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authorzlg <zlg@zlg.space>2020-08-02 17:11:04 -0700
committerzlg <zlg@zlg.space>2020-08-02 17:11:04 -0700
commit3d7601df24ccefd9063c6e83379ff6f90cd32642 (patch)
tree5e7ab83f1923032d6ada1f6bba70c80b95032630
parentvgstash_cli: Show what happens to note data (diff)
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README.md: Tidy up prose, rearrange milestones
-rw-r--r--README.md55
1 files changed, 28 insertions, 27 deletions
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 39c148a..7079ecc 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -1,15 +1,16 @@
# vgstash - a place to stash your game collection
If you love video games, you've probably amassed a collection of them, across
-many different systems; physical, digital, and everything in-between. At some
-point, a player may want to know a few key pieces of information that may steer
-their gaming. These questions are great for quelling boredom and keeping a
-gaming backlog manageable:
+many different systems and platforms, both physical and digital. At some point,
+a player may want to know a few key pieces of information that may steer their
+gaming. These questions are great for quelling boredom and keeping a gaming
+backlog manageable:
* Which games do I own?
* Which games have I beaten or completed?
* Which games do I need to beat?
* What was the note I left for X game?
+* Which games do I have more than one copy of?
vgstash seeks to answer these type of questions in a simple and extensible way.
@@ -21,8 +22,8 @@ vgstash is available via `pip`:
pip install [--user] vgstash
~~~
-Please note that vgstash is under heavy development at present. Do not install
-unless you are interested in helping its development.
+Once everything's installed, just run `vgstash init` from a shell to get
+started.
# Concept
@@ -57,7 +58,7 @@ vgstash tracks it somewhat like this:
'--------------------------------------------------------'
```
-This is the bare minimum information you need to meaningfully track a video
+This is the bare minimum information you need to meaningfully track a video
game in your collection.
# Command Line Usage
@@ -78,13 +79,13 @@ tuned to match the user's preferences.
## Quoting Game Titles
-A note on characters: some shells treat certain characters differently. The most
-common ones you'll run into are punctuation, like single quotes ('), double
-quotes (") and exclamation points (!). You'll need to search your shell's manual
+A note on characters: some shells treat certain characters differently. The most
+common ones you'll run into are punctuation, like single quotes ('), double
+quotes (") and exclamation points (!). You'll need to search your shell's manual
for "character escaping" to get the details.
-Let's take a few game titles that might be problematic for a shell, and add them
-to vgstash. These examples assume you're using bash (the Bourne Again SHell) or
+Let's take a few game titles that might be problematic for a shell, and add them
+to vgstash. These examples assume you're using bash (the Bourne Again SHell) or
something comparable.
First: a title with single quotes and exclamation points:
@@ -101,14 +102,14 @@ Next is a little more insidious: a title with two (or more) exclamation points:
$ vgstash add 'Mario Kart: Double Dash!!' GCN p n
```
-Note that we're using single quotes; if we used double quotes, then the `!!`
+Note that we're using single quotes; if we used double quotes, then the `!!`
would expand to the last command entered into the shell, creating
`Mario Kart: Double Dash<your last command here>`. Quite different from what
you'd expect!
-But what if we, somehow, had both single quotes *and* sequential exclamation
-points? Single-quoted strings cannot escape a single quote character. Double
-quotes won't stop the `!!` expansion. Escaping the exclamation points retains
+But what if we, somehow, had both single quotes *and* sequential exclamation
+points? Single-quoted strings cannot escape a single quote character. Double
+quotes won't stop the `!!` expansion. Escaping the exclamation points retains
the backslash; what is one to do? There are a few ways to tackle this one:
```bash
@@ -122,18 +123,18 @@ $ vgstash add Some\ title\'s\ crazy\!\! PC d n
$ vgstash add "Some title"\''s crazy!!' PC d n
```
-The `$'text'` form is handy when you need to use double and/or single quotes
-alongside exclamation points, or you can just escape every special character
+The `$'text'` form is handy when you need to use double and/or single quotes
+alongside exclamation points, or you can just escape every special character
(including space) as needed.
-The "exotic" one takes advantage of the shell's built-in string concatenation
-and the ability to mix quoting styles. First we have `Some title` in double
-quotes; then an escaped single quote for literal output; then `s crazy!!` in
+The "exotic" one takes advantage of the shell's built-in string concatenation
+and the ability to mix quoting styles. First we have `Some title` in double
+quotes; then an escaped single quote for literal output; then `s crazy!!` in
single quotes to avoid the `!!` expansion.
-The last option is to disable the feature (history expansion) altogether, though
+The last option is to disable the feature (history expansion) altogether, though
you'll miss out on nice stuff like `sudo !!`. In bash, it's disabled with `set
-+H` or `set +o histexpand`. Change `+` to `-` to turn it back on when you're
++H` or `set +o histexpand`. Change `+` to `-` to turn it back on when you're
done.
These tips may not work in all shells, so try using `echo` to print the title
@@ -149,7 +150,7 @@ $ vgstash delete "my gamels" PC
Removed my gamels for PC from your collection.
```
-That's it! This is something that the shell does before vgstash begins
+That's it! This is something that the shell does before vgstash begins
processing its arguments, so please don't report any bugs dealing with quoting.
# Commands
@@ -164,8 +165,8 @@ vgstash has a fairly small set of commands:
* notes
* update
-The power is in the `list` command. vgstash comes with a set of default filters
-that allow you to reason about your game collection. For example, this command
+The power is in the `list` command. vgstash comes with a set of default filters
+that allow you to reason about your game collection. For example, this command
will show you every game marked "playing" that you also own in some way:
```bash
@@ -189,11 +190,11 @@ These are planned for the full 0.3 release:
* command line interface finished
* Match feature-set with `master`
-* Iron out any initial bugs on Windows and Mac (testers welcome!)
Goals planned for the 0.4 release:
* import and export with JSON
+* Iron out any initial bugs on Windows and Mac (testers welcome!)
Goals planned for the 0.5 release: