Warp is the modern, Rust-based terminal with AI built in so you and your team can build great software, faster.

Believe this terminal has been out for a while on other platforms, but just hit the linux market too. Personally been looking forwards to this one for a while, but don’t have any prior experience with it - so kinda hoping its as good as it looks.

Link: https://www.warp.dev/blog/warp-for-linux

Edit: Some fair points in comments that terminals shouldn’t need cloud login. Personally thought that was an optional thing for people who wanted sync capability.

  • winety@lemmy.zip
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    8 months ago

    I generally agree with you.

    The input works more like a normal text editor (including mouse support) and has in-built completions, syntax highlighting, and support for multiple-cursors.

    If you actually want those features, that’s your shell’s job. Not your terminal emulator. And presumably if you need these fancy features you’ll just use a normal text editor to make a shell script.

    I, personally, would like to see a terminal / shell / whatever with support of standard, modern text input: CTRL + Arrows to skip words, CTRL + SHIFT + Arrows to select whole words, deleting all of selected text etc. I find it baffling that the terminal – the main text input of my system – uses a different way of text input than any other text field.

      • winety@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        I just installed Konsole to try it out. CTRL + Arrows to jump between words works, but this also works in Blackbox and Gnome Terminal. :D

        CTRL + SHIFT + Arrows for selecting words, SHIFT + Arrows for selecting characters, nor deleting selected text doesn’t work in Konsole, Blackbox, nor Gnome Terminal.

        • Deckweiss@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          My bad, I was wrong. The selection mode in Konsole is indeed very wonky. From the manual:

          Selection Mode
          Konsole has a selection by keyboard mode. In this mode it is possible to move around the scroll-
          back and select text without the mouse.
          Enter and leave this mode by using the keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+Shift+D by default).
          Moving the cursor: Arrows, PageUp, PageDown, Home, End.
          Moving the cursor vi style: h,j,k,l, to move one character, Ctrl+b,f,u,d for page up/down or half
          page up/down.
          Select text by using Ctrl or Shift with arrows, or by using V to start selection, moving the cursor
          and then V again to end selection. Shift-V selects whole lines, instead of characters.
          
    • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I never realised that for most people terminals don’t have intuitive shortcuts. But most terminals use Emacs shortcuts, so if you get used to that it becomes quite intuitive. I know those shortcuts are not universal, but it’s not that the shortcuts aren’t there, or that they didn’t used a standard, it’s just that the standard they use didn’t become the standard most people are used to.