While I like the acronym so, this tool would actually be better described as se: an interface to the StackExchange network. In particular one thing that differentiates it from similar tools is that you can simultaneously search any number of sites in the StackExchange network:
# search using your default configuration
$ so how do i reverse a list in python
# search for a latex solution
$ so --site tex how to put tilde over character
# use google to search stackoverflow.com, askubuntu.com, and unix.stackexchange.com
$ so -e google -s askubuntu -s stackoverflow -s unix how do i install linux
You can install the AUR package so (tracks latest release) or so-git (tracks master), e.g.
yay -S so-git
You can install the package so via
pkg install so
You can install the package so via
pkgin install so
You can install the homebrew formula
brew install so
Alternatively, you can use MacPorts to install so:
sudo port install so
If you have scoop you can install via the extras bucket:
# add extras bucket
scoop bucket add extras
# install so
scoop install so
For any OS you can install the crate so directly:
# everything but windows
cargo install so
# windows
cargo install so --no-default-features --features windows
For more information on the feature flags, see selecting a backend.
Static binaries are available on the releases
page for common Linux, MacOS, and
Windows targets. You can quickly install the one you need to directory DEST
with:
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://samtay.github.io/so/install.sh \
| bash -s -- --to DEST
Right now I'm only building the most common targets, but in theory it should be
easy to add more, so if you don't see what you are looking for just open an
issue and I can add it. Here's a
list of the supported
targets. If you don't know
what you need, you can install rustc
and open an issue with the output of rustc -Vv | grep host | cut -d' ' -f2
.
The configuration files for e.g. a user Alice
can be found in the following
directories:
- Linux:
/home/alice/.config/so
- Windows:
C:\Users\Alice\AppData\Roaming\Sam Tay\so
- MacOS:
/Users/Alice/Library/Preferences/io.Sam-Tay.so
The config.yml
file lets you specify your CLI defaults. So if you dislike the
lucky prompt, always search serverfault.com and unix.stackexchange.com, and
want the fastest search engine, you can set your config file like this:
# config.yml
---
api_key: ~
limit: 10
lucky: false
sites:
- serverfault
- unix
search_engine: stackexchange
Run so --help
to see your current defaults.
In the same directory you'll find colors.toml
which is self-documented. The
default theme attempts to blend in with your default terminal theme, but you can
change it as necessary. In particular, you may want to change the highlight_text
if the current selection is difficult to read. There are some themes in the themes directory as well.
There's a very primitive integration in place to copy the contents of
the currently focused question or answer to the system clipboard. This requires
some command in your PATH that can accept stdin and pipe to the clipboard.
On mac & windows, this will work out of the box with the default set to pbcopy
& clip
respectively. On Linux, I've made the assumption that xclip
is likely
the most popular, but if you use something else (e.g. wl-copy
on wayland),
you'll need to set the command directly:
# config.yml
---
copy_cmd: copy --option-to-take-stdin
If you want to use your own StackExchange API Key you can set it via
so --set-api-key <KEY>
You can also choose to use no key by editing your configuration to api_key: ~
.
If for some reason my API key is globally throttled, you can hit the
StackExchange API with no key up to 300 times per day per IP, which I imagine is
fine for most users.
The available search engines are StackExchange, DuckDuckGo, and Google.
StackExchange will always be the fastest to search because it doesn't require an
additional request or any HTML parsing; however, it is also very primitive.
DuckDuckGo is in second place for speed, as its response HTML is much smaller
than Google's. I've found that it performs well for my queries, so it is the
default search engine.
DuckDuckGo sometimes blocks requests, so it is no longer the default.
As stated in the docs,
If a single IP is making more than 30 requests a second, new requests will be dropped.
So, don't go crazy with the multi-site search, since it is all done in parallel. In particular, if you specify more than 30 sites, SE will likely ban you for a short time.
If you're installing from source, you can choose from a number of available
backend rendering engines. Note that the package default
and windows
feature
flags do not have an ncurses dependency, for the sake of portability. The
default backend is termion, a bindless
library in pure Rust which seems to work quite well on Linux, MacOS, BSD, and
Redox. The windows backend is by default
crossterm, and while its level of
support is awesome, it does comes at a price in performance. On my machine, the
app kind of flashes between draws. So if you are on Mac, Linux, or Redox, your
best bet is to compile with default features which uses the termion backend. If
you are on windows, use crossterm, but know it will be slightly jumpy.
If the crossterm folks figure out a fix for allowing ncurses to receive resize
events, and you have
ncurses installed on
your system, then the ncurses and pancurses backends are likely the most
performant. Just know that currently if you choose this option, and you run
the --lucky
prompt, you won't be able to resize the terminal window while the
TUI is open.
Available backends:
termion-backend
ncurses-backend
pancurses-backend
crossterm-backend
E.g. to use ncurses-backend
:
cargo install so --no-default-features --features ncurses-backend
See more information about this choice here.
Warning: this was my first time writing Rust and there is very likely some non-idiomatic and straight up ugly code throughout this project, so don't come looking here for a good Rust example! That being said, I would love to improve the codebase. Feel free to check out the contributing guidelines and submit any refactoring issues or pull requests.
Credit to my good friend Charles for logo design.