- Регистрация
- 9 Май 2015
- Сообщения
- 1,480
- Баллы
- 155

The Problem Every Developer Faces
Scene: It's 2 AM, you need to find all files modified in the last week, and you're staring at the terminal cursor blinking mockingly.
We've all been there. You KNOW there's a command for this. You've used it before. But is it find . -mtime -7 or find . -mtime +7? Or was it -ctime?
Off to Google again.

What I'm Building
GCLI (coming soon) bridges the gap between knowing what you want and remembering the syntax.
Instead of:
- Googling "linux find files modified last week"
- Scrolling through Stack Overflow answers
- Testing commands on dummy files first
You type:
gcli "show me files modified in the past week"
You get:
find . -mtime -7 -type f
Finds files (-type f) modified within the last 7 days (-mtime -7)
Why Not Just Use ChatGPT?
Fair question! But:
- ChatGPT might give you a 200-word explanation when you need a quick command
- It's not optimized for CLI-specific tasks
- You have to context-switch to a browser/app
- Commands need to be safe and tested
GCLI is built specifically for this use case.
The Commands You'll Never Google Again
- "compress this directory"
- "show disk usage by folder"
- "kill process on port 8080"
- "create symbolic link"
- "change file permissions recursively"
- "show git commits from last month"
Working on the private beta. If you're interested in early access, drop your email at
What CLI command do you Google most often? Let me know in the comments - might help prioritize features!
Источник: