friends
is a volunteer project. If you find it useful, please consider
making a small donation (π) to show you appreciate its continued development.
π Donate with these buttons! π
π Donate with these buttons! π
Spend time with the people you care about. Introvert-tested. Extrovert-approved.
NOTE: Participation is encouraged! Make issues, ask questions, submit pull requests (even if it's your first time contributing to open-sourceβyou'll get lots of help), and give feedback! This project is very much alive!
- Overview
- Installation
- A note on output
- Usage
- Core concepts
- Global flags
- Syncing across multiple machines
- Setting reminders
- Command reference
- Other documentation
- Contributing (it's encouraged!)
- Code of Conduct
- License
friends
is a command-line program that helps you to keep track of your relationships with the
people you care about.
friends
gives you:
- More organization around staying in touch with friends and family.
- A way to track the ebbs and flows of your relationships over time.
- Suggestions for who to call or hang out with when you have free time, whether it's fifteen minutes or an entire weekend.
- A low-cost way to record and remember big moments in your life.
Its philosophy emphasizes:
- Simplicityβit should be quick and easy to use.
- Transparencyβall data is stored in a human-readable Markdown file. No
proprietary formats here! And in addition to being open-source,
friends
is very much open to new ideas. Please contribute! - Intelligenceβspecify dates with English phrases like "yesterday." Specify
friends with their first names, even when you're friends with many Joannes.
friends
will figure it out.
$ gem install friends
Easy, huh?
To make its output easier to view and work with, friends
"pages" its output.
This means that when it has a lot to print it will let you scroll up or down
in your terminal to view all of it.
By default, friends
tries to use the less -RFX
command for paging, which should
be available on most systems, and if that is not available falls back to simply
printing the output. However, you can set a different pager by setting the FRIENDS_PAGER
environment variable. If you have less
version 530 or later
we recommend using
this instead:
FRIENDS_PAGER="less -RF"
friends
is structured around several different types of things:
- Activities: The things you do. Each activity has a date associated with it. Activities may optionally contain any number of friends, locations, and tags.
- Friends: The people you do activities with. Each friend has a name and,
optionally, one or several nicknames. (Examples:
John
,Grace Hopper
) - Locations: The places in which activities happen. (Examples:
Paris
,Marie's Diner
) - Tags: A way to categorize your activities with tags of your
choosing. Tags may contain colons and hyphens inside them. (Examples:
@exercise:running
,@school
,@science:indoors:agronomy-with-hydroponics
) - Notes: Any additional information you want to record about a friend
or location. (Example:
John and Jane got engaged.
)
The friends.md
Markdown file that stores all of your data contains:
- an alphabetical list of all locations:
### Locations:
- Atlantis
- Marie's Diner
- Paris
- an alphabetical list of all friends and their nicknames and locations:
### Friends:
- George Washington Carver
- Grace Hopper (a.k.a. The Admiral a.k.a. Amazing Grace) [Paris]
- Marie Curie [Atlantis]
- an ordered list of all activities:
### Activities:
- 2018-11-01: **Grace Hopper** and I went to _Marie's Diner_. George had to cancel at the last minute.
- 2018-01-04: Got lunch with **Grace Hopper** and **George Washington Carver**.
- 2017-12-31: Celebrated the new year in _Paris_ with **Marie Curie**.
- 2017-11-15: Talked to **George Washington Carver** on the phone for an hour.
- and an ordered list of all notes:
### Notes:
- 2018-06-15: **Grace Hopper** found out she's getting a big Naval Academy building named after her. @navy
- 2017-06-06: **Marie Curie** just got accepted into a PhD program in _Paris_. @school
See the example
friends.md
file for more information.
friends
supports several global flags that can be used on any command when
specified before the name of the command, like: friends [flags] [command]
.
These flags are:
--colorless
: Disable output colorization and other effects.--debug
: Debug error messages with a full backtrace.--filename
: Set the location of the friends file to use (default:~/friends.md
).
$ friends --filename ./test/tmp/friends.md clean
File cleaned: "./test/tmp/friends.md"
--quiet
: Quiet output messages.
$ friends --quiet add activity Went rollerskating with George.
$ # No output!
In addition, these flags may be used without any command:
--help
: Show the help menu. This is equivalent tofriends help
. Help menus are available for all levels of commands:
$ friends --help
$ friends list --help
$ friends list activities --help
--version
: Show thefriends
program version.
Wouldn't it be nice to be able to use friends
across all of your
devices? Hooray, you can! Just put the friends.md
file in your
Dropbox/Box Sync/Google Drive/whatever folder and use the
--filename
flag. You can even set up a Bash/Zsh/whatever alias to
do this for you, like so:
alias friends="friends --filename '~/Dropbox/friends.md'"
Though friends
has no built-in reminder functionality, it's easy to use a
system like cron
(Mac or Linux) or Task Scheduler
(Windows) to set various
reminders.
For example, on a Mac, the following crontab
configuration results in every day
at 9:00 p.m. a Terminal tab opening, printing "Time to journal!" and then launching
an add activity
prompt through friends
:
0 21 * * * osascript -e 'activate application "Terminal"' &> /dev/null && osascript -e 'tell application "Terminal" to do script "clear && echo Time to journal! && friends add activity"' &> /dev/null
Here's another example (also for Mac) of using friends
to suggest some people to
hang out with every Saturday morning:
0 10 * * 6 osascript -e 'activate application "Terminal"' &> /dev/null && osascript -e 'tell application "Terminal" to do script "clear && echo Consider hanging out with one of these friends today: && friends suggest"' &> /dev/null
(If you use other tools, please share and we'll add to these examples!)
*Note that the command-line output is colored, which this README cannot show.
$ friends add activity Got lunch with Grace and George.
Activity added: "2018-01-04: Got lunch with Grace Hopper and George Washington Carver."
friends
will automatically figure out which "Grace" and "George" you're referring to, even if you're friends with lots of different Graces and Georges.
Nicknames will be used to match friends in activities, just like formal names:
$ friends add activity Invented debugging with The Admiral.
Activity added: "2017-01-06: Invented debugging with Grace Hopper."
You can also use the first initial of a last name instead of the whole thing.
friends
will figure out what to do with those pesky periods (if you include
them) based on whether you're in the middle of a sentence or not:
$ friends add activity Got lunch with Earnest H and Earnest S. in the park. Man, I like Earnest H. but really love Earnest S.
Activity added: "2017-05-01: Got lunch with Earnest Hemingway and Earnest Shackleton in the park. Man, I like Earnest Hemingway but really love Earnest Shackleton."
And locations will be matched as well:
$ friends add activity Went swimming near atlantis with George.
Activity added: "2017-01-06: Went swimming near Atlantis with George Washington Carver."
Tags will be colored if they're provided (though this README can't display color so you'll just have to have faith here):
$ friends add activity The office softball team wins a game! @work @exercise:sports
Activity added: "2017-05-05: The office softball team wins a game! @work @exercise:sports"
You can of course specify a date for the activity:
$ friends add activity Yesterday: Celebrated the new year with Marie.
Activity added: "2017-12-31: Celebrated the new year with Marie Curie."
Or get an interactive prompt by just typing friends add activity
, with or without a date specified:
$ friends add activity 2018-11-01
2018-11-01: <type description here>
Natural-language dates work just fine:
$ friends add activity last Monday
2017-03-07: <type description here>
You can escape the names of friends you don't want friends
to match with a backslash:
$ friends add activity "2018-11-01: Grace and I went to \Marie's Diner. \George had to cancel at the last minute."
Activity added: "2018-11-01: Grace Hopper and I went to Marie's Diner. George had to cancel at the last minute."
And if an activity contains friends or locations you haven't yet added, you can simply
denote them with the signifiers found in the friends.md
file (**
s around friends,
and _
s around locations), and friends
will automatically add the friends or locations
that are missing:
$ friends add activity "2018-11-01: I got to meet **Oprah Winfrey** in _Chicago_ today."
Activity added: "2018-11-01: I got to meet Oprah Winfrey in Chicago today."
Friend added: "Oprah Winfrey"
Location added: "Chicago"
This is really handy for when you have an activity involving a friend or location that you can't remember if you've already added. Just use the signifiers and they'll be added if necessary!
Notes can be added exactly like activities, either on one line:
$ friends add note Yesterday: Marie got accepted into a PhD program
Note added: "2017-12-31: Marie Curie got accepted into a PhD program"
Or with a prompt:
$ friends add note last Monday
2017-03-07: <type description here>
And just like with add activity
, dates, friends, locations, nicknames, and tags will all be
intelligently matched. In addition, as with add activity
you can use the **
/_
signifiers
around friend and location names and they'll be added if necessary:
$ friends add note "2018-11-01: **Oprah Winfrey** grew up in _Chicago_."
Activity added: "2018-11-01: Oprah Winfrey grew up in Chicago."
Friend added: "Oprah Winfrey"
Location added: "Chicago"
This is really handy for when you have a note involving a friend or location that you can't remember if you've already added. Just use the signifiers and they'll be added if necessary!
$ friends add friend Grace Hopper
Friend added: "Grace Hopper"
$ friends add tag Grace Hopper science
Tag added to friend: "Grace Hopper @science"
$ friends add location Atlantis
Location added: "Atlantis"
$ friends add nickname "Grace Hopper" "The Admiral"
Nickname added: "Grace Hopper (a.k.a. The Admiral)
$ friends add nickname "Grace Hopper" "Amazing Grace"
Nickname added: "Grace Hopper (a.k.a. The Admiral a.k.a. Amazing Grace)"
Reads and re-writes the friends.md
file:
$ friends clean
File cleaned: "~/friends.md"
This command is useful after manual editing of the file, for re-ordering its
contents and adding any missing friends or locations that are found in
activities or notes. Note that friends clean
is automatically called after
the editor in friends edit
is closed.
Allows you to manually edit the file:
$ friends edit
Opening "~/friends.md" with "vim"
The file is opened with the command specified by the EDITOR
environment
variable, falling back to vim
if it is not set:
$ export EDITOR='atom --wait'
$ friends edit
Opening "~/friends.md" with "atom --wait"
Note that when setting your own EDITOR
value, if you like to use
an editor like Atom, VS Code, or Sublime Text, you should first make
sure you have the command-line tool for your editor (atom
, code
,
or subl
) installed correctly so you can open your editor from the
command line. Then, when setting EDITOR
, make sure to use the
--wait
flag (as in the example above), which will allow friends
to be able to run the clean
command (see below).
After the editor has been closed, friends
will automatically run the
clean
command to re-organize the file and add any friends or locations
you've referenced in activities or notes that have not been added to the
file. This means that, similar to the add activity
and add note
commands, you can add lines like:
- 2018-01-01: I just met **Oprah Winfrey** in _Chicago_!
And if that friend or location isn't already present it'll be added:
Friend added: "Oprah Winfrey"
Location added: "Chicago"
File cleaned: "~/friends.md"
Graphs (in color!) your activities over time:
$ friends graph
Feb 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ
Dec 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Nov 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
By default, graphs are scaled relative to the month with the most activities. You can also show the unscaled graph:
$ friends graph --unscaled
Feb 2018 |ββ
Jan 2018 |βββββββ
Dec 2017 |β
Nov 2017 |βββ
You can graph only activities with a certain friend:
$ friends graph --with George
Feb 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Dec 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Nov 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
The dots represent the total activities of each month, so you can get a feel for the proportion of activities with that friend vs. the total you've logged.
You can also graph a certain group of friends:
$ friends graph --with George --with Grace
Feb 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Dec 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Nov 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Or graph only activities with a certain tag:
$ friends graph --tagged food
Feb 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Dec 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Nov 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Or with multiple tags:
$ friends graph --tagged fun --tagged work
Feb 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Dec 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Nov 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Or graph only activities in a certain location:
$ friends graph --in Paris
Feb 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Dec 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Nov 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Or graph only activities on or after a certain date:
$ friends graph --since 'January 21st 2018'
Feb 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Or graph only activities before or on a certain date:
$ friends graph --until 'January 1st 2018'
Jan 2018 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Dec 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
Nov 2017 |ββββββββββββββββββββ|
And you can use multiple of these flags together:
$ friends graph --unscaled --in Paris --tagged food --with George --since 'Jan 2018'
Jan 2018 |βββββββ|
Fen 2017 |βββββ|
Displays a help menu. This is equivalent to friends --help
.
$ friends help
NAME
friends - Spend time with the people you care about. Introvert-tested. Extrovert-approved.
SYNOPSIS
friends [global options] command [command options] [arguments...]
...
Help menus are available for all levels of commands:
$ friends help
$ friends help list
$ friends help list activities
Lists recent activities:
$ friends list activities
2018-01-04: Got lunch with Grace Hopper and George Washington Carver. @food
2017-12-31: Celebrated the new year with Marie Curie in New York City. @partying:ball-drop
2017-11-15: Talked to George Washington Carver on the phone for an hour.
You can list the activities you did with a certain friend:
$ friends list activities --with George
2018-01-04: Got lunch with Grace Hopper and George Washington Carver. @food
2017-11-15: Talked to George Washington Carver on the phone for an hour.
Or only activities done with a group of friends:
$ friends list activities --with George --with Grace
2018-01-04: Got lunch with Grace Hopper and George Washington Carver. @food
Or filter your activities by location:
$ friends list activities --in "New York"
2017-12-31: Celebrated the new year with Marie Curie in New York City. @partying:ball-drop
Or by tag:
$ friends list activities --tagged food
2018-01-04: Got lunch with Grace Hopper and George Washington Carver. @food
Or use more than one tag:
$ friends list activities --tagged fun --tagged work
2018-07-04: Summer picnic with @work colleagues. @fun
Or by date:
$ friends list activities --since 'December 31st 2017'
2018-01-04: Got lunch with Grace Hopper and George Washington Carver. @food
2017-12-31: Celebrated the new year with Marie Curie in New York City. @partying:ball-drop
$ friends list activities --until 'December 31st 2017'
2017-12-31: Celebrated the new year with Marie Curie in New York City. @partying:ball-drop
2017-11-15: Talked to George Washington Carver on the phone for an hour.
And you can mix and match these options to your heart's content:
$ friends list activities --tagged food --with Grace --with George
2018-01-04: Got lunch with Grace Hopper and George Washington Carver. @food
You can list notes the same way you list activities:
$ friends list notes --tagged school --with Marie
2017-03-12: Marie Curie completed her PhD in record time. @school
2015-06-06: Marie Curie just got accepted into a PhD program in Paris. @school
Lists your "favorite" friends (by total number of activities):
$ friends list favorite friends
Your favorite friends:
1. George Washington Carver (2 activities)
2. Grace Hopper (1)
3. Marie Curie (0)
Lists your "favorite" locations (by total number of activities):
$ friends list favorite locations
Your favorite locations:
1. Atlantis (2 activities)
2. Paris (1)
3. London (0)
Lists all of your friends in alphabetical order:
$ friends list friends
George Washington Carver
Grace Hopper
Marie Curie
You can also include friend nicknames, locations, and tags:
$ friends list friends --verbose
George Washington Carver
Grace Hopper (a.k.a. The Admiral a.k.a. Amazing Grace) [Paris] @navy @science
Marie Curie [Atlantis] @science
You can filter your friends by location:
$ friends list friends --in Paris
Marie Curie
And you can also filter your friends by tag:
$ friends list friends --tagged science
Grace Hopper
Marie Curie
You can even use more than one tag to further narrow down the list:
$ friends list friends --tagged science --tagged navy
Grace Hopper
Lists all tags you've used, in alphabetical order:
$ friends list tags
@dancing
@food
@school
@swanky
You can limit this to only tags from activities:
$ friends list tags --from activities
@dancing
@food
@swanky
Or only tags from friends:
$ friends list tags --from friends
@school
@swanky
Or only tags from notes:
$ friends list tags --from notes
@navy
@school
Or only tags from two out of three:
$ friends list tags --from activities --from friends
@dancing
@food
@navy
@school
@swanky
Lists all of the locations you've added, in alphabetical order::
$ friends list locations
Atlantis
New York City
Paris
Since friends
is a command-line program, we can easily support
more complex searching by piping the output of a list
command
through a command-line tool like grep
.
For instance, to see all of the notes containing the string PhD
:
$ friends list notes | grep PhD
2017-07-01: Marie Curie just got accepted into a PhD program.
2017-06-10: John Doe is finishing his PhD.
2013-06-10: John Doe is just starting his PhD.
And you can combine this with the normal filter options provided
by friends
, like this:
$ friends list notes --with John --since 'January 1st 2015' | grep PhD
2017-06-10: John Doe is finishing his PhD.
Note that grep
has some handy flags, like --ignore-case
/-i
, and
--color=always
, to help customize your search:
$ friends list notes --with John --since 'January 1st 2015' | grep -i PhD
2017-06-10: John Doe is finishing his PhD.
2016-06-01: I think John Doe is hoping to finish his phD about a year from now.
These grep
flags might be slightly different depending on which version of
grep
you have installed.
Removes a specific tag from a friend:
$ friends remove tag Grace Hopper fun
Tag removed from friend: "Grace Hopper (a.k.a. Amazing Grace) @OtherTag"
Removes a specific nickname from a friend:
$ friends remove nickname "Grace Hopper" "The Admiral"
Nickname removed: "Grace Hopper (a.k.a. Amazing Grace)"
$ friends rename friend "Grace Hopper" "Grace Brewster Murray Hopper"
Name changed: "Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (a.k.a. Amazing Grace)"
This will update that friend's name in all notes and activities.
$ friends rename location Paris "Paris, France"
Location renamed: "Paris, France"
This will update that location's name in all notes and activities.
Sets a friend's location:
$ friends set location Marie Paris
Marie Curie's location set to: Paris
Gives you your lifetime usage stats:
$ friends stats
Total activities: 4
Total friends: 3
Total locations: 3
Total notes: 4
Total tags: 5
Total time elapsed: 848 days
Gives you suggestions of up to three random friends to do something with, based on how often you've done things with them in the past:
$ friends suggest
Distant friend: Marie Curie
Moderate friend: Grace Hopper
Close friend: George Washington Carver
You can request suggestions of friends in a specific location:
$ friends suggest --in Paris
Distant friend: Marie Curie
Updates friends
to the latest version on RubyGems:
$ friends update
Updated to friends 0.17
In case you're really interested, we have documentation on RubyDoc.
If you have an idea, make a GitHub issue! Suggestions are very very welcome, and usually are implemented very quickly. And if you'd like to do the implementing yourself, see the contributing guide.
A big big thanks to all of this project's lovely contributors:
Another way to contribute is to make a donation with any of these buttons:
π Donate with these buttons right here! π
Thank you to all backers! π [Become a backer]
Support this project by becoming a sponsor. Your logo will show up here with a link to your website. [Become a sponsor]
Note that this project follows a Code of Conduct. If you're a polite, reasonable person you won't have any issues!
Friends is released under the MIT License.