naviallows you to browse through cheatsheets (that you may write yourself or download from maintainers) and execute commands, with argument values prompted to you. It uses fzf under the hood.
If you don't have access to bash at the moment and you want to live preview navi, head to this playground. It'll start a docker container with instructions for you to install and use the tool. Note: login required.
For what? Hmm, for having actual based on server navigation system. PRE-RE servers, for example, can't even have any navigation system without manual edits (which is impossible to do to be clear). With renewal servers a little bit better situation, but only if you are using clean rAthena or follow official way. With such generator will be super-nice to have up to date and 100% correct navigation system which will show user actual and correct data and will make navigation system usable.
I like the idea, even though I'd personally do a script for that which would auto-generate those files for rathena (like the sql-file generation) . Maybe we should add those kind of ideas to the github issues, so that they can't be forgotten?
Zipped Windows releases without installer are available in the alternative download locations below or from the release assets at GitHub - Little Navmap Releases - Version 3.0.8 (scroll down to Assets).
Little Navmap comes with a detailed user manual including several tutorials which is available online as well as in PDF and other formats like EPUB.Help buttons in all relevant areas of the program display corresponding chapters in the online manual on click.
A cycle 1801 database courtesy of Navigraph is included in the download and includes navaids,airways, airspaces, procedures and more. The navigation data can be updated using the NavigraphFMS Data Manager (subscription required).
A widely configurable map display using the OpenStreetMap as a background map which is only oneoption of many online and included offline maps. The map shows airports, navaids (VOR, NDB, ILS andmore), MORA (minimum off-route altitude) altitude grid, MSA (minimum sector altitude) diagrams,airways, en-route holdings, airspaces, oceanic tracks, high altitude winds, AI or multiplayeraircraft and ships as well as airport weather and winds aloft. A seamlessly integrated airportdiagram displays taxiways, displaced thresholds, overrun areas, aprons, parking spots and more.
It supports approach and departure procedures like SIDs, STARs and final approaches, offers awidely configurable automatic flight plan calculation and several export formats like GFP (Reality XP GTNand Flight1 GTN), FPL (Reality XP GNS), GPX, RTE, FLP and X-Plane FMS as well as drag and dropflight plan editing on the map. The program can read the PLN, FMS and FLP and more flight plan formats.
An elevation profile is shown for the flight plan allowing to find a safe cruise altitude alsodisplaying top of climb, top of descent and procedure altitude restrictions. Calculated and shownclimb as well as descent paths adhere to altitude restrictions.
Aircraft performance and fuel planning is included which automatically considers winds aloft forfuel, top of climb and top of descent calculation. Performance values can be collectedautomatically during flight and can be merged into the currently profile at any time.
Userpoint functionality allow to place, edit and export user defined features like points ofinterest, visual reporting points and more on the map. Import and export of CSV, X-Plane and Garminfiles.
Little Navmap comes with its own logbook allowing to automatically record, search and editlogbook entries. The logbook records the flight plan and the flown track which can be exported toGPX files.
thefuck is one of those utilities you won't be able to live without once you've tried it. Whenever you mis-type a command and get an error, just run fuck and it'll auto-correct it. Use up/down to choose a correction, or just run fuck --yeah to just execute the most likely immediately.
z lets you jump to any directory without needing to remember or specify its full path. It remembers which directories you've visited, so you can jump around quickly - you don't even need to type the full folder name. It also has an interactive selection option, using fzf so you can live-filter directory results
scc gives you a breakdown of number of lines of code written in each language for a specific directory. It also shows some fun stats, like estimated cost to develop and complexity info. It's incredibly fast, very accurate and has support for a wide range of languages
aria2 is a lightweight, multi-protocol, resuming download utility for HTTP/HTTPS, FTP, SFTP, BitTorrent and Metalink, with support for controlling via an RPC interface. It's incredibly feature rich, and has tons of options. There's also ziahamza/webui-aria2 - a nice web interface companion.
bat is a clone of cat with syntax highlighting and git integration. Written in Rust, it's very performant, and has several options for customizing output and theming. There's support for automatic piping and file concatenation
diff-so-fancy gives you better looking diffs for comparing strings, files, directories and git changes. The change highlighting makes spotting changes much easier, and you can customize the output layout and colors
entr lets you run an arbitrary command whenever file changes. You can pass a file, directory, symlink or regex to specify which files it should watch. It's really useful for automatically rebuilding projects, reacting to logs, automated testing, etc. Unlike similar projects, it uses kqueue(2) or inotify(7) to avoid polling, and improve performance
fzf is an extremely powerful, and easy to use fuzzy file finder and filtering tool. It lets you search for a string or pattern across files. fzf also has plugins available for most shells and IDEs, for showing instant results while searching. This post by Alexey Samoshkin highlights some of it's use cases.
hyperfine makes it easy to accurately benchmark and compare arbitrary commands or scripts. It takes care of warm-up runs, clearing the cache for accurate results and preventing interference from other programs. It can also export results as raw data and generate charts.
just is similar to make but with some nice additions. It let's you group your projects commands together into recopies, which can be easily listed and run. Supports aliases, positional arguments, different shells, dot env integration, string interprulation, and pretty much everything else you could need
jq is like sed, but for JSON - you can use it to slice and filter and map and transform structured data with ease. It can be used to write complex queries to extract or manipulate JSON data. There's also a jq playground that you can use to try it out, or formulate queries with live feedback
ripgrep is a line-oriented search tool that recursively searches the current directory for a regex pattern. It can ignore the contents of .gitignore and skip binary files. It's able to search within compressed archives, or only search specific extension, and understands files using various encoding methods
rsync lets you copy large files locally or to or from remote hosts or external drives. It can be used to keep files across multiple locations synced, and is perfect for creating, updating and restoring backups
tre outputs a tree stye list of files for your current or a specified directory, with colors. When running with the -e option, it numbers each item, and creates a temporary alias that you can use to quickly jump to that location
Like top, but for monitoring resource usage for running (Docker and runC) containers. It shows real-time CPU, memory and network bandwidth as well as the name, status and ID of each container. There's also a built-in log viewer, and options to manage (stop, start, exec, etc) containers
bpytop is a fast, interactive, visual resource monitor. It shows top running processes, recent CPU, mem, disk and network history. From the interface you can navigate, sort and search - there's also support for custom color themes
glances is another resource monitor, but with a different feature set. It includes a fully responsive web view, a REST API and historical monitoring. It's easily extendable, and can be integrated with other services
browsh is a fully interactive, real-time, and modern text-based browser rendered to TTYs and browsers. It supports both mouse and keyboard navigation, and is surprisingly feature rich for a purely terminal based application. It also mitigates battery drain issues that plague modern browsers, and with support for MoSH, you can experience faster load times due to reduced bandwidth
buku is a terminal-based bookmark manager, with tons of configuration, storage and usage options. There's also an optional web UI and browser plugin, for accessing your bookmarks outside of the terminal
cmus is terminal music player, controlled with keyboard shortcuts. It has support for a wide range of audio formats and codecs, and allows organising tracks into playlists and applying playback settings
cointop show current crypto prices, and track the price history of your portfolio. Supports price alerts, historical charts, currency conversion, fuzzy searching, and much more. You can try the demo via the web at cointop.sh, or by running ssh cointop.sh
ddgr is like googler, but for DuckDuckGo. It's fast, clean and easy, with support for instant answers, search completion, search bangs, and advanced search. It respects your privacy by default, and also has HTTPS proxy support, and works with Tor
mut is a classic, a terminal based mail client for sending, reading and managing emails. It supports all mainstream email protocols and mailbox formats, allows for attachments, BCC/CC, threads, mailing lists and delivery status notifications
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