implemented feedback.
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			@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
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title = "A modern CLI renaissance?"
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title = "The modern CLI renaissance."
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date = 2024-03-04T12:20:02-06:00
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draft = true
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+++
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			@ -83,10 +83,9 @@ xsel -bi
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ls specifically can trace its history to 1961 
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-->
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Take a look at this [table](#appendix-the-tools) at the bottom of the page.
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I'll wait.
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Notice the relative scarcity between ~1995 and ~2015?
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Id like to talk about a trend I've seen these past few years,
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Over the past few years, it seems like the rate at which new CLI tools are being written has picked back up again,
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accelerating after seeing relatively little activity between ~1995 and ~2015.
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I'd like to talk about this trend I've noticed,
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where people are rewriting and rethinking staples of the command line interface,
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why I think this trend might be happening,
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and why I think this trend is a good thing.
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			@ -112,14 +111,6 @@ Terminal programs now coexist with graphical user interfaces,
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and only a small subset of computer users even know they exist,
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whereas in the past, terminals were the only way one interacted with the computer.
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Perhaps more importantly, our knowledge has expanded:
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our knowledge of user interfaces,
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of what works and what doesn't,
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of what usecases are common and what usecases are niche,
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the way that error messages can teach,
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the value of a good out of the box experience,
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and the value of documentation that is easy to find and digest.
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These changes to the environment surrounding CLI apps in recent years have
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led to a resurgence in development of command line utilities.
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Instead of just developing completely new tools or cloning old tools,
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			@ -187,15 +178,15 @@ whats there.
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Vim (top right) greatly improved on Vi, adding things such as syntax highlighting, line numbers, spellchecking, split windows, folding, and even basic autocompletion.
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However, everything but syntax highlighting is either extremely clunky or outright disabled without configuration.
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(for example, the earliest things I did when I first made a `.vimrc` was to enable indent folding,
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make some better keybinds for navigating windows, and adding a line number ruler to the side)
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For example, the earliest things I did when I first made a `.vimrc` was to enable indent folding,
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make some better keybinds for navigating windows, and adding a line number ruler to the side.
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Neovim (bottom left) further improved on Vim, adding support for Treesitter and the Language Server Protocol, 
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but the out of the box experience is the *exact* same as vim!
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In order to take advantage of the LSP and Treesitter support, you have to install plugins,
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which means learning a Nvim package manager, learning how to configure LSPs,
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and configuring a new LSP for every language you want to use it with
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(or finding out about Mason and being OK with having multiple levels of package management in your Nvim install alone).
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or finding out about Mason and being OK with having multiple levels of package management in your Nvim install alone.
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Don't get me wrong: Neovim is a great editor once you get over the hump.
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I still use it as my daily driver, but so much of its functionality is simply hidden.
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			@ -205,8 +196,8 @@ Helix doesn't have plugin support [yet](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/di
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but it has so much stuff in core that,
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looking through my neovim plugins,
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pretty much all of them are in the core editor!
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(Ironically, the one feature that I feel helix is missing, [folding](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/issues/1840),
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is a core part of neovim, albeit one that requires some configuration to get good use out of).
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Ironically, the one feature that I feel helix is missing, [folding](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/issues/1840),
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is a core part of neovim, albeit one that requires some configuration to get good use out of.
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Helix does have a config file where you can change a huge amount of settings,
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but its an extremely usable IDE out of the box thanks to having all of its features enabled by default.
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			@ -221,7 +212,7 @@ In the worst case, they can even point you in a completely different direction t
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Git is a good example of this. As much as I love git, sometimes its error messages are the  opposite of helpful.
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To borrow an example from [Julia Evans](https://jvns.ca/blog/2024/04/10/notes-on-git-error-messages/#git-checkout-asdf),
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if you run `git checkout SomeNonExistantBranch`, you get:
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`error: pathspec 'SomeNonexistantBranch` did not match any file(s) known to git`.
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`error: pathspec 'SomeNonexistantBranch' did not match any file(s) known to git`.
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This is confusing because you are trying to checkout a branch, you arent thinking about files.
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Another example, I covered [before](../nushell) is the contrast between Bash and Nushell.
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