On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 4:46 AM, Amit Uttamchandani atu13...@csun.edu wrote:
I just looked at vile...very cool app. Haven't figured out all the
commands yet but I'm quite happy that it supports verilog syntax
highlighting. Can you do vertical splits or file browsing within vile?
Vile
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 03:35:18PM -0400, James Turner wrote:
I'm also running 0.4a from packages on openbsd 4.4 without any issues. I
haven't seen any characters get eaten. What $TERM are you running? How
often do your chars get eaten? What do you mean by eaten? You type and
half don't ever
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 3:19 PM, Amit Uttamchandani
So if you need to work on let's say around 5-6 source code files along
with constant references to external files such as pdf's, etc. you have
multiple tabs in a terminal or multiple shells open and use that to
navigate the file system? Also
On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 15:50:14 +0900
Alan Busby thebu...@thebusby.com wrote:
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 3:19 PM, Amit Uttamchandani
So if you need to work on let's say around 5-6 source code files along
with constant references to external files such as pdf's, etc. you have
multiple tabs in a
On Thu, 12 Mar 2009 22:57:08 -0600
Neale Pickett ne...@woozle.org wrote:
I am astounded by how many respondents regularly use file managers!
I couldn't live without them. I used to use dired in Emacs, now I use
the corresponding vim functionality.
If you know what you want, then it is quicker
On Thu, 12 Mar 2009 14:52:26 -0300
Brendan MacDonell macdonel...@gmail.com wrote:
[snip]
* Text Editor: vile. I prefer the statically compiled lexers for
syntax highlighting as it means that I never have to contend with the
limited context and broken highlighting caused by starting vim at a
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 07:38:24AM +0100, Martin Oppegaard wrote:
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 03:35:18PM -0400, James Turner wrote:
I'm also running 0.4a from packages on openbsd 4.4 without any issues. I
haven't seen any characters get eaten. What $TERM are you running? How
often do your chars
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 02:59:03PM +0900, Alan Busby wrote:
I am astounded by how many respondents regularly use file managers!
Yeah, I'm starting to feel like I'm missing something here...
Do file managers have some killer feature that the shells
(bash/tcsh/zsh/etc) don't?
To navigate between directories the internal comands dirs, pushd,
popd, etc are very useful. Also you can do multiple tasks in the same
terminal with the job control commands.
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 7:19 AM, Amit Uttamchandani atu13...@csun.edu wrote:
On Fri, 13 Mar 2009 14:59:03 +0900
Alan
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 12:59 AM, Alan Busby thebu...@thebusby.com wrote:
I am astounded by how many respondents regularly use file managers!
Yeah, I'm starting to feel like I'm missing something here...
Do file managers have some killer feature that the shells
(bash/tcsh/zsh/etc) don't?
Kurt H Maier wrote:
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 12:59 AM, Alan Busby thebu...@thebusby.com wrote:
I am astounded by how many respondents regularly use file managers!
Yeah, I'm starting to feel like I'm missing something here...
Do file managers have some killer feature that the shells
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 12:52:14AM -0700, David E. Thiel wrote:
On Fri, Mar 13, 2009 at 07:38:24AM +0100, Martin Oppegaard wrote:
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 03:35:18PM -0400, James Turner wrote:
I'm also running 0.4a from packages on openbsd 4.4 without any issues. I
haven't seen any
How do suckless members code? How do they manage multiple files? Bug
reports, etc?
I'm very curious to hear how others respond so I might as well pitch in too;
1. Window Manager = dwm/wmii
2. File Manager = bash
3. Text Editor = emacs
4. Calendar/Todo = cal/emacs/email (Google's Calendar for
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 3:51 AM, Alan Busby thebu...@thebusby.com wrote:
How do suckless members code? How do they manage multiple files? Bug
reports, etc?
I'm very curious to hear how others respond so I might as well pitch in too;
same here, maybe a wiki page :)
here is mine, please note
Amit Uttamchandani wrote:
4. Calendar/Todo - calcurse
i will checkout this one, thanks :)
As I only work on private projects, I dont have a bugtracker etc.
1. window manager - dwm (of course :P )
2. shell and file manager - zsh
3. text editor - vim (scripts: camelcasemotion, code_complete)
1. Window Manager = dwm-gtx
2. Shell = zsh
3. Texteditor = vim
4. Calender = cal / vim
5. VCS = mercurial
8. Chat = irssi/bitlbee
9. Music = mpd / ncmpc
10. Terminal = rxvt-unicode
11. Debugger = gdb/valgrind
2009/3/12, Jorge Vargas jorge.var...@gmail.com:
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 3:51 AM, Alan
On Wed, 11 Mar 2009 23:07:41 -0700
Amit Uttamchandani atu13...@csun.edu wrote:
How do suckless members code? How do they manage multiple files? Bug
reports, etc?
Thanks for the responses...found many new tools. zsh is very
interesting, will be learning how to use that.
P.S. Apologize for
1. Window Manager = dwm-gtx
2. Shell = bash/ksh (depends on where i am)
3. Texteditor = vim
4. Calender = cal / vim
5. VCS = git
8. Chat = irssi/bitlbee (psyc for the server side)
9. Music = mpd / ncmpc / mpdtoys
10. Terminal = rxvt-unicode
11. Debugger = gdb/valgrind
12. ikiwiki for note taking,
User-Agent: Mutt/1.5.18 (2008-05-17)
[...]
Sent from my Nokia mobile phone
What mua did you use?
FWIW, I use mutt.
--
regards,
GPG key 1024D/4434BAB3 2008-08-24
gpg --keyserver subkeys.pgp.net --recv-keys 4434BAB3
唐詩218 李商隱 無題二首之二
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 09:23:47AM +0100, Enno Boland (Gottox) wrote:
1. Window Manager = dwm-gtx
2. Shell = zsh
3. Texteditor = vim
4. Calender = cal / vim
5. VCS = mercurial
8. Chat = irssi/bitlbee
9. Music = mpd / ncmpc
10. Terminal = rxvt-unicode
11. Debugger = gdb/valgrind
Window
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 04:59:41PM +0800, bill lam wrote:
User-Agent: Mutt/1.5.18 (2008-05-17)
[...]
Sent from my Nokia mobile phone
What mua did you use?
FWIW, I use mutt.
really its just mutt, i just changed my sig. to say what it says now, so
i can get away with writing short and
On Thu, 12 Mar 2009, Jimmy Tang wrote:
really its just mutt, i just changed my sig. to say what it says now, so
i can get away with writing short and terse emails to people (sucks to
waste time on writing long detailed emails) its a trick i picked up from
kevin rose of digg.com fame.
--
8. music - turntables and mpd/sonata
Do you have multiple instances of mpd and control them with your turntables?
hiro wrote:
8. music - turntables and mpd/sonata
Do you have multiple instances of mpd and control them with your turntables?
no, maybe it was phrased a little bit confusing :)
but there is a very good (and suckless!) digital vinyl emulation
software for Unix: http://www.xwax.co.uk/
Window Manager = xmonad (for working twinview support)
Shell = zsh and bash (zsh is good but oh so slow...)
File Manager = shell/mc
Text Editor = vim
Calendar / Todo = nothing/cal/text files in svn
File search = locate/find/grep/ctags!!
SCM = svn
E-Mail = mutt
Music = mocp
Chat = irssi bitlbee
Hi,
Amit Uttamchandani atu13...@csun.edu wrote:
3. Text Editor - Vim
I mostly use elvis which, in my opinion, is much smaller, faster and
more suckless vi-clone than vim. As a little example compare elvis.syn
with vim syntax files. It even has interesting features that vim lacks
(for
Window Manager = dwm(heavily patched and edited by me, nearing a fork)
File Manager = bash
Text Editor = nano
Calendar / Todo = paper
File search = find | grep | good directory structure
E-Mail = gmail
Music = ncmpc + mpd + sshfs
Chat = irssi+bitlbee, soon swapping irssi for something lighter
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 09:11:57AM +0100, Christoph Schied wrote:
Amit Uttamchandani wrote:
...
11. personal wiki - zim (dont like it though, still want to write a clone)
What I have discovered today: vimwiki
(http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2226) seems to be nice
- at least
1 Window Manager - DWM
2 File Manager - Tcsh
3 Text editor - Vim (I wish a suckless vi please!)
4 Calendar/Todo - Pcal (Try pcal -H | w3m -T text/html -cols 80)
5 File search - find/grep/awk
6 Web browser - Firefox, Dillo (last version support CSS a bit), w3m
(for documentation).
7 Code
but there is a very good (and suckless!) digital vinyl emulation software
for Unix: http://www.xwax.co.uk/
Thanks. So far I've been playing only with analog vinyl and this
evercrashing windows stuff;)
I found some other comments, which sound really promising, so I think
I will give this a try:
Unfortunately I've had to move to Windows at work, but at home I'm
still using Linux with more choice of applications.
Window manager - DWM, sometimes hacked
Scripting language of choice: python (I find it easier to use one
language almost all my scripting even though it's sometimes overkill
for
s/DWM/dwm/
openbsd, dwm, xterm, nvi, opencvs, tmux, mutt, irssi
--
James Turner
BSD Group Consulting
http://www.bsdgroup.org
will that be?
--
De: explodingm...@gmail.com [mailto:explodingm...@gmail.com] En nombre de Ian
Daniher
Enviado el: jueves, 12 de marzo de 2009 12:45 p.m.
Para: dwm mail list
Asunto: Re: [dwm] Suckess Code Management
Window Manager = dwm(heavily patched and edited by me, nearing a fork
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 4:29 PM, Szabolcs Nagy nszabo...@gmail.com wrote:
s/DWM/dwm/
Side effect of being forced to windows: sense of capitalisation goes
out the window.
--
cheers, dave tweed__
computer vision reasearcher: david.tw...@gmail.com
while having code so
I'll only bother to mention here what utilities/applications I use
that might be considered unusual, as repeating the same set of
browsers / chat clients / DCVS tools ad infinitum would likely become
tedious. Without further preamble, I think the following might be
worth mentioning:
* WM: a
i was using elvis so far until i started using vim. I was pretty happy with
it, but the feeling was that it was keeping so much stuff in the core
instead of delegating to external programs or scripts.
But thats true, elvis is smaller than vim :) you can publish a git/bzr/hg
branch of the last
I love this game! I'm a sys admin and not so much a developer, so my
answers are going to be a little different:
Window Manager = dwm
File Manager = bash (rarely: pcmanfm)
Text Editor = vim (usually in vi mode) or nvi
Scripting = bash or perl
Calendar / Todo = wyrd
File search = find | grep
SCM
On Thu, 12 Mar 2009 13:01:17 -0500
Kurt H Maier karmaf...@gmail.com wrote:
I love this game! I'm a sys admin and not so much a developer, so my
answers are going to be a little different:
I can't believe nobody mentioned conkeror. Uses XULRunner but is very
lightweight compared to firefox.
Hi pancake,
pancake panc...@youterm.com wrote:
i was using elvis so far until i started using vim. I was pretty happy with
it, but the feeling was that it was keeping so much stuff in the core
instead of delegating to external programs or scripts.
But thats true, elvis is smaller than vim :)
I can't believe nobody mentioned conkeror. Uses XULRunner but is very
lightweight compared to firefox. Ratpoison guy is main coder if I
understood right.
Last time I tried conkeror it was a kludgy addon for a kludgy browser.
Now it seems to be an independent app, even if it's still based ona
Hi!
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 12:30:02PM -0400, James Turner wrote:
openbsd, dwm, xterm, nvi, opencvs, tmux, mutt, irssi
How are tmux and nvi going along at your place? Here, tmux eat the
characters,
seemingly at random. mg and vim are not affected.
I've tried tmux 0.4a precompiled, and 0.7
I'm also running 0.4a from packages on openbsd 4.4 without any issues. I
haven't seen any characters get eaten. What $TERM are you running? How
often do your chars get eaten? What do you mean by eaten? You type and
half don't ever make it to the screen?
On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 07:29:29PM +0100,
Here is mine:
1. Window Manager = dwm
2. File Manager = zsh / pcmanfm
3. Text Editor= vim
4. Calendar/Todo = calcurse (Thanks who ever posted that earlier)
5. File search= locate
6. VCS= git
7. Email = Claws (I can't get mutt to work with gmail)
8. Chat =
Typically I have three windows open: Emacs and rxvt on tag 1, and
Firefox on tag 2. Emacs runs in less RAM than Firefox or what many of
you use for playing music, and it does all of the following:
Emacs: editor, chat (rcirc + bitlbee, comint), email (gnus),
rss (gnus), address book
I am astounded by how many respondents regularly use file managers!
Yeah, I'm starting to feel like I'm missing something here...
Do file managers have some killer feature that the shells
(bash/tcsh/zsh/etc) don't?
For all the mutt users,
I imagine most are doing (fetchmail - procmail - mutt)
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