Yet another python client for tldr.
tldr.py is a python client for tldr: simplified and community-driven man pages. Instead of the long man pages:
tldr will give you several simple yet powerful examples:
The command examples are not good? Don't worry, you can set up your own 'tldr'! They are just markdown files and you can modify them at your ease. Don't forget to Share them with the community!
One more thing, tldr is just a simple version for the man page, it's NOT an alternative. Sometimes, you should read the man pages patiently ;)
- use local file, fast.
- support custom the output color.
- support fetch the latest tldr pages.
- support rebuild the index.
$ (sudo) pip install tldr.py
$ curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lord63/tldr.py/master/install.sh | bash
firstly, clone the tldr repo to somewhere(e.g. ~/code/tldr). We will use it when we look for a command usage.
$ cd ~/code $ git clone https://github.com/tldr-pages/tldr.git
then, init the configuration file, the default location for the configuration file is your home directory, you can use the
TLDR_CONFIG_DIR
environment variable to point it to another folder(e.g. $HOME/.config)$ tldr init Input the tldr repo path: (e.g. /home/lord63/code/tldr/) Input your platform(linux, osx or sunos): (e.g. linux) Initializing the config file at ~/.tldrrc
and you configuration file should look like this:
colors: command: cyan description: blue usage: green platform: linux repo_directory: /home/lord63/code/tldr
Don't worry about the colors
option, it is for the output when you
look for a command, you can custom it by yourself.(Note that the color
should be in ['black', 'red', 'green', 'yellow', 'blue', 'magenta',
'cyan', 'white'])
finally, build the index. Tldr.py will find the command via the index.json. After a new fresh clone or when you add some new pages, remember to rebuild the index.
$ tldr reindex Rebuild the index.
look for a command usage:
$ tldr find {{command}}
check for updates(so that we can get the latest man pages):
$ tldr update
rebuild the index.json after you add some new pages:
$ tldr reindex
locate the command man page:
$ tldr locate {{command}}
Or you can use tldr --help
to get the help message.
Q: I want to add some custom command usages to a command, how to do it?
A: Find the location of the command page; add the command usages; done.
Q: I want to add some custom command pages, how?
A: Add the command pages to the right folder(e.g. /tldrrepo/pages/linux); rebuild the index; done.
Q: I want a short command liketldr COMMAND
, nottldr find COMMAND
.
A: I'm afraid not, but you can add an alias: alias howto='tldr find'
, then use howto tar
.
Q: I want fuzzy find command usage.
A : Opition one: tldr list | grep KEYWORD
, option two(suggested way): install fzf first,
then use tldr list | fzf | xargs -I{} tldr find {}
, you will love it.
Q: I don't like the default color theme, how to change it?
A: Edit the tldr configuration file at ~/.tldrrc
; modify the color
until you're happy with it.
Q: I faided to update the tldr pages, why?
A: Actually, tldr.py
just tries to pull the latest tldr pages for
you, no magic behinds it. So the reason why you faided to update is that
tldr.py
failed to pull the latest upstream, check the failing output
and you may know the reason, e.g. you make some changes and haven't
commit them yet. You can pull the pages by hand so you can have a better
control on it.
Q: Why use the git repo instead of the assets packaged by the official?
A: In fact, you can use the offical assets if you want, download the
assets and extract it somewhere, but tldr.py
don't support update it
using tldr update
.
Use a git repo, you can:
- do the version control, yeah, use git.
- better for customization, just edit the pages and add new pages, they belongs to you. You can even maintain your own 'tldr'. If use the official assets, you'll always get the latest pages.
- It sucks? Why not help me improve it? Let me know the bad things.
- Want a new feature? Feel free to file an issue for a feature request.
- Find a bug? Open an issue please, or it's better if you can send me a pull request.
Contributions are always welcome at any time! ✨ 🍰 ✨
MIT.