💾 Nodemore Recursively Searches Directories for Unused Projects
NodeJS has a horrible way of dealing with dependencies. One that intentionally aims to strip you of any functionality other than programming in Javascript. I found myself trying to install a small 100GB game only to find that I couldn't due to half of my 1TB hard disk being taken over by node_modules
(That was a horror game in itself).
and it's in Rust.
If linux is free if you don't value your time, then Javascript is free if you don't value your space.
Head to the releases page and download the MSI build. From there, install it like any other program
wget https://github.com/WillKirkmanM/nodemore/releases/download/v1.0.0/nodemore -O ~/.local/bin
To start the program, simply run
$ nodemore
nodemore
was built with functionality in mind. Every feature has been meticulously chosen for ease of use and simplicity. Enjoy!
Usage: nodemore [OPTIONS]
Options:
-p, --path <PATH> Path to Search [default: .]
-t, --time <TIME> Time Frame [default: "1 week"]
-a, --prompt Prompt Before Deletion
-s, --show-size Whether to show file sizes (Slow)
-v, --verbosity <VERBOSITY> Verbosity Level [default: 0]
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print version
Nodemore has a custom nodemore.yml
config file that you can use instead of the command line (you can find an example here)
# nodemore.yml
cleaning:
time: "1 day"
path: "."
As present, the configurations will be stored in the cleaning
section holding both a time
and a path
option. These would be equivalent to running:
$ nodemore -t "1 day"
and
$ nodemore -p "."