⛵ boat
boat - A Basic Opinionated Activity Tracker, inspired by bartib.
This is only the code for the command line application. It relies on boat-lib for core functions.
[!WARNING]
🚧 Work in ProgressThis cli is actively being developed. Since it's in its early stages, things will likely break often. Don't use it for now.
Why was this tool created?
The bartib cli is what inspired me to create boat.
It's a feature-full tool that I used for a while, but I found it quite limiting for my usage due to its lack of support for machine-readable output.
That's it, I wanted an activity tracker that I could combine easily with jq and so I decided to make my own tool.
How is boat intended to be used?
First, I would like to share my view on command line tools. To me, they are two types of CLIs:
- The ones meant to be invoked manually from your prompt:
cat/bat,vim,zoxide,rg, etc.- a subcategory of those include Terminal User Interfaces (TUIs) like
lazygit,gh-dashand many others
- a subcategory of those include Terminal User Interfaces (TUIs) like
- And the ones meant to be used in scripts:
jq,fzf,find
[!NOTE] These examples are probably not the best ones, there is a lot of overlap between the manual/scripting. But a good example of this distinction are the two ways to define command line arguments:
- short:
-j(to use when you invoke the CLI from your prompt)- verbose:
--json(to use in scripts for better read experience)
I like the idea of designing a CLI to do most of the heavy lifting (core functionalities) and do not prioritize the UI much as I would rather let the users create their own scripts and focus on making it as easy as possible for them to integrate the CLI in them.
That's why I have designed boat to be 'script-friendly' first, while also making sure it's okay as a tool that you invoke from the command line directly.
I think boat is okay as a CLI that invoke directly from your prompt but it shines best if you wrap it with custom bash scripts.
I have been using the bartib project for some time. Since it runs in the terminal, it fits with my workflow. But as I find myself wanting to create a lot of customized keybinds and bash scripts with fzf or jq, I stumbled upon this PR: https://github.com/nikolassv/bartib/pull/26 The maintainer of bartib shares his opinion on machine-readable output and
Installation
The easiest way to install is through crates.io:
The other option is to build from source:
Usage
To get a feel of how boat can be used, you can try boat help to get the list of commands:
Basic Opinionated Activity Tracker
Usage: boat <COMMAND>
Commands:
new Create a new activity
start Start/resume an activity
config Manage configuration
pause Pause/stop the current activity
modify Modify an activity
delete Delete an activity
get Get the current activity
list List activities and tags
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
Options:
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print version
If you want to invoke boat from your command-line directly, you can make use of a variety of shorter aliases:
Commands:
new n
start s, st, sail
config c, cfg, conf
pause p
modify m, mod
delete d, del
get g
list l, ls
I really wanted to have each command start with a different character so that I could assign a single-char alias to all of them. That explains why some of the commands do not use a more fitting keyword.
Like stop would have been a better command than pause but since it shares the same starting charcter as the start command, I could not use it.
Maybe I will drop this in the future, let's see.