Text editor is highly customized Neovim in compiled suckless terminal emulator. Used for HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Bash, Python, and a bit of C. I also use a text expander called espanso that is really powerful when used with bash.
In my search engine of choice, Duckduckgo (Lite), I love using bangs like !mdn !w !aur !archwiki for amazingly fast searches. I have a bunch of extensions, but Vimium is crazy helpful. I love my bspwm window manager in Linux. Plus my ortholinear keyboard just made my workflow crazy fast when it needs to be…
I also wrote my own git wrapper in bash that can do the basics (add, commit, push) and some other features (add emojis, reset hard push, choose previous commit to roll back to, even create or delete a github repo calling out to their api). I use that for most git related things, otherwise I just use git directly. The list goes on, but for web dev my tools are…unique.
Text editor is highly customized Neovim in compiled suckless terminal emulator. Used for HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Bash, Python, and a bit of C. I also use a text expander called espanso that is really powerful when used with bash.
In my search engine of choice, Duckduckgo (Lite), I love using bangs like !mdn !w !aur !archwiki for amazingly fast searches. I have a bunch of extensions, but Vimium is crazy helpful. I love my bspwm window manager in Linux. Plus my ortholinear keyboard just made my workflow crazy fast when it needs to be…
I also wrote my own git wrapper in bash that can do the basics (add, commit, push) and some other features (add emojis, reset hard push, choose previous commit to roll back to, even create or delete a github repo calling out to their api). I use that for most git related things, otherwise I just use git directly. The list goes on, but for web dev my tools are…unique.