Okay, there's one thing I don't like about ripgrep. rg is too similar to rm 😅
Okay, there's one thing I don't like about ripgrep. rg is too similar to rm 😅
Here is mine :
1. #git :blobcatheart:
2. #lsd https://github.com/lsd-rs/lsd :blobcatrainbow:
3. #cat (which is actually an alias over #bat https://github.com/sharkdp/bat 🦇)
4. #rg #RipGrep https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep 🪦
5. #Nix https://nixos.org :nixos:
I’ve been leaning on ripgrep a lot lately. I always knew it existed, but I never fully appreciated it until I started working with larger, fast-changing codebases. Now rg is one of my most-used commands.
What I love most is that it respects .gitignore, so it skips things like venv and node_modules without extra effort. And honestly, the overall UX is just fantastic.
🚀 #Ripgrep 15.0.0: the latest in a thrilling saga of text searching — because who doesn't crave yet another tool to do what we've been doing since the dawn of UNIX? 🙄 Meanwhile, #GitHub drowns us in buzzwords like AI and security, hoping we won't notice it's all just new packaging on the same stale sushi. 🍣
https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/releases/tag/15.0.0 #TextSearching #SoftwareUpdates #UNIX #Tools #HackerNews #ngated
How can #ripgrep be so abnormally fast?
Searching through my 87GB source code directory in half a second.
Like... WHAT?
How To Search Inside Files In Linux Using Grep, Find And Ripgrep #Linux #SearchFiles #grep #find #ripgrep #Linuxcommands #Linuxbasics #Linuxhowto
https://ostechnix.com/search-inside-files-linux-grep-find-ripgrep/
Yesterday I wrote a little note-taking tool based on #fzf and #ripgrep for myself and I'm quite happy with it so I thought I'd push it to #codeberg to share it with others but I really wanted to include a little GIF in the README showing it in action to demonstrate how it works, but when converting my screencap video to a GIF, no matter what I do, it's played back at like 25% of the original speed in #Firefox. And that's when I realized that all the people including GIFs of their CLI tools in their GitHub/Codeberg READMEs likely aren't annoyingly slow typers after all, it's the f*cking browser. 😒
Just published an article on my blog. If you're a RipGrep user, you should take a look. It might solve your issue.
https://andrewwoods.net/blog/2025/ripgreps-annoying-message/
bennypowers.dev/posts/fun-with-ripgrep/
Fun with #ripgrep, part 1.
#ripgrep replacement in #bash with #GNU #grep.
https://forgejo.mueller.network/Zentonic/ripgrepgeneric.git
ripgrepgeneric: da, wo es kein ripgrep gibt ☝️
zum beispiel auf alten, zu migrierenden, servern. auf denen es wohl noch alte configs zu durchforsten, aber keine attraktive möglichkeit ripgrep nachzuinstallieren, gibt.
da sucht man, in welcher datei das suchwort drinsteht und wenn ja, an welcher stelle.
dieser zweizeiler mit variablenübernahme wird durch das script komftebel™ vertreten.
I've just installed ripgrep (`sudo apt install ripgrep` in Ubuntu) and it is, as claimed, blazing fast at searching code repositories. Shockingly fast.
Why Android can't use CDC Ethernet (2023)
https://jordemort.dev/blog/why-android-cant-use-cdc-ethernet/
#ycombinator #android #cdc #ethernet #java #regex #ripgrep #usb
@jean_dupont Yes! It works especially nice with #ripgrep and #fd !
I just pushed my updated #emacs #config to Codeberg, have a look if you want. There have been a lot of changes to Time Management (e.g. parallel clocks), document templates etc.
https://codeberg.org/anonimno/emacs/src/branch/master/config.org
But I also have this issue with #ripgrep and #consult-notes. Anybody have an ides?
@ike ... and this stuff has been done with an approach to kanban boards (as part of an NLNet funded project, Icebreaker).
So for instance, I can use #ripgrep to search `rqr` for available tasks (or a more complex annotation featuring that as a subsets).
Because Ive been diligent regarding spacing things out and cross linking like a zettlekasten the location of a document can provide an additional context in supplement to the line(s) identified.
There are other forms like `ìq` for policies.
Here’s something that puts your readline edit-mode into your prompt. I probably didn’t need to do this. I’m a #Vim user (really #NeoVim) and so I have a `.inputrc` that makes my #commandline edit-mode (because of #readline) always be #vi. This is for #bash. It may work in other shells, I don’t know. I use #starship. The actual command I wrote uses #ripgrep. At least twenty other ways you could do it. I put all the changes into a gist: https://gist.github.com/wolf/e2bd126159961e3142350f6dfe04056a
Most people never change from the default edit-mode. If they do, they probably don’t switch back and forth. Starship narrows the field further. Almost certainly this is of no use to you unless you want to learn a little about some of the pieces. Enjoy anyway.