A Node.js
based command-line client for tldr.
tldr-node-client's output for the tar
page, using a custom color theme
npm install -g tldr
In any of the supported Linux distros:
sudo snap install tldr
If you want to help testing the latest changes, and get the newer features earlier, you can install the snap from the edge channel:
sudo snap install tldr --edge
Note that the snap package is not fully tested and supported. It may be likely you encounter issues while using it. It is recommended to use the npm package instead.
To see tldr pages:
tldr <command>
show examples for this commandtldr <command> --os=<platform>
show command page for the given platform (linux
,osx
,sunos
)tldr --search "<query>"
search all pages for the querytldr --linux <command>
show command page for Linuxtldr --osx <command>
show command page for OSXtldr --sunos <command>
show command page for SunOStldr --list
show all pages for current platformtldr --list-all
show all available pagestldr --random
show a page at randomtldr --random-example
show a single random exampletldr --markdown
show the original markdown format page
The client caches a copy of all pages locally, in ~/.tldr
.
There are more commands to control the local cache:
tldr --update
download the latest pages and generate search indextldr --clear-cache
delete the entire local cache
As a contributor, you might also need the following commands:
tldr --render <path>
render a local page for testing purposes
You can configure the tldr
client by adding a .tldrrc
file in your HOME directory. You can copy the contents of the config.json
file from the repo to get the basic structure to start with, and modify it to suit your needs.
The default color theme is the one named "simple"
. You can change the theme by assigning a different value to the "theme"
variable -- either to one of the pre-configured themes, or to a new theme that you have previously created in the "themes"
section. Note that the colors and text effects you can choose are limited. Refer to the chalk documentation for all options.
{
"themes": {
"ocean": {
"commandName": "bold, cyan",
"mainDescription": "",
"exampleDescription": "green",
"exampleCode": "cyan",
"exampleToken": "dim"
},
"myOwnCoolTheme": {
"commandName": "bold, red",
"mainDescription": "underline",
"exampleDescription": "yellow",
"exampleCode": "underline, green",
"exampleToken": ""
}
},
"theme": "ocean"
}
If you regularly need pages for a different platform (e.g. Linux), you can put it in the config file:
{
"platform": "linux"
}
The default platform value can be overwritten with command-line option:
tldr du --os=osx
As a contributor, you can also point to your own fork containing the tldr.zip
file. The file is just a zipped version of the entire tldr repo:
{
"repository" : "http://myrepo/assets/tldr.zip",
}
Currently we only support command-line autocompletion for zsh. Pull requests for other shells are most welcome!
It's easiest for oh-my-zsh users, so let's start with that.
mkdir -p $ZSH_CUSTOM/plugins/tldr
ln -s bin/autocompletion.zsh $ZSH_CUSTOM/plugins/tldr/_tldr
Then add tldr to your oh-my-zsh plugins,
usually defined in ~/.zshrc
,
resulting in something looking like this:
plugins=(git tmux tldr)
Fret not regular zsh user!
Copy or symlink bin/autocompletion.zsh
to
my/completions/_tldr
(note the filename).
Then add the containing directory to your fpath:
fpath = (my/completions $fpath)
- If you are trying to install as non-root user (
npm install -g tldr
) and get something like -
Error: EACCES: permission denied, access '/usr/local/lib/node_modules/tldr'
Then most probably your npm's default installation directory has improper permissions. You can resolve it by clicking here
- If you are trying to install as a root user (
sudo npm install -g tldr
) and get something like -
as root ->
gyp WARN EACCES attempting to reinstall using temporary dev dir "/usr/local/lib/node_modules/tldr/node_modules/webworker-threads/.node-gyp"
gyp WARN EACCES user "root" does not have permission to access the dev dir "/usr/local/lib/node_modules/tldr/node_modules/webworker-threads/.node-gyp/8.9.1"
You need to add the option --unsafe-perm
to your command. This is because when npm goes to the postinstall step, it downgrades the permission levels to "nobody". Probably you should fix your installation directory permissions and install as a non-root user in the first place.
- If you see an error related to
webworker-threads
like -
/usr/local/lib/node_modules/tldr/node_modules/natural/lib/natural/classifiers/classifier.js:32
if (e.code !== 'MODULE_NOT_FOUND') throw e;
Most probably you need to reinstall node-gyp
and webworker-threads
. Try this -
sudo -H npm uninstall -g tldr
sudo -H npm uninstall -g webworker-threads
npm install -g node-gyp
npm install -g webworker-threads
npm install -g tldr
For further context, take a look at this issue
Colors can't be shown under Mintty or PuTTY, because the dependency colors.js
has a bug.
Please show support to this pull request, so it can be merged.
Meanwhile, you can do one of the following to fix this issue:
- Add the following script to your shell's rc file (
.zshrc
,.bashrc
, etc.): (RECOMMENDED)
tldr_path="$(which tldr)"
function tldr() {
eval "$tldr_path" $@ "--color"
}
- Add
alias tldr="tldr --color=true"
to your shell's rc file. - Prepend
process.stdout.isTTY = true;
totldr.js
(NOT RECOMMENDED) - Fix
colors.js
's logic (NOT RECOMMENDED)- Go to
%appdata%\npm\node_modules\tldr\node_modules\colors\lib\system\
- Overwrite
supports-colors.js
with supports-colors.js from my repo.
- Go to
- Use
CMD.exe
.
Contribution are most welcome! Have a look over here for a few rough guidelines.