ok rsadowksi@ previous draft was tested by bcallah@ at the time DESCR: kitty is designed for power keyboard users. To that end all its controls work with the keyboard (although it fully supports mouse interactions as well). Its configuration is a simple, human editable, single file for easy reproducibility (I like to store configuration in source control). The code in kitty is designed to be simple, modular and hackable. It is written in a mix of C (for performance sensitive parts) and Python (for easy hackability of the UI). It does not depend on any large and complex UI toolkit, using only OpenGL for rendering everything. Finally, kitty is designed from the ground up to support all modern terminal features, such as unicode, true color, bold/italic fonts, text formatting, etc. It even extends existing text formatting escape codes, to add support for features not available elsewhere, such as colored and styled (curly) underlines. One of the design goals of kitty is to be easily extensible so that new features can be added in the future with relatively little effort. * Offloads rendering to the GPU for lower system load and buttery smooth scrolling. Uses threaded rendering to minimize input latency. * Supports all modern terminal features: graphics (images), unicode, true-color, OpenType ligatures, mouse protocol, focus tracking, bracketed paste and several new terminal protocol extensions. * Supports tiling multiple terminal windows side by side in different layouts without needing to use an extra program like tmux. * Can be controlled from scripts or the shell prompt, even over SSH. * Has a framework for Kittens, small terminal programs that can be used to extend kitty's functionality. For example, they are used for Unicode input, Hints and Side-by-side diff. * Supports startup sessions which allow you to specify the window/tab layout, working directories and programs to run on startup. * Cross-platform: kitty works on Linux and macOS, but because it uses only OpenGL for rendering, it should be trivial to port to other Unix-like platforms. * Allows you to open the scrollback buffer in a separate window using arbitrary programs of your choice. This is useful for browsing the history comfortably in a pager or editor. * Has multiple copy/paste buffers, like vim.
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3 lines
113 B
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SHA256 (kitty-0.18.3.tar.xz) = j8kjeT43qabGOAdlVsj7qjIk2hNW/xheVE4y1Z1KZ6Q=
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SIZE (kitty-0.18.3.tar.xz) = 3107268
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