+++ title = "A modern CLI renaissance?" date = 2024-03-04T12:20:02-06:00 draft = true +++ Take a look at this [table](#appendix-the-tools) at the bottom of the page. Ill wait. Notice the relative scarcity between ~1995 and ~2015? Id like to talk about a trend Ive seen these past few years, where people are rewriting and rethinking staples of the CLI, why I think this trend is a good thing, and why I think this trend might be happening. ## History The terminal has been a staple of computer user interfaces since before computer monitors were available, with some of the first computers offering an interactive mode in the late 1950's. The 'modern' Linux terminal traces its linage to the very first version of Unix, in 1971. Many utilities that a Linux user interacts with every day, commands like `rm`, `cat`, `cd`, `cp`, `man` and a host of other core commands trace their initial versions to this first version of Unix. Other tools are a bit newer, such as `sed` (1974), `diff` (1974) `bc` (1975), `make` (1976) or `vi` (1976). There were a few more tools introduced in the 90's, such as `vim` (1991) and `ssh`, (1995), but you get the picture. The majority of the foundational CLI tools on a Linux pc, even one installed yesterday, are older than Linux itself is. ## Ok, so? Now, theres nothing wrong with this, the tools work fine still, but, in the half-century since they were first written, Terminals and the broader Linux ecosystem have all changed. Terminals now have capacity to display more colours, Unicode symbols, and even inline images. Terminal programs now coexist with graphical user interfaces, and only a small subset of computer users even know they exist, wheras in the past, terminals were the only way one interacted with the computer. Additionally, and perhaps more importantly, our knowledge has expanded, our knowledge of user interfaces, of what works and what doesnt, of what usecases are common and what usecases are niche, the way that error messages can teach, the value of a good out of the box experience, and the value of documentation that is easy to find and digest. ## Exploration of the solution space These changes to the environment surrounding CLI apps has in recent years, led to a resurgence in development of command line utilities. Instead of just developing completely new tools, Ive noticed that people are rethinking and reinventing tools that have existed since the early days of Unix. ## The lessons learned from the past A large amount of the innovation in the area, I think, can be attributed to lessons that have been learned in 50 years of using software; sharp edges we have repeatedly cut ourselves on, unintuitive interfaces that repeatedly trip us up, and growing frustration at the limitations that maintaining decades of backwards compatibility imposes on our tools. These lessons have been gathering in the collective conciousness; through cheatsheets, guides, and FAQs; resources to guide us through esoteric error messages, complex configurations, and dozens upon dozens of flags. Id like to go over a couple of the more prominent lessons that I feel terminal tools have learned in the past several decades. ### A good out of the box experience While configurability is great, one should not need to learn a new configuration language and dozens or hundreds of options to get a usable piece of software. Configuration should be for customization, not setup. One of the earliest examples of this principle may be the fish shell. Both zsh and fish have powerful prompt and autocompletion engines, but zsh requires you to setup a custom prompt and enable completions in order to use the features that set it apart from the competition. With no config file, zsh is no better than bash. When starting fish for the first time however, its powerful autocompletion and information rich prompt are front and center with no configuration required. Of course, fish still has the same level of configurability as zsh, it just also has sensible defaults. To demonstrate my point, this is the default prompt for zsh with no configuration. It *only* shows the hostname, none of the advanced featurs you can get out of a zsh prompt even without plugins. ![zsh prompt, only shows hostname](zsh_prompt.png) Here is bash's prompt. It actually gives more info than zsh's, even though zsh can do more when properly configured. ![bash prompt, shows hostname and current directory](bash_prompt.png) And here is fish's default prompt. It has a few colours, shows everything the bash prompt does, and additionally shows the git branch we are on. ![fish prompt, has colours, shows hostname, current directory, and git info](fish_prompt.png) Text editors are another great example of the evolution of out of the box defaults. Vim and Neovim both improved on their predecessors, but much of that improvement is locked behind extremely complex configuration experiences and plugins. Heres four different terminal text editors with no configuration applied: ![vi, vim, neovim, and helix editors in their default configuration](editors.png) Vi, (top left) is our baseline, and, as far as I can tell, doesnt actually support much for configuration. What you see out of the box is more or less whats there. Vim (top right) greatly improved on Vi, adding things such as syntax highlighting, line numbers, spellchecking, split windows, folding, and even basic autocompletion. However, everything but syntax highligting is either extremely clunky or outright disabled without configuration. (for example, the earliest things I did when I first made a `.vimrc` was to enable indent folding, make some better keybinds for navigating windows, and adding a line number ruler to the side) Neovim (bottom left) further improved on Vim, adding support for Treesitter and the Language Server Protocoll, but the out of the box experience is the *exact* same as vim! In order to take advantage of the LSP and Treesitter support, you have to install plugins, which means learning a Nvim package manager, learning how to configure LSPs, and configuring a new LSP for every language you want to use it with. (Or finding out about Mason and being OK with having multiple levels of package management in your Nvim install alone). Dont get me wrong, Neovim is a great editor once you get over the hump, I still use it as my daily driver, but so much of its functionality is simply hidden. Then we have the Helix (bottom right) editor. Colour scheme aside, everything is just there. Helix doesnt have plugin support [yet](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/discussions/3806), but it has so much stuff in core that, looking through my neovim plugins, pretty much all of them are in the core editor! (ironically, the one feature that I feel helix is missing, [folding](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/issues/1840), is a core part of neovim, albiet one that requires some configuration to get good use out of). Helix does have a config file where you can change a huge amount of settings, but its an extremely usable IDE out of the box, thanks to having all of its features enabled by default. ### Friendly error messages [before](../nushell) ### Concise and discoverable documentation ### Common usecases should be easy ## Shedding historical baggage ## The trendsetter ## The languages ## Appendix: the tools This is an extremely unscientific table of command line tools that I have tried, have used, or currently use. It is assuredly incomplete, but *should* be broadly representative. The date data has been gathered from the first git commit where available, wikipedia otherwise, and sorting is by year first, then alphabetical. |tool|year|language| |-|-|-| |ls|1961|c| |cat|1971|c| |cd|1971|c| |cp|1971|c| |man|1971|c| |rm|1971|c| |grep|1973|c| |diff|1974|c| |sed|1974|c| |bc|1975|c| |make|1976|c| |vi|1976|c| |bourne shell|1979|c| |awk|1985|c| |screen|1987|c| |[bash](https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/)|1989|c| |[zsh](https://www.zsh.org/)|1990|c| |[vim](https://www.vim.org/)|1991|c| |midnight commander|1994|c| |ssh|1995|c| |[curl](https://github.com/curl/curl)|1996|c| |[fish](https://fishshell.com/)|2005|c/rust| |[fossil](https://fossil-scm.org/home/doc/trunk/www/index.wiki)|2006|c| |[tmux](https://github.com/tmux/tmux)|2007|c| |[git](https://git-scm.com/)|2008|c| |[go 1.0](https://go.dev/)|2012|go| |[fzf](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf)|2013|go| |[eza/exa](https://github.com/eza-community/eza)|2014|rust| |[neovim](https://neovim.io/)|2015|c| |[pueue](https://github.com/Nukesor/pueue)|2015|rust| |[rust 1.0](https://www.rust-lang.org/)|2015|rust| |[just](https://github.com/casey/just)|2016|rust| |[micro](https://micro-editor.github.io/)|2016|go| |[nnn](https://github.com/jarun/nnn)|2016|c| |[ripgrep](https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep)|2016|rust| |[fd](https://github.com/sharkdp/fd)|2017|rust| |[bat](https://github.com/sharkdp/bat)|2018|rust| |[broot](https://dystroy.org/broot/)|2018|rust| |[difftastic](https://difftastic.wilfred.me.uk/)|2018|rust| |[hyperfine](https://github.com/sharkdp/hyperfine)|2018|rust| |[lazygit](https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit)|2018|go| |[lsd](https://github.com/lsd-rs/lsd)|2018|rust| |[nushell](https://www.nushell.sh/)|2018|rust| |[scc](https://github.com/boyter/scc)|2018|go| |[sd](https://github.com/chmln/sd)|2018|rust| |[git-delta](https://github.com/dandavison/delta)|2019|rust| |[grex](https://github.com/pemistahl/grex)|2019|rust| |[starship](https://starship.rs/)|2019|rust| |[tre](https://github.com/dduan/tre)|2019|rust| |[typst](https://typst.app/)|2019|rust| |[diskonaut](https://github.com/imsnif/diskonaut)|2020|rust| |[helix](https://helix-editor.com/)|2020|rust| |[pijul](https://pijul.org/)|2020|rust| |[zellij](https://zellij.dev/)|2020|rust| |[zoxide](https://github.com/ajeetdsouza/zoxide)|2020|rust| |[btop](https://github.com/aristocratos/btop)|2021|c++| |[ast-grep](https://github.com/ast-grep/ast-grep)|2022|rust| |[yazi](https://github.com/sxyazi/yazi)|2024|rust|