I no longer have time to maintain my hobby projects and with the rising number of security issues, I would advise you to look at a more actively maintained fork.
If you use macOS you might enjoy using cmux as a replacement for awrit.
Or just awrit.
awrit-demo.webm
Yep, actual Chromium being rendered in your favorite terminal that supports the Kitty terminal graphics protocol.
awrit works best in Kitty v0.31 or newer
- Display documentation from DevDocs
- Watch the changes from Vite come to life
- Tiled layout without a tiling window manager using Kitty's layouts
- Add fancy UI using web technologies, so NeoVim can pretend it is Emacs instead of the other way around
awrit [url]
# if url is not provided, it will go to the awrit homepage (this is temporary, promise)
# the URL protocol can be http:, https:, or data:
# if the URL protocol is not included, https: is used by defaultFor more options look at the help:
awrit --helpawrit can be configured through config.js in the project root. Changes to it will update the config in any running awrit.
Currently it only supports custom keybindings and changing the homepage that displays when no URL is provided.
For more details on keybinding syntax and available actions, see the comments in config.js.
Assuming you already have git installed, your installation of awrit will already be a Git repository.
You can update awrit to use your fork by changing the origin:
# note: you'll have to change the username some-kind-contributor to your GitHub username
git remote set-url origin [email protected]:some-kind-contributor/awrit.git
# also track the upstream electron branch
git remote add upstream -f -t electron [email protected]:chase/awrit.gitYou can make a branch (ex: my-feature-branch) off the latest changes by doing:
git fetch upstream electron
git checkout upstream/electron
git switch -c 'my-feature-branch'
Read Your First Code Contribution for more information on making a PR.