come out, it's gonna be a banger :)
@utahnl9 ай бұрын
Not a separate tool but you can press in ctrl+r in bash to search your command history.
@gavinjones9 ай бұрын
Indeed but you can't see all matches at once. You could grep but the program is just more convenient
@zytr0x1083 ай бұрын
How did I not know about this!
@fan_juggler9 ай бұрын
calcure - calendar for your terminal!
@haplozetetic95199 ай бұрын
tlp works with Powertop. From Debian 12's description in Synaptic: TLP is a feature-rich command-line utility, saving laptop battery power without the need to delve deeper into technical details. TLP’s default settings are already optimized for battery life and implement Powertop’s recommendations out of the box. Moreover TLP is highly customizable to fulfill specific user requirements. Settings are organized into two profiles, allowing to adjust between savings and performance independently for battery (BAT) and AC operation. In addition TLP can enable or disable Bluetooth, NFC, Wi-Fi and WWAN radio devices on boot. For ThinkPads and selected other laptops it provides a unified way to configure charge thresholds and recalibrate the battery.
@ToadalChaos9 ай бұрын
Fzf also does command history searching! In fact, that's what I use it for the most.
@jurgenhaan76529 ай бұрын
My most used console based tools on a daily basis would be the following: htop - top replacement (but not as cluttered as btop) screen - mainly used to keep long running processes in the background on servers ipython - just for writing code snippets quickly grep | awk | sed - for general string manipulation in pipes vim - text editor git | tig - interfacing with git repos midnight commander - NC like file manager flatpak - jailed package manager find - finding stuff and doing stuff to it ssh - duh. remote access, socks proxies, piped file transfers, etc. So still rather vanilla when tools are concerned. Even though I know there are some improved tools or anything, I do like to use the defaults so I can go at any system without having to install custom stuff.
@prvulm7 ай бұрын
This! Those new fancy tools are nice to have on own system but when you ssh into customer sles or rhel that maybe dont even have internet access for security reasons, not that much.
@MrOrtmeier9 ай бұрын
Community recommendation videos are gold for Linux nerds. I always want to find new or better utilities i never knew existed
@lundgamingxd53879 ай бұрын
Another fire TLE video🔥
@TheLinuxEXP9 ай бұрын
Thanks 🔥
@MoPaTography9 ай бұрын
You can also rerun commands by typing exclamation mark and number you see when you type the history command. Eg !45 will re run command 45 in the history output
@ArmenManukyan9 ай бұрын
ncdu has a more intuitive UI than dust, I'd recommend that instead.
@rjhornsby9 ай бұрын
Watching the video, it took me a confused minute to understand why dust’s tree representation was inverted. I think it’s because of the sort by size - but I dunno. Visually it still seems less intuitive.
@HappyCheeryChap9 ай бұрын
@@rjhornsby yeah i think because you're usually more interested in finding the big stuff... So this saves you from having to scroll up to see them.
@kkb-graph9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the Atuin! I'd recommend ncdu instead of dust, as it is much more powerful. What else I could recommend: diff-so-fancy, fswatch, httping, jenv, lnav, lynis, micro, mtr BTW, I use both htop and btop - each is better for its own use case Sure, please make such videos regularly - that is the most practically useful content for most of us)
@princesa_lina9 ай бұрын
zellij is a moroccan word (darija) that means tile (as in floor or wall tiles)
@TheLinuxEXP9 ай бұрын
Ohh Nice!
@princesa_lina9 ай бұрын
@@TheLinuxEXP:)
@themedleb9 ай бұрын
We can say that Zellij (زليج) is Arabic, It is known in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Al-Andalus (old Spain). Reference: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zellij Man3rf ch7al wasel zellij had liamat hhh
@princesa_lina9 ай бұрын
@@themedlebi've never heard it used in arabic, that's why i assumed it's a darija word
@DeathSugar9 ай бұрын
first thing I definitely install is a ripgrep and fd-find - replacements for grep and find. They are magnitude faster than default ones.
@lucaggett16039 ай бұрын
FZF has been a great addition! I often use autojump for quickly navigating directories
@klmcwhirter9 ай бұрын
How does autojump compare to zoxide ? Do you know? I just started to use zoxide with fzf integration recently.
@lucaggett16039 ай бұрын
@@klmcwhirter I've not tried zoxide, but I looked at the docs a while ago and it seems it is pretty much the same as autojump in terms of functioniality (at least for my usecase)
@konstantink079 ай бұрын
@@klmcwhirterzoxide is better
@lucaggett16039 ай бұрын
@@klmcwhirter I've used both and they're pretty much identical, zoxide is a bit faster but it's not very noticeable for me
@le90389 ай бұрын
Man, ever since I started using bash my life has been getting better and better! I think bash should be installed on every linux computer out there...
@konstantink079 ай бұрын
tf are you talking about??? it's literally the default on like 99% of distros already. zsh is better though (at least for interactive usage)
@le90389 ай бұрын
@@konstantink07 Woooosh
@blainescroggs92689 ай бұрын
I'm gonna have to watch this again and take notes :)
@theinhumaneme9 ай бұрын
We need more videos of this format!!!!
@henriquearaujo5583 ай бұрын
Great video! I hope you do this format (bringing community's suggestions) more often
@wtfisgoingon5359 ай бұрын
Bottom (htop alternative), Starship (powerline), Helix (text editor). I'm also using Zellij and Eza, both are great. And all of them are Rust apps :)
@konstantink079 ай бұрын
starship is slow af
@moarjank9 ай бұрын
Rust is faster than bash, so in my exp, it's faster than og powerline
@darthkielbasa9 ай бұрын
00:01 glances is a game changer. If you’re the dashboard type, has api capabilities
@goldskula9 ай бұрын
ranger is a must for me
@Luc4849 ай бұрын
I use the command line everyday but still I found some interesting things I did not know in your presentation. Excellent work! I really liked it!
@howling-wolf9 ай бұрын
If you already have fzf installed you can configure it ro replace ctrl+r search with a small window similar to the other tool you showed. But it still uses the shell history file. Very simple, very lightweight and blazingly fast
@Drezaem559 ай бұрын
Another suggestion: fish. Might not be for everyone, but the completion suggestions are so good and your up arrow behaves as you'd want unlike when using zsh-autosuggestions. The coloring is also really good and it's got most popular colorscheme's so all the colors integrate nicely into the rest of your terminal. Bad thing is: it's not posix compliant, so your bashrc/zshrc isn't 1:1 to fish config, though converting is very easy.
@IllllIIllllI9 ай бұрын
After only using bash for everything, installing fish for the first time was like stepping into the 21st century shell-wise
@moarjank9 ай бұрын
Add bass to fish, and you can still get system environment variables and a clean way to run POSIX code
@subrezon9 ай бұрын
A very simple one I use all the time is tree, basically recursive ls that goes inside directories as well.
@halfsourlizard93199 ай бұрын
find exists and produces output that's much easier to process with further commands though.
@subrezon9 ай бұрын
@@halfsourlizard9319of course, but tree is easier to process with your eyes if you want to make sense of a directory structure at a glance, thanks to the output having an actual tree, drawn using ASCII box drawing.
@TheSast9 ай бұрын
I use erdtree for that, I find it more exhaustive
@halfsourlizard93199 ай бұрын
@@subrezon My semi-random cwd has 1559 files it its subdirectories ... and that's a relatively small project. Using eyes and text-visualised structure is only feasible in very small / not very deep dirs. 🤷♀️
@sodiboo9 ай бұрын
i usually use `eza --tree` for this, it's much nicer too look at
@Little-bird-told-me9 ай бұрын
*Just when I thought I knew a lot about Linux, you broke my myth and I am glad you did. Thank you and more of it please !*
@amigalemming9 ай бұрын
Terminal history: I am used to type a prefix of an old command line and then cycle through all commands in history with that prefix using PageUp and PageDown. Works after enabling the corresponding settings in /etc/inputrc. Was the default in SuSE.
@mood_47388 ай бұрын
Zoxide, a smarter cd command. One of the best packages I've ever discovered
@seymourtoa9 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT list and quick reviews! much appreciated! side note - now I'm gonna be busy tonight trialing all these little nuggets of Linux beauty!
@Wampa8429 ай бұрын
My top 3 most used tools are tldr, LF (TUI file explorer), and sshuttle (routing traffic through an SSH tunnel - a poor man's VPN).
@XoaGray9 ай бұрын
I've been using BTOP for years, but hadn't heard of any of the other programs here, so I'm all for seeing more command line tools. It's often something that's just forgotten nowadays.
@artim969 ай бұрын
dust looks interesting. Another du alternative I found was gdu. Kinda a go-written interactive version of du. You can navigate thorugh directories starting from the directory you passed to the command and if so desired delete files and directories from it. And it seems to be a little bit faster than du on slow hardware for some reason.
@kuhluhOG9 ай бұрын
Imo one of the most useful ones is jq It least you nicely deal with JSON from the command line.
@RevHardt9 ай бұрын
There’s yq as well
@mritunjaymusale9 ай бұрын
What about rsync? I think it's better than cp command and it's more reliable and robust when paired with COW file system like ZFS
@tarcilioneto9 ай бұрын
Surprised Nala was not in the list. Great video!
@JeroenFallsUp9 ай бұрын
You mention using bat as a replacement for cat, but as someone that actually uses cat to concatenate files I wonder if that would work at all with bat seeing all the fancy stuff on the screen.
@lordkekz49 ай бұрын
You can configure bat's syntax highlighting, line numbering etc. in a config and via commandline parameters. But you can still just use cat in these cases, and bat for syntax highlighting and such. It complements cat more than replacing it.
@arzaroth19449 ай бұрын
I seem to recall that bat detects when piped or redirected and in such cases behaves like cat. I haven't checked in a long time but since I aliased bat as cat years ago and didn't run into this conundrum I'm fairly certain of this.
@lordkekz49 ай бұрын
@@arzaroth1944 Oh, you're right! I didn't even realize it was that smart xD
@gavinjones9 ай бұрын
Hstr is pretty similar to atuin which i usually use. nnn or n is also good command which lets you navigate folders with arrow keys. Some people mentioned midnight commander which is much more feature packed Thefuck is useful if you want to fix previous commands mistake. I have it aliased to oof to avoid showing that if someone else sees me type it lol
@cxob21346 ай бұрын
my favorite terminal programs are: Ranger: A terminal file manager, best way to navigate directories FAST MOC: terminal music player, that just works, no fuss.
@Daktyl1989 ай бұрын
Probably my favorite command line utility is the text editor “micro”. It doesn’t try to be anything it’s not. It’s a simple text editor, with familiar keybinds unlike Nano.
@emanuelsanchez37629 ай бұрын
Is there an audio-recorder alternative for terminal? An Audio recorder which starts when an audio signal is detected and stops when the signal ends and saves the file.
@alxkw63559 ай бұрын
Powertop is as well very usefull for home servers. If you have one running 24/7. 10 to 15Watts shaved off of the idle power draw is always good!
@matiasbpg9 ай бұрын
Gnu parallel. Don't use it often, but when I have to is awesome. Turns what could have been a script to a line of bash
@FrontLineNerd9 ай бұрын
Wow. Atuin is completely awesome.
@TheLazyJAK9 ай бұрын
Instead of tldr, use an aggregator like cht sh. Also, I've never heard of eza, is it related to exa? Seems very similar. Another tool like that is ls deluxe (lsd)
@vorrnth87349 ай бұрын
It's a fork because exa is unmaintained.
@TheLazyJAK9 ай бұрын
@@vorrnth8734 ah thanks. I think I still like lsd better
@gordug8 ай бұрын
This is genuinely the most informative video I've seen this year. 🎉
@laesseV9 ай бұрын
fzf can also search through your command line history with CTRL-R
@CocolinoFan9 ай бұрын
You should have mentioned that is bad to have two package magnets if you don't know what your doing...
Zellij (زليج) is an Arabic word for "tile". It is pronounced the normal way, no need to say "jay" in the end of the word.
@drzmuhammed9 ай бұрын
fzf atuin dust btop are new additions to my bucket.... we need more videos like this.... these are the grass root level.. and make us productive...... I basically use derived output from commands of core packages to display in waybar. Use calcurse , Ranger , atool, nmtui, top etc... basically trying to live in a terminal with some flatpak app for my study related stuffs.
@howling-wolf9 ай бұрын
instead of dust, i like to use ncdu. It analyzes all files beforehand and allows you to navigate the filesystem with arrow keys. It is a great tool to dinf the dirs that eat ur drive space.
@ordinosaurs9 ай бұрын
There's ncdu, a cli command that replaces du without the visual confusion of dust. Fast, simple, and incredbly useful. Can't live without it.
@trevorford83329 ай бұрын
The one I came across was notify-send, not as powerful as some of them but worth a look at.
@TheLinuxEXP9 ай бұрын
Very nice as well!
@tercmd9 ай бұрын
I use notify-send every single day to notify me after my software is updated (apt, snap, flatpak). Doesn't work flawlessly, but nice as an easy signal
@npaladin20009 ай бұрын
I tend to prefer ncdu over dust...not as pretty but pretty enough. It also has a 1:1 clone for Windows called gdu, which I just alias to ncdu there for less confusion,
@sp10sn6 ай бұрын
Hell yeah. I saw that Neverwinter Nights folder :D
@severgun9 ай бұрын
5:19 Just press Ctrl+R
@neko68039 ай бұрын
POSIX-Stans will hate me: Fish as my shell of choice for dailydriving has recommendations from your entire shell history that get shown and altered while you type the command
@konstantink079 ай бұрын
you might as well set python as your default shell...
@moarjank9 ай бұрын
Also, use can use "bass" to get closer to POSIX compatibility, and to source bash profiles
@__Brandon__8 ай бұрын
Zsh will do this too, but won't break every shell command you know and love
@neko68038 ай бұрын
@@__Brandon__ there is always that one guy who will recommend Z-Shell when someone else talks about fish... do you folks not realize that others like me run fish partly to spite and troll you? Also, some people are just not in the mood of writing their own config or testing 6 million different ones to fin the features they like. You could make bash do 90% of what fish offers out of the box too but where is the point of trial-and-error-ing a custom config for whatever shell if i could just use fish and know it works the way i want it to? It makes smart suggestions, colours commands in a way that improves readability and it does so without me having to configure it. I can update my system all other stuff that i need the CLI too works just as well in fish with the same commands as if i was running bash, ash or zsh. Scripting in Fish, yes, thats differently but out of the box, neither bash or zsh work as well as fish. Especially for users unfamiliar with reading CLI-Text... "But muh Posixcompliancy 😭😭😭" - I do not CARE about posix, i once wrote an Archinstallerscript in Powershell just because i wanted to send it to someone who i knew would be offended upon seeing it😂
@moarjank8 ай бұрын
If worried about compatibility, bass is great. (I used to be an avid zsh user, but it's soo overbearing to configure. fish just works, and has better syntax anyway)
@RenderingUser9 ай бұрын
"battop" best battery info viewer
@Kevin-oj2uo9 ай бұрын
What a great video Nick! So many tools that will help manage my linux servers! ❤
@sumirandahal769 ай бұрын
better cd -> zoxide to mount partitions -> bashmount tmux etc
@Rohinthas9 ай бұрын
I REALLY like these kinds of videos! I specifically saved this one for later because I wanted to pay full attention. Might not be the best for the algorithm though... but I absolutely appreciate this type of content! I did not know about eza for example and its the exact tool I need!
@theeternalsw0rd9 ай бұрын
Good to know about eza as I was using exa and didn't realize it's unmaintained now.
@3osufdh4rfg9 ай бұрын
Same.
@bluesquare237 ай бұрын
Same
@huubeijndhovenvan71778 ай бұрын
What I never hear younger unix/linux users talk about (I’m 64 and using unix since 1985) is: the ! Command in vi/vim. It gives you everything of any command line tool inside vi/vim while editing your files. Try getting your head around the endless possibilities here.
@bluesquare237 ай бұрын
I do that all the time just to get back to the terminal rq for a second just to see something in the back scroll.
@jamesbond_0076 ай бұрын
Of course, typing ^R and then doing an incremental search through your history is already built-in to bash. To search again if you didn't find what you wanted, type ^R again while in ^R mode to find the previous occurrence of your search string. And, since it's incremental, the search automatically updates when you add or remove (or change) characters. [This is in response to Atuin]
@novaTopFlex7 ай бұрын
btop is not the only utility with the said interface, just the C++ version of it. Also developed by “aristocratos” and available in various repositories are the “bashtop” (for Bash) and “bpytop” (for Python) commands.
@averagemamil45239 ай бұрын
Excellent vid - lots of utils I’ve never even heard of 👍
@bencetari5 ай бұрын
Micro editor instead of nano. Highlights syntax by default and has customizable keycommands and integrated terminal escape as well as internal command execution like the replace command.
@beardlyinteresting9 ай бұрын
Do people not know about ctrl+r? It let's you do a search of your command history, not as feature rich as atuin I'm sure but should come standard in most shells
@NotcardNotLive5 ай бұрын
doas is almost a must have, sudo is kinda complicated to fix and doas is more lightweight, its worth it to try
@Diablokiller9999 ай бұрын
At least 2-3 CLI tools I will install on our embedded devices to make maintenance a lot easier, thanks! The Login logo looked familiar to me, wasn't sure you use a Tuxedo notebook until the sponsor part :D Tuxedo is part of Schenker (XMG), so really high quality german manufacturer that offers completely customizable hardware (even with watercooling in laptops!) and I love Tuxedo OS as an out-of-the-box working alternative to Debian/Ubuntu. Works perfectly, amazing build quality and performance and good support as well!
@biscotty66699 ай бұрын
Funfact: Zellige is a style of tiling from Morocco. Also: `nix-env -i ` instead of homebrew
9 ай бұрын
So in case somebody doesn't want to install a database, if you press Ctrl+R and then type something, it will search it kn your command history. It is fast and useful and better than pressing Up 200 times