See? Here's a graph of your productivity gains after using spark: ▁▂▃▅▇
spark is a shell script, so drop it somewhere and make sure it's added
to your $PATH
. It's helpful if you have a super-neat collection of dotfiles,
like mine.
Just run spark
and pass it a comma-delimited list of numbers. It's designed
to be used in conjunction with other scripts that can output in that format.
spark 0,30,55,80,33,150
▁▂▃▅▂▇
Invoke help with spark -h
.
There's a lot of stuff you can do.
Number of commits to the github/github Git repository, by author:
› git shortlog -s |
cut -f1 |
tr "\n" ',' |
sed 's/ //g' |
spark
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Magnitude of earthquakes over 1.0 in the last 24 hours:
› curl http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/catalogs/eqs1day-M1.txt --silent |
sed '1d' |
cut -d, -f9 |
tr "\n" ',' |
sed 's/ //g' |
spark
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Code visualization. The number of characters of spark
itself, by line, ignoring empty lines:
› awk '{ print length($0) }' spark |
grep -Ev 0 |
tr "\n" ',' |
spark
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Since it's just a shell script, you could pop it in your prompt, too:
ruby-1.8.7-p334 in spark/ on master with history: ▂▅▇▂
›
Sounds like a wiki is a great place to collect all of your wicked cool usage for spark.
- Speedup. It's a little more sluggish than it should be since we're doing a few unnecessary loops.
- I'd like to constrain character widths with a
-w
switch.
This is a @holman joint.