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I wanted to have a separate laptop where I only use the terminal for my use cases. At the moment I am somewhat confident using the terminal, but I think limiting myself to tty only would build my confidence even more. Any tips?

EDIT: I am already using nvim and I already have installed a minimal distro (Arch). I just need advice on how to actually run this system effectively.

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[–] CsXGF8uzUAOh6fqV@lemmy.world 38 points 1 month ago (12 children)
  • set a good tty font (it's almost all you're gonna see)
  • be comfy with basic core utils (mv, cp, chmod, ...)
  • choose a shell (bash, fish, ...) and set up some useful aliases/abbreviations
  • fzf or something similar does wonders (also replaces things like dmenu)
  • terminal multiplexers are used instead of window managers
  • some applications allow you to do some graphics (like mpv to play video)
  • there is more advanced stuff you can do with frame buffers
  • there are terminal browsers like w3m or lynx
  • a good extensible text editor is essential (vim, nvim, emacs, helix, ...)
  • research some cli applications for your usecase (cal (calendar), neomutt (email), ...)

Over time your collection of aliases and scripts will grow to make common tasks you do easier.

[–] ctr1@fl0w.cc 6 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Great list. Customizing the font is definitely a priority. I recommend one of the Terminus fonts. Also zellij multiplexer + helix editor is a great combo that works well in the tty.

One thing to add is that it took me a while to create a decent 16-color theme for helix and vim, and while they're okay by default you can actually get a pretty nice looking IDE if you spend some time tinkering with the colors

[–] gramgan@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

+1 for the Terminus + zellij + helix combo

[–] cybersandwich@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

How does zellij do copy and paste? That's the only thing keeping me from diving into tmux (beyond using it as a persistent terminal).

[–] ctr1@fl0w.cc 0 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I'm not sure how to paste directly into a pane, but you can copy by opening up the scrollback in EDITOR from search mode using Ctrl+S e. This creates a file in /tmp so I try to make sure to clear it when I'm done.

I usually only copy and paste between editor windows using a script that mimics xclip (automatically used by helix), and if I need to paste a command I either edit my bash history or write a script.

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