Hey! The weakest part of Claude Code I think is that it's closed source and locked to Claude models only. If you are looking for inspiration, Roo is the the best tool atm. It offers far more interesting capabilities. Just to name some - user defines modes, the built in debug mode is great for debugging, architecture mode. You can, for example, ask it to summarize some part of the running task and start a new task with fresh context. And, unlike in Claude Code, in Roo the LLM will actually follow your custom instructions (seriously, guys, that Claude.md is absolutely useless)! The only drawback of Roo, in my opinion, is that it is NOT a cli.
I dunno what you would consider non trivial. I am building a diffing plugin for neovim. The experience is.. mixed. The fast progression at the start was impressive, but now as the code base have grown the issues show up. The code is a mess. Adding one feature breaks another and so on.
I have no problem in using the agent on code that I know very well, because I can stir it in the exact direction I want. But vibe coding something I don't fully understand is a pain.
Hi! Looks like a very interesting tool, as a stubborn cli-only user, I was pleased that there is cli version of this alongside the GUI verison. However, trying to look into the documentation of the cli has left me with a 404 page.
https://docs.xpipe.io/cli/man
They should write a typescript-to-go transpiler (in typescript) , so that they can write their compiler in typescript and use typescript to transpile it to go.
> I'm excited to understand more about how aider creates a map of the repository and effectively compresses the information in ways similar to how I keep track of high level ideas.
I do not disagree with your point, except, given the current state of US, it is hard to describe it as not repressive. I understand it's a spectrum. I checked on Wikipedia - abortion is legal in China. That's one right that many US women don't have. Which does not mean that China is a free country, but just to gain some perspective. The notion of some place being a dictatorship was many times weaponized to launch invasions and economic sanctions that left that place broken and impoverished.
It seems like you could use aider in architecture mode. Basically, it will suggest the solution to your problem fist, and prompt you to start editing, you can say no to refine the solution and only start editing when you are satisfied with it.
Citation? I think this is not true. The EU law seems to just require explicit consent. So websites and apps can ask whether user wants to share data to keep using them for free or pay a subscription fee.
I'd like to point out that, for example, Ctrl+a is not specific to bash, it's a readline[0] keybinding. A subset of those will work in the text box in which I am typing this comment. C-f and C-b work, even C-h, but not C-w. Perhaps this key combo is reserved for closing the firefox tab on windows? Anyway, I love readline and wish it would work on literally all text inputs.
I see. I don't subscribe to Tantra, so can't comment on that. What I believe is that there is no magic and it just depends on the conditions. Those can be from your birth or before your birth. Like if you have a genetic mutation that inhibits brain developement, it will make it harder to grasp these concepts and / or meditate.
>Then, understanding Brahmā’s invitation, the Buddha Vipassī surveyed the world with the eye of a Buddha, out of his compassion for sentient beings. And he saw sentient beings with little dust in their eyes, and some with much dust in their eyes; with keen faculties and with weak faculties, with good qualities and with bad qualities, easy to teach and hard to teach. And some of them lived seeing the danger in the fault to do with the next world, while others did not. It’s like a pool with blue water lilies, or pink or white lotuses. Some of them sprout and grow in the water without rising above it, thriving underwater. Some of them sprout and grow in the water reaching the water’s surface. And some of them sprout and grow in the water but rise up above the water and stand with no water clinging to them.
This is from Digha Nikaya 14. There is another one, but I don't remember which sutta, where Buddha says that for some people the path is long and hard, while for others it's short and quick.