#shell
Try is a simple Ruby tool that organizes your coding experiments in one folder like ~/src/tries, using fuzzy search to quickly find or create dated directories (e.g., 2025-01-18-redis-test). Install via `gem install try-cli` or curl the single file, then add `eval "$(try init)"` to your shell—no setup needed. It ranks recent projects highest with smart matching, so you avoid scattered "test" folders and lost /tmp work. This saves time jumping between ideas, keeping your chaotic projects instantly accessible and productive.
https://github.com/tobi/try
#other#ai#bolt#copilot#cursor#cursorai#devin#devinai#github_copilot#lovable#open_source#replit#system_prompts#trae#trae_ai#trae_ide#v0#vscode#windsurf#windsurf_ai
You can access a huge collection of over 7000 lines of official system prompts and internal tools from many AI models and agents like v0, Manus, Cursor, Replit Agent, and more. These prompts guide AI to work better by giving clear instructions, which helps the AI give more accurate and useful answers. Using these prompts can save you time, improve AI performance, and make your interactions with AI smoother and more productive. Plus, there’s a free AI security audit service to help protect your AI systems from leaks and hacks, keeping your data safe. Supporting this project helps keep these valuable resources updated.
https://github.com/x1xhlol/system-prompts-and-models-of-ai-tools