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diff --git a/locale/fr/LC_MESSAGES/_articles/2021-01-26-ann-remembering-add-memory-to-dmenu-fzf-and-similar-tools.po b/locale/fr/LC_MESSAGES/_articles/2021-01-26-ann-remembering-add-memory-to-dmenu-fzf-and-similar-tools.po deleted file mode 100644 index f71c98f..0000000 --- a/locale/fr/LC_MESSAGES/_articles/2021-01-26-ann-remembering-add-memory-to-dmenu-fzf-and-similar-tools.po +++ /dev/null @@ -1,302 +0,0 @@ -# -msgid "" -msgstr "" - -msgid "title: \"ANN: remembering - Add memory to dmenu, fzf and similar tools\"" -msgstr "" - -msgid "date: 2021-01-26" -msgstr "" - -msgid "layout: post" -msgstr "" - -msgid "lang: en" -msgstr "" - -msgid "ref: ann-remembering-add-memory-to-dmenu-fzf-and-similar-tools" -msgstr "" - -msgid "Previous solution" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"I previously used [yeganesh](http://dmwit.com/yeganesh/) fill this gap, but " -"as I started to rely less on Emacs, I added fzf as my go-to tool for doing " -"fuzzy searching on the terminal. But I didn't like that fzf always showed " -"the same order of things, when I would only need 3 or 4 commonly used files." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"For those who don't know: yeganesh is a wrapper around dmenu that will " -"remember your most used programs and put them on the beginning of the list " -"of executables. This is very convenient for interactive prolonged use, as " -"with time the things you usually want are right at the very beginning." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"But now I had this thing, yeganesh, that solved this problem for dmenu, but " -"didn't for fzf." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"I initially considered patching yeganesh to support it, but I found it more " -"coupled to dmenu than I would desire. I'd rather have something that knows " -"nothing about dmenu, fzf or anything, but enhances tools like those in a " -"useful way." -msgstr "" - -msgid "Implementation" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"Other than being decoupled from dmenu, another improvement I though that " -"could be made on top of yeganesh is the programming language choice. Instead" -" of Haskell, I went with POSIX sh. Sticking to POSIX sh makes it require " -"less build-time dependencies. There aren't any, actually. Packaging is made " -"much easier due to that." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"The good thing is that the program itself is small enough ([119 " -"lines](https://euandreh.xyz/remembering.git/tree/remembering?id=v0.1.0) on " -"v0.1.0) that POSIX sh does the job just fine, combined with other POSIX " -"utilities such as " -"[getopts](http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/getopts.html)," -" [sort](http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/sort.html) " -"and " -"[awk](http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/awk.html)." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"The behaviour is: given a program that will read from STDIN and write a " -"single entry to STDOUT, `remembering` wraps that program, and rearranges " -"STDIN so that previous choices appear at the beginning." -msgstr "" - -msgid "Where you would do:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"$ seq 5 | fzf\n" -"\n" -" 5\n" -" 4\n" -" 3\n" -" 2\n" -"> 1\n" -" 5/5\n" -">\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "And every time get the same order of numbers, now you can write:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"$ seq 5 | remembering -p seq-fzf -c fzf\n" -"\n" -" 5\n" -" 4\n" -" 3\n" -" 2\n" -"> 1\n" -" 5/5\n" -">\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"On the first run, everything is the same. If you picked 4 on the previous " -"example, the following run would be different:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"$ seq 5 | remembering -p seq-fzf -c fzf\n" -"\n" -" 5\n" -" 3\n" -" 2\n" -" 1\n" -"> 4\n" -" 5/5\n" -">\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"As time passes, the list would adjust based on the frequency of your " -"choices." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"I aimed for reusability, so that I could wrap diverse commands with " -"`remembering` and it would be able to work. To accomplish that, a " -"\"profile\" (the `-p something` part) stores data about different runs " -"separately." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"I took the idea of building something small with few dependencies to other " -"places too:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "the tests are just more POSIX sh files;" -msgstr "" - -msgid "and a POSIX Makefile to `check` and `install`." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"I was aware of the value of sticking to coding to standards, but I had past " -"experience mostly with programming language standards, such as ECMAScript, " -"Common Lisp, Scheme, or with IndexedDB or DOM APIs. It felt good to " -"rediscover these nice POSIX tools, which makes me remember of a quote by " -"[Henry Spencer](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Spencer#cite_note-3):" -msgstr "" - -msgid "Those who do not understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly." -msgstr "" - -msgid "Usage examples" -msgstr "" - -msgid "Here are some functions I wrote myself that you may find useful:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "Run a command with fzf on `$PWD`" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"f() {\n" -" profile=\"$f-shell-function(pwd | sed -e 's_/_-_g')\"\n" -" file=\"$(git ls-files | \\\n" -" remembering -p \"$profile\" \\\n" -" -c \"fzf --select-1 --exit -0 --query \\\"$2\\\" --preview 'cat {}'\")\"\n" -" if [ -n \"$file\" ]; then\n" -" # shellcheck disable=2068\n" -" history -s f $@\n" -" history -s \"$1\" \"$file\"\n" -" \"$1\" \"$file\"\n" -"fi\n" -"}\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"This way I can run `f vi` or `f vi config` at the root of a repository, and " -"the list of files will always appear on the most used order. Adding `pwd` to" -" the profile allows it to not mix data for different repositories." -msgstr "" - -msgid "Copy password to clipboard" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"choice=\"$(find \"$HOME/.password-store\" -type f | \\\n" -" grep -Ev '(.git|.gpg-id)' | \\\n" -" sed -e \"s|$HOME/.password-store/||\" -e 's/\\.gpg$//' | \\\n" -" remembering -p password-store \\\n" -" -c 'dmenu -l 20 -i')\"\n" -"\n" -"\n" -"if [ -n \"$choice\" ]; then\n" -" pass show \"$choice\" -c\n" -"fi\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"Adding the above to a file and binding it to a keyboard shortcut, I can " -"access the contents of my [password store](https://www.passwordstore.org/), " -"with the entries ordered by usage." -msgstr "" - -msgid "Replacing yeganesh" -msgstr "" - -msgid "Where I previously had:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "exe=$(yeganesh -x) && exec $exe\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "Now I have:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "exe=$(dmenu_path | remembering -p dmenu-exec -c dmenu) && exec $exe\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "This way, the executables appear on order of usage." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"If you don't have `dmenu_path`, you can get just the underlying `stest` tool" -" that looks at the executables available in your `$PATH`. Here's a juicy " -"one-liner to do it:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"$ wget -O- https://dl.suckless.org/tools/dmenu-5.0.tar.gz | \\\n" -" tar Ozxf - dmenu-5.0/arg.h dmenu-5.0/stest.c | \\\n" -" sed 's|^#include \"arg.h\"$|// #include \"arg.h\"|' | \\\n" -" cc -xc - -o stest\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"With the `stest` utility you'll be able to list executables in your `$PATH` " -"and pipe them to dmenu or something else yourself:" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"$ (IFS=:; ./stest -flx $PATH;) | sort -u | remembering -p another-dmenu-exec" -" -c dmenu | sh\n" -msgstr "" - -msgid "In fact, the code for `dmenu_path` is almost just like that." -msgstr "" - -msgid "Conclusion" -msgstr "" - -msgid "Patches welcome!" -msgstr "" - -msgid "the manpages are written in troff directly;" -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"For my personal use, I've [packaged](https://euandreh.xyz/package-.git" -"repository/) `remembering` for GNU Guix and Nix. Packaging it to any other " -"distribution should be trivial, or just downloading the tarball and running " -"`[sudo] make install`." -msgstr "" - -msgid "" -"Today I pushed v0.1.0 of [remembering](https://euandreh.xyz/remembering/), a" -" tool to enhance the interactive usability of menu-like tools, such as " -"[dmenu](https://tools.suckless.org/dmenu/) and " -"[fzf](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf)." -msgstr "" - -#~ msgid "" -#~ "Today I pushed v0.1.0 of [remembering](https://remembering.euandreh.xyz), a " -#~ "tool to enhance the interactive usability of menu-like tools, such as " -#~ "[dmenu](https://tools.suckless.org/dmenu/) and " -#~ "[fzf](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf)." -#~ msgstr "" - -#~ msgid "" -#~ "For my personal use, I've packaged `remembering` for [GNU " -#~ "Guix](https://euandreh.xyz/euandreh-guix-channel.git/) and " -#~ "[Nix](https://euandreh.xyz/dotfiles.git/tree/nixos/not-on-" -#~ "nixpkgs/remembering.nix?id=0831444f745cf908e940407c3e00a61f6152961f). " -#~ "Packaging it to any other distribution should be trivial, or just " -#~ "downloading the tarball and running `[sudo] make install`." -#~ msgstr "" - -#~ msgid "the man pages are written in troff directly;" -#~ msgstr "" - -#~ msgid "" -#~ "Today I pushed v0.1.0 of " -#~ "[remembering](https://euandreh.xyz/remembering.git/), a tool to enhance the " -#~ "interactive usability of menu-like tools, such as " -#~ "[dmenu](https://tools.suckless.org/dmenu/) and " -#~ "[fzf](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf)." -#~ msgstr "" |