What are your most liked alias for long commands or just to give them better names.
Mine are:
alias load="source .load.sh"
alias eload="$EDITOR .load.sh"
alias gpush="git push"
alias gadd="git add --all"
alias gcommit="git commit -m "
alias gst="git status -s"
alias gpull="git pull"
I found a function version of this version somewhere. Same thing except it defaults to my local area but can be overridden if you specify a different zip code.
weather() {
if [ $(command -v curl) ]; then
if ! (($#)); then
curl wttr.in/44113
else
curl wttr.in/$1
fi
else
echo "curl not installed. Aborting."
fi
}
Here are mine. Sorry for the mouth full, but I think people may benefit from some of these :)
alias ll="ls -alkhF"
alias l="ls -1"
# BE CAREFUL WITH THIS AND COULD RETURN COLOR KEYCODES INTO PIPES ETC...
alias grep='grep --color=always'
alias db='dotnet build'
alias gs='git status'
alias gf='git fetch'
alias gl='git pull'
alias gp='git push'
alias gpt='git push --tags'
alias gP='git push --force-with-lease'
alias ga='git add'
alias gd='git diff'
alias gw='git diff --word-diff'
setopt interactive_comments
preexec(){ _lc=$1; }
alias gcm='git commit -m "${_lc#gcm }" #'
# THE BELOW TO BE USED ALONG WITH THE FOLLOWING GIT ALIASES:
#[alias]
# logo = log --pretty=tformat:'%C(auto,red)%m %C(auto,yellow)%h%C(auto,magenta) %G? %C(auto,blue)%>#(12,trunc)%ad %C(auto,green)%<(15,trunc)%aN%C(auto,reset)%s%C(auto,red) %gD %D' --date=short
# adog = log --all --decorate --oneline --graph
# dog = log --decorate --oneline --graph
alias glog='git logo'
alias gdog='git dog'
alias gadog='git adog'
alias gb='git branch'
alias gba='git branch --all'
alias gco='git checkout'
alias gm='git merge'
alias gt='git tag | sort -V | tail'
alias rl='source ~/.zshrc'
alias n='nvim'
# LIST PATHS OF OTHER ZSH SHELLS I HAVE OPEN
lssh() {
ps au \
| awk '$11 == "-zsh" || $11 == "/bin/zsh" { print $2 }' \
| xargs pwdx \
| awk '{ print $2 }' \
| sed -n "\|^${2}.*|p" \
| sort -u \
| nl
}
# CD TO SHELL NUMBER RETURNED BY LSSH
cdsh() {
cd $(lssh \
| sed "$1!d" \
| cut -f 2)
}
# CD TO PATH OF ANOTHER SHELL, USING FZF AS SELECTOR
cs() {
cmd1=$(lssh | fzf --select-1 --query "$1" --height=~50 | cut -f 2)
cmd="cd $cmd1"
print -S $cmd
eval $cmd
}
# RUN THE COMMAND FROM HISTORY, USING FZF AS SELECTOR, ALTERNATIVE TO <C-R>
hf() {
cmd=$(history 0 | sort -nr | cut -c 8- | fzf -e --select-1 --no-sort --query "$1" )
# push the command into the history
print -S $cmd
eval $cmd
}
# REMMINA USING THE CONNECTION FILE SELECTED USING FZF
rf() {
pushd ~/.local/share/remmina
cmd=$(remmina -c $(ls $PWD/* | fzf -e --select-1 --no-sort --query "$1"))
# push the command into the history
print -S $cmd
eval $cmd
popd
}
Not exactly an alias but a short script. First, get git-revise which is a replacement for git rebase, and fzf if for some reason you don't have it yet. Then make a script in your ~/.local/bin called git-f or whatever you'd like:
#!/bin/bash
REF=${1:-origin/main} # adjust to your favorite trunk branch name
COMMIT=$(git log --pretty=oneline ${REF}.. \
| fzf --preview "git show -p --stat {+1}" | cut -d' ' -f1)
if [ -n "$COMMIT" ]; then
exec git revise "$COMMIT"
else
exit 1
fi
Now hack away in a branch, make some commits, and at some point you will realize you want to modify an earlier commit. Use git add -p to add the relevant lines, but then instead of making a fixup commit just type git f and pick the target commit from the list.
alias clearswap='sudo swapoff -a && sudo swapon -a'
alias grep='grep --color=auto'
alias ls='ls --color=auto --group-directories-first'
alias la='ls -lAh --color=auto --group-directories-first'
alias timestamp='date +%Y-%m-%dT%H-%M-%S'
I don't use aliases. Since I use fish as a login shell, I use abbreviations. I have a lot of them configured. But I think my favorite one is yeet which expands to paru -Rcns.
What a nice abbreviation of the conventional way of declaring the minimanalasation of a command.
I need to check out fish but i don't really know about it so much.
yeah, I could do that. Kinda prefer to use my alias anyway as the expletive is almost always the first word that comes to mind when I forget to sudo something
For git and working with a mix of master and main default branch repos my favourite is
gsm='git switch $(git_main_branch)' to switch back to main/master
I mostly write my environment and aliases which are only ment to be used for a project by creating a file called .load.sh.
It is mostly just things like alias run="python main.py" or something
I made a cool exercise some time ago: checking my top 10 used commands, to see how I can "optimize" them, and maybe create a few aliases to save a few keystrokes. Turns out I don't need that much aliases in the end:
alias v='vis' # my text editor
alias sv='doas vis'
alias ll='ls -l'
And that's pretty much it ^^ I do have a lot of scripts though, some of them being one-liners, but it makes them shell independent, which I like :)
edit: I do have a bunch of git aliases though for common subcommands I use. I prefer using them as git <alias> over using she'll specific aliases so I can always type "git" and not mentally think wether I need a git command or a shell alias.
Its original goal was to be a vim clone with 90% of the features in 10% of the code. Then it grew into being the bastard son of Vim and Sam editors (plan9's structural regex based editor).
The result is vis, an editor with vim like navigation and text manipulation mechanics, but with access to Sam's powerful structural regex commands which works selection wise, rather than likewise like vim. Check this paper to learn about it: struct-regex.pdf.
Selection of my fish abbreviations for comfy terminal creatures:
# MISC -----------------
abbr -a la 'exa -la'
abbr -a p 'python'
abbr -a v 'nvim'
abbr -a rmd 'rm -rf'
abbr -a feh 'feh --scale-down -d'
abbr -a ka 'doas killall'
abbr -a fp 'ffplay'
abbr -a ff 'firefox'
abbr -a tree 'exa -T'
abbr -a libver 'dpkg -l | grep'
abbr -a ex 'chmod +x'
# specific file and directory based
abbr -a notes 'nvim ~/.vimwiki/index.md'
abbr -a idir 'cd ~/some/important/dir'
abbr -a fishconf 'nvim ~/.config/fish/config.fish'
abbr -a vimconf 'nvim ~/.config/nvim/init.vim'
abbr -a i3conf 'nvim ~/.config/i3/config'
# PACMAN ---------------
abbr -a pin 'doas pacman -S'
abbr -a pun 'doas pacman -Rns'
abbr -a pss 'pacman -Ss'
abbr -a pls 'pacman -Qd'
abbr -a aurls 'paru -Qm'
abbr -a pct 'pacman -Q | wc -l'
abbr -a syu 'paru -Syu'
abbr -a pcl 'paccache -r -k 1; paru --cc;'
abbr -a pfd 'pacman -Qs'
# GIT ------------------
abbr -a ga 'git add -A; git status'
abbr -a gr 'git reset'
abbr -a gd 'git diff'
abbr -a gc 'git commit -m'
abbr -a gdc 'git diff HEAD~0 --stat'
abbr -a gl 'git log'
abbr -a gb 'git branch'
abbr -a gp 'git push origin'
abbr -a gch 'git checkout'
abbr -a gam 'git commit --amend - m'
abbr -a gcl 'git clone'
# RUST -----------------
abbr -a cc 'cargo clippy --all-features'
abbr -a ccc 'cargo check'
abbr -a cb 'cargo build'
abbr -a cr 'cargo run'
abbr -a cbr 'cargo build --release'
abbr -a crr 'cargo run --release'
abbr -a ct 'cargo test'
abbr -a ctt 'cargo tarpaulin --ignore-tests --skip-clean'
abbr -a bacon 'bacon clippy-all -w'
abbr -a cil 'cargo install --path ./'
abbr -a cia 'cargo install-update -a'
abbr -a ca 'cargo add'
Bacon is just compiler output but it "stays open" in your terminal and refreshes after you save your file; It is nice if you use something a bit minimal like vim without language server but you don't want to compile manually every time.
Quite basic but saves me a couple of seconds each time.
alias update="sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y && sudo apt autoremove -y && sudo apt autoclean -y"
The first alias actually gave me some ideas, thanks for that. But I don't understand how is what you did is really different from alias ein='sudo emerge -av'. I think the only thing that is different is the way you do it ein abc def will be the same as ein abc, but why would you want this?
alias gladog="git log —all —decorate —oneline —graph"
is my all time favourite. Sometimes I just want to have a quick way to see the git graph in the terminal.