#historian
Historian is a simple command line utility for storing strings or blocks of UTF8 encoded text. Think of it as a semi-manually managed non-volatile multi-buffer pasteboard for your terminal.
Features
-
multiple pasteboard support
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supports unix piping for adding text
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output can be by line or in its entirety
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aliases can be set for quick access when another pasteboard is active
Installation
Historian works best when installed as a global module:
npm -g install historian
On installation, Historian comes with one pasteboard titled
pasteboard
.Historian currently relies on the default relative locations of the conf and var directories installed with the module. This will probably be changed in a future release to improve usability.
Usage
Historian's usage and arguments can be invoked by running:
hijs --usage
To list the current pasteboards available for use:
hijs -l
To create or use a pasteboard:
hijs -u [name]
Newly created pasteboards are not created on disk until data is added. If you switch to another pasteboard, the current will be disregarded if it has no contents.
You can examine details about the active pasteboard by running:
hijs -e
This will return the name, total entries, and total characters.
Adding to a pasteboard is easy:
hijs -a string
You can also use the output from something else:
echo 'I need to remember this!!' | hijs
or maybe a log:
You can output the whole pasteboard with:
hijs -p
or a specific line:
hijs -p 10
You can also assign aliases to certain strings for easy access. These are stored independently of historian's other pasteboards:
hijs --alias alias_name striiiing
You paste aliases with:
hijs -p alias_name
Or you can get a little fancier if you're doing something like running multiple dev instances or whatever I don't know:
The front end source will end up in the pasteboard:
hijs -p
###License: MIT
Readme art by Bobby Fasel