What projects are out there seeking to innovate in the terminal and command line space, and improve or revolutionize the terminal environment?

  • NuShell is one such example, a shell that uses structured data in its pipelines. Many other experimental shells out there innovating in different spaces.
  • An even more daring example is DomTerm. It’s a terminal emulator with more rich rendering. Supports rich text, images, etc while maintaining xterm compatibility.

Please do not shy from answering projects that are very experimental, early stage, break a lot of backwards compatibility or radically change the current way of doing things.

12 points
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Zellij - a better way for a cli application to communicate with the terminal

Warp - a terminal emulater that integrates LLM completion natively

Fish - a shell that generates completions automatically from a man-page

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5 points

Need to check Zellij.
On desktop I use Kitty multiple windows on dual monitor with layouts, ditch tmux for kitty.

But i still use tmux on server with tmuxinator to create layouts, Zellij looks to be a good replacement

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3 points

Thanks for the answer!

Warp has really cool features (seems to be beyond LLM?), but what kept me from trying is that its not open source, and seems to have anti privacy features, and VC-funded. It is still a very tempting product, so maybe I will try it.

Zellij seems interesting. I’ll check that out!

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1 point

Can you talk more about zellij? The docs don’t really explain much. It seems to be a multiplexer like tmux?

One reason I haven’t used multiplexers yet is that I use tiling window managers, and so the tiling is managed by that through separate terminal windows.

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1 point

Sorry, I can’t find the blog post. I remember reading something about how zellij’s goal was to allow cli apps to create pop-ups, overylay windows and other stuff all in the terminal. Idk where it is though

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1 point

If you want to have a single window for multiple shells or you want to replace use of tmux in an SSH context, Zellij is exactly that. The plus side is if you work remote from your machine, an ssh connection will feel faster than a VNC session to the same machine. IMO 100% a difference you can feel if you already remote to your work desktop.

I haven’t seriously used it yet but I should. If you’re a fan of text environments it’s worth a shot. I’m still rocking multiple putty windows like a caveman.

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8 points

Basically everything from https://charm.sh/

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3 points

I use glow all the time, I love it!

I’ve been playing with wish too, I see a lot of potential for it

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1 point
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I’m very bitter that I can’t use charm.sh lib’s in Python applications 💔

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5 points

break a lot of backwards compatibility or radically change the current way of doing things

Plan 9. We can still have textual interfaces without emulating the ancient use of teletypewriters.

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2 points

The bell labs plan9?

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1 point

Yes, or one of the forks.

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4 points
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Deleted by creator
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3 points

Terminology was pretty dope in its day

https://www.enlightenment.org/about-terminology.md

The whole concept of terminal emulation is stuck. But would different be adopted?

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