Basically it's about 3 factors: panelize everything, grep everything and save everything. Panelization is known from Midnight Commander - it means to capture command output into a list that can be browsed. Grepping is known from fzf. Screen saving is a new paradigm You basically have new screen (a greppable panel) for each new command, which is saved to the disk (GDBM), and which can be fetched/navigated to, having also PWD dir and position in panel restored. pt., 14 kwi 2023, 20:01 użytkownik Sebastian Gniazdowski < sgniazdowski@gmail.com> napisał: > Hi, > by accident, I might have discovered a novel approach to command line > - a merge of Midnight Commander panels with pure shell. Basically, > n-commodore, the project that does this, panelizes each command that > you enter and allows multi-keyword grepping. Up to this point, it's > like fzf. However, by use of db/gdbm module, n-commodore's also: > - allows a persistent save of each of the screens (even of the help > screen, e.g.), > - the screens are saved and indexed, for later retrieval via > Ctrl-Shift-Left/RIight, > - they save not only the panel, but also: current PWD, active line in > the panel, search query/command line buffer and restores them on > fetch. > > n-commodore is a Zsh script implemented on top of Zui library. > Persistence is done via db/gdbm module. You can clone the repo and > simply run bin/n-c or use a plugin manager (alias `nc` will be then > set up). The login shell can be Bash or any other, if zsh will be > installed. > > Asciicast: https://asciinema.org/a/577630 > Homepage: https://github.com/psprint/n-commodore >