Inspired by tools like Grafana that I just discovered, what other cool open source tooling do you use?
Primary code editor: helix
Graphical debugger and certain IDE features: vscodium
Lots of open source language servers: clangd, rust-analyzer, perl-navigator, …
Makefile to compile-comands.json: bear
TUI file manager: yazi
Better Grep:ripgrep
Debugger: gdb(gnu debugger)
Neovim with the LunarVim config.
LunarVim is great but I really think its better to make your own config and spend the initial investment of getting that set up.
You’ll understand the editor better and because of that can configure it to exactly how you want, and integrate things you regularly use into it (such as plugin features and bash functions) and also learn some Lua along the way
I’ve been trying it but the LSP refuses to work. It’s supposed to be work out of the box, but it just doesn’t. It’s better than vim, but still distant from any IDE I’ve used. Feels like going back to the dark ages (vim is babylonian times and nano is stone age).
Always tried to try neovim but felt kinda overwhelmed since I was always a jetbrains/vscode kind of guy. Never knew there were pre-configured setups. I’ll give this one a try, thanks!
Edit: and I’ve just seen it supports Vue, fucking great
Honestly, you are better off by sticking with Jetbrains/Code and using their vim keybindings. If you really enjoy spending hours configuring vim to do what the others do out of the box, then go for it. Otherwise just use vim keybindings everywhere.
Not exactly programming but recently discovered Logseq and I’m absolutely loving it. Been using it for work but I kinda want to start using it for personal stuff too.
It’s good, I been using it, but I’m heavy on my phone for my notes, and the android app has to improve a bit
Now that I’ve finished the first draft of an article on setting up rootless Podman on Guix System, I’m using and building out a set of tools to support a new article covering an all Red Hat stack from inner loop to CI.
So far, it’s
- OpenShift for the platform services run on
- Podman for my local container engine
- Podman Compose for inner loop development
- OpenShift Pipelines for CI
- Shipwright for building container images locally with Buildah
- Quay for image scanning and storage
- OpenShift Serverless for scale-to-zero deployments
I wish podman or docker had an IPFS registry. When dockerhub or quay decide to be slow for whatever reason, then all you can do is sit and wait. With IPFS it would be possible to pull from multiple hosts and even mirror images.
editor · neovim configured with fennel
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plugin management · paq-nvim
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better fennel support · tangerine.nvim
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code highlighting · default vim regex, nvim-treesitter
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lsp management · mason.nvim
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…and even more open-source neovim plugins
shell · zshell
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plugin management · antidote
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plugins · belak/zsh-utils, olets/zsh-abbr, zsh-users/zsh-autosuggestions, etc.
build system · gnu make
os · voidlinux
not programming related, but i though i’d mention
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