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Features

Arijit Basu edited this page Apr 9, 2021 · 48 revisions

Hackability

xplr is built with configurability in mind. So it allows you to perform a vast set of operations and make it behave just the way you want.

You can easily dump the default configuration or copy it into an YAML file as ~/.config/xplr/config.yml and then tweak it. And next time when you run xplr, it will load that configuration. A few things you can do with the xplr configuration:

Fast

Although speed is not the primary concern, xplr is already fast enough so that you can take it out for a walk into your /nix/store any time you want. I currently measure the most commonly used operations and I have seen it improve significantly over time, and it's only the start.

Minimalist

xplr prefers to stay minimal, but just like speed, minimalism isn't as aggressively pursued as configurability. If adding some lines of code or a dependency allows the users to be a little more productive or allows xplr to be a little more configurable, it will be considered. But of-course, the bulk vs productivity gain per user balance will also be considered in the decision-making.

Integration

Being super configurable, xplr by design integrates well with other tools. Try this fzf integration tutorial or this vim plugin if you are not convinced yet.

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