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The search service can find package by either name (apache), provides(webserver), absolute file names (/usr/bin/apache), binaries (gprof) or shared libraries (libXm.so.2) in standard path. It does not support multiple arguments yet...
The System and Arch are optional added filters, for example System could be "redhat", "redhat-7.2", "mandrake" or "gnome", Arch could be "i386" or "src", etc. depending on your system.
Why another text editor? Fresh brings the intuitive, conventional UX of editors like VS Code and Sublime Text to the terminal. While veterans like Emacs and Vim - and newer editors like Neovim and Helix - are excellent for power users who prefer modal, highly specialized workflows, they often present a steep learning curve for those used to standard GUI interactions. Fresh is built for the developer who wants a familiar, non-modal experience out-of-the-box, without sacrificing the speed and portability of the command line. Keyboard bindings, mouse support, menus, command palette etc. are all designed to be familiar to most modern users. Architecturally, Fresh is built to handle multi-gigabyte files or slow network streams efficiently, maintaining a negligible memory overhead regardless of file size. While traditional editors struggle with latency and RAM bloat on large files, Fresh delivers consistent, high-speed performance on any scale. The goal for Fresh is to be an intuitive and accessible, high-performance terminal-based editor that "just works" on any hardware, for everyone.
| Package | Summary | Distribution | Download |
| fresh-editor-0.2.21-1.1.aarch64.html | A terminal text editor you can just use | OpenSuSE Ports Tumbleweed for aarch64 | fresh-editor-0.2.21-1.1.aarch64.rpm |
| fresh-editor-0.2.21-1.1.x86_64.html | A terminal text editor you can just use | OpenSuSE Tumbleweed for x86_64 | fresh-editor-0.2.21-1.1.x86_64.rpm |
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