I like how all the tests seem to be contained within a "jury" folder which judges the merit of your code, made me smile - It's always nice for open-source/FOSS projects to retain a bit of whimsy and joy.
When it comes to wallpapers, you could do a similar trick on X11 DEs by putting it onto the root window (with a tool like xwinwrap) and on Wayland DEs that support layer-shell (with a tool like windowtolayer). I'm not aware of screen lockers that do something like that, but you could always write your own one.
First feature request: allow disabling all the `tput setab 0` calls throughout the codebase. This may make screensavers look weird on white terminals but should improve them for anyone using non-black-but-dark terminal themes.
In the good ol' days, ~1990, Norton Commander had a screensaver with stars, similar to the one in the gallery readme, but with fewer stars, that grew from a dot to bigger dot, to shining, then bursted. Nice to see something like that again.
I thought the same thing. I remember being in elementary school and seeing one of these terminate-and-stay-resident / TSR joke things that made the smiley face ascii character bounce around the screen. That led me to finally move on from Pascal and dive into C to make one of my own, though I'm pretty sure it would be possible in Pascal, all the (very obscure) information I could find as a child used C examples. When I finally had one running that would "Moo!" at random places I felt like a real hacker.
Looks like an attempt to make the main GitHub page (the part above the README) display something interesting. It is messed up now because of further commits, but you can see what it looked like at the time here:
See the spread-the-word script in https://github.com/attogram/bash-screensavers/tree/main/spot...
This script generates a series of shell commands to create a "spotlight" message on the main GitHub repository page. It does this by generating commands that make trivial changes to the top 12 files and directories and then commit those changes with custom messages.
This first time I used a mac where zsh was the default, I was confused for quite a bit of time when it would not run something I was used to doing. I kept looking up errors on the internet until I came across someone's post with a reply asking if they were using Terminal on a new OS X. Sure enough, this was a new mac as well. Now I know one of the first steps for me with a new Mac is change default shell. I'm way too old and set in my ways to care to learn a new shell. Choosing a shell, IDE, font, etc are games for youth.
I used "brew install bash && brew info bash" to get the path, then ran that shell (zsh doesn't work), then inside that new bash, ran the screensaver app.
I found the 4k fullscreen perf in iTerm2 to be not-great, so I did it again in the kitty (GPU powered) terminal macos app, and it was good.
ive always wanted to build something like this for divination, an X by Y field in which each cell is randomly assigned a character from a set which refreshes on a tick that you're meant to just gaze on and look for spontaneous patterns in, maybe with some conway game of life style rules about how cells can be more or less likely to update based on the states of their neighbors. Fork incoming.
Nice! I won't use this since screensavers are much more interesting when not limited to characters, but this is a neat project.
Screensavers are a lost art. I still enjoy them, but at some point we just gave up on them. In the era of CRTs they had a practical purpose (they're screen savers, after all), but modern OLED displays also suffer from burn-in for which screensavers would be useful. My enjoyment is purely aesthetic, though. Sometimes I just want to have something pleasing to glance at in the background, instead of a black screen.
Nowadays most operating systems and desktop environments don't even support them. The state of the art on Linux still seems to be `xscreensaver`, which does have many great ones, but the collection is static, and most of it is visually stuck in the 90s. I wouldn't even try getting it to run on Wayland, and when I last looked into it, it required some hacks and 3rd-party tools.
Also, I've always found the feature of screen locking and screen saving to be orthogonal. Often I want to see pretty graphics without locking my screen, and viceversa.
How can anyone have a bad day when great projects like this pop up on the front page of HN?
Did you see the library of viz? https://github.com/attogram/bash-screensavers/blob/main/libr...
My favourite API: lov_die_with_honor()
With "matrix" causing bash to consume 46% of my CPU time, I think I'll pass. I think I can play the actual film in 4K with less CPU time than that.
I like how all the tests seem to be contained within a "jury" folder which judges the merit of your code, made me smile - It's always nice for open-source/FOSS projects to retain a bit of whimsy and joy.
Gallery of current screensavers: https://github.com/attogram/bash-screensavers/blob/main/gall...
they're generally pretty but they should really hide the cursor, it looks offputting in basically all cases
Agreed! Known bug that will get squashed...
Do screens still need to be saved?
OLEDs are famous for burning in[1], so potentially "yes".
1: https://www.pcworld.com/article/2918628/your-oled-displays-w...
You can put them onto your Plasma wallpaper and/or lockscreen background with plasma-wallpaper-application: https://invent.kde.org/dos/plasma-wallpaper-application
(thought I'd share that since its raison d'être was to put Asciiquarium there :))
Nice. This makes them actual screensavers in my view as opposed to just animations. (Not that screens require "saving" any more, but still.)
> Not that screens require "saving" any more, but still.
OLEDs can still suffer from burn-in, but it's also just easier to have them... turn off...
Ah, sweet!
Do you know if this supports any DE (or no DE)? Or is it strictly for KDE Plasma?
Plasma wallpaper plugins are, well, for Plasma.
When it comes to wallpapers, you could do a similar trick on X11 DEs by putting it onto the root window (with a tool like xwinwrap) and on Wayland DEs that support layer-shell (with a tool like windowtolayer). I'm not aware of screen lockers that do something like that, but you could always write your own one.
Right, but I hoped it would work as a standalone Qt app.
Yeah, I've used xwinwrap before, but am lost on Wayland. I'll look into windowtolayer, thanks. I'd rather not have to write this myself...
I've used Emacs for years but just recently learned about zone.el. I wonder if this is based on it too. I see some of the same screensavers here.
Wow! The copyright of zone.el goes back to 2000. But this is the first time I hear about it! How did you find this gem?
It got mentioned briefly in an article in Mickey Petersen's excellent Mastering Emacs blog.
I know the trendy thing is to hide the menu-bar, but it's great for discoverability. Tools→Games→Zone Out
Never a nice surprise when I find rm -rf / --no-preserve-root in a public repo, apart from this time!
Also, found one of the easter eggs!
Good catch!
For folks curious about the rm -rf see https://github.com/attogram/bash-screensavers/blob/main/gall... line 339
a simple one:
Why bother with Xwindow when you can have this ?
Nice!
First feature request: allow disabling all the `tput setab 0` calls throughout the codebase. This may make screensavers look weird on white terminals but should improve them for anyone using non-black-but-dark terminal themes.
In the good ol' days, ~1990, Norton Commander had a screensaver with stars, similar to the one in the gallery readme, but with fewer stars, that grew from a dot to bigger dot, to shining, then bursted. Nice to see something like that again.
Of course, if used as an actual screensaver on a phosphor or plasma based screen, eventually the character grid would be burned into your screen.
A lot of screensavers, even historically, forget the original purpose of what "saving" your screen means.
You can also experiment and make your own[1] using TerminalTextEffects[2]. I added this to my ~/.zshrc
Which has.. Change motd to have an ascii art of your choice. Run it in a loop if you want :)1: https://keeb.dev/static/login.mp4 2: https://github.com/ChrisBuilds/terminaltexteffects
For the 'life' screensaver it might make sense to use half blocks as a base rendering unit. ASCII 220 and 223.
I love seeing projects like this on the front page. They are so fun and can be little small tricks that improve your quality of life drastically.
Recommendation: Use the terminal control codes 1049h and 1049l [1][2] to keep the terminal 'clean'.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Control_Seque...
[2]: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/789031
fwiw I've noticed that Omarchy[1] uses some terminal-based screensavers, using something called tte[2] to do so.
1: https://omarchy.org/
2: https://github.com/ChrisBuilds/terminaltexteffects
Very cool! Reminds me of the various 90s movie pretend hacker typing screensavers like Neo-HackerTyper.
Check hollywood out then: https://github.com/dustinkirkland/hollywood
Why does the cursor flicker around the screen for most of these? Does it have something to do with not double buffering the display?
Some artifact from asciinema maybe. Only shows up in the preview gifs. Needs to be fixed!
For tmux users: you can use the lock-command option with something like cmatrix for a quick and dirty screensaver.
This reminds me of having a screensaver in DOS.
I thought the same thing. I remember being in elementary school and seeing one of these terminate-and-stay-resident / TSR joke things that made the smiley face ascii character bounce around the screen. That led me to finally move on from Pascal and dive into C to make one of my own, though I'm pretty sure it would be possible in Pascal, all the (very obscure) information I could find as a child used C examples. When I finally had one running that would "Moo!" at random places I felt like a real hacker.
Cool
What are those commit messages?
Looks like an attempt to make the main GitHub page (the part above the README) display something interesting. It is messed up now because of further commits, but you can see what it looked like at the time here:
https://github.com/attogram/bash-screensavers/tree/a7369a93c...
See the spread-the-word script in https://github.com/attogram/bash-screensavers/tree/main/spot... This script generates a series of shell commands to create a "spotlight" message on the main GitHub repository page. It does this by generating commands that make trivial changes to the top 12 files and directories and then commit those changes with custom messages.
Protip for the author: --allow-empty ;P
But that doesn't change the files, so it won't show up in the tree view as the user is trying to accomplish.
instead of --amend?
Instead of adding or removing a space in random files when making cute and useless commit logs.
that's what I meant - "amend" would not create any extra commits/entries
...which is not a helpful advice when what they clearly wanted is to create a bunch of extra commits.
AI slop - or worse, somebody trying to hide something.
unfortunately quite inefficient, I'm sure higher framerates must be possible
(at least when running in docker, maybe that's the bottleneck, but I hesitated to run this on my machine directly)
Doesn't work for me on MacOS:
I get "mapfile: command not found"
After installing bash via MacPorts, it works for me. All except #3 cutesaver, which gives an infinite loop of:
shuf has been a part of coreutils since 2006.
IIRC macOS is at least one major version behind in bash.
something something licensing something something
new installs default to bash not being the default terminal. someone else mentioned macports, but there's a new version available via brew as well
So far I have resisted the change. All the people I know who think zsh is great have a fairly large number of addons to get it that way.
This first time I used a mac where zsh was the default, I was confused for quite a bit of time when it would not run something I was used to doing. I kept looking up errors on the internet until I came across someone's post with a reply asking if they were using Terminal on a new OS X. Sure enough, this was a new mac as well. Now I know one of the first steps for me with a new Mac is change default shell. I'm way too old and set in my ways to care to learn a new shell. Choosing a shell, IDE, font, etc are games for youth.
I encountered this in another project. This should hopefully fix it:
zmodload zsh/mapfile
Same here
Bash Screensavers v0.0.27 (Mystic Shine)
./screensaver.sh: line 79: mapfile: command not found 1 .
(Press ^C to exit)
Choose your screensaver: 1 404 Screensaver Not Found:
Oh no! Screensaver had trouble! Error code: 1
Get a Bash that's not ancient. mapfile is there since version 4.0 from 2009.
Seems to be a old version of bash installed and used by default on macos
Even after updating still getting the same error
checked active bash version:
echo $BASH_VERSION
5.3.3(1)-release
What's relevant is whether "/usr/bin/env bash" runs the correct one.
I used "brew install bash && brew info bash" to get the path, then ran that shell (zsh doesn't work), then inside that new bash, ran the screensaver app.
I found the 4k fullscreen perf in iTerm2 to be not-great, so I did it again in the kitty (GPU powered) terminal macos app, and it was good.
ive always wanted to build something like this for divination, an X by Y field in which each cell is randomly assigned a character from a set which refreshes on a tick that you're meant to just gaze on and look for spontaneous patterns in, maybe with some conway game of life style rules about how cells can be more or less likely to update based on the states of their neighbors. Fork incoming.
Nice! I won't use this since screensavers are much more interesting when not limited to characters, but this is a neat project.
Screensavers are a lost art. I still enjoy them, but at some point we just gave up on them. In the era of CRTs they had a practical purpose (they're screen savers, after all), but modern OLED displays also suffer from burn-in for which screensavers would be useful. My enjoyment is purely aesthetic, though. Sometimes I just want to have something pleasing to glance at in the background, instead of a black screen.
Nowadays most operating systems and desktop environments don't even support them. The state of the art on Linux still seems to be `xscreensaver`, which does have many great ones, but the collection is static, and most of it is visually stuck in the 90s. I wouldn't even try getting it to run on Wayland, and when I last looked into it, it required some hacks and 3rd-party tools.
Also, I've always found the feature of screen locking and screen saving to be orthogonal. Often I want to see pretty graphics without locking my screen, and viceversa.