dis da fun mode. makes u feel like hackerman or smth, launch it with:
or from source like a true alpha:
you can also pass CLI flags alongside --tui and theyll apply as the starting config. like if you want to start with the Country list and some prioritized TLDs:
hoardom --tui --list Country --top ch,li
the TUI has a few panels:
- search bar at the bottom: type your domain names here then obliterate enter to hacksor them
- results in the middle: shows whats available and whats taken
- favorites on the right side: your watchlist on pulling the trigger and shelling out moneu for em domainers
- settings below favorites: toggle stuff duh
- scratchpad on the left (if enabled in toggler settings): just a little text area for gathering inspiration and other stuff like amongus memes or the bee movie script (saves to config.toml btw so u dont loose your mommy asmr converted to base64 that you saved in ur notes)
and since version 1.0.1 theres also a top bar with an export button and help button.
type a domain suffix or full domain in the search bar and press Enter. you can search multiple things at once seperated by spaces or commas:
coolproject shitproject durchfall
or mix full domains and suffixes:
coolproject.ch shitproject
results stream in as they come back, theres a progress bar at the top of the results panel during a search.
press s during a search to cancel it if youre impatient.
if Clear on Search is off in settings, results accumulate across searches. press C to clear manually.
| key |
what |
F1 |
toggle help overlay |
F2 |
open/close export popup |
Ctrl+C |
quit |
s |
cancel running search |
Tab / Shift+Tab |
cycle between panels |
Esc |
close help/dropdown, or clear selection in current panel |
| key |
what |
Enter |
start the search |
| typing |
works normally when no search is running |
Home / End |
jump to start/end of input |
| key |
what |
Up / Down |
navigate the list |
Enter |
add highlighted domain to favorites |
| mouse scroll |
scroll through results |
| key |
what |
Up / Down |
navigate |
Backspace / Delete |
remove the focused favorite |
| key |
what |
Up / Down |
move between settings rows |
Enter / Space |
toggle checkboxes or open the TLD list dropdown |
as was already said... put whatever u want in here
mouse is on by default. you can click and interact with stuff
if you hate mouse in terminal apps (or your terminal doesnt like it for reasons) can be disabled :
theres 4 things in there:
- TLD List dropdown: pick Standard, Decent, Country, All, or any custom imported lists
- Show Unavailable checkbox: toggles whether taken domains show with premium details in results
- Show Notes Panel checkbox: toggles the scratchpad panel on the left
- Clear on Search checkbox: if on, results get cleared before each new search. if off they pile up for the true hoarding feeling.
// todo add the job amount selector here too
oh and settings auto save to config
when you find a domain you like in the results, highlight it and press Enter to add it to favorites. favorites show up in the right panel and persist across sessions.
if you (for whatever reason) decide to stop hoard domains in ther you can REMOVE THEM OMG WHAT CRAZY AHH FEATURE I KNOW RIGHT ???, focus the favorites panel, navigate to it, and hit Backspace or Delete.
press F2 or click the Export batten in the top bar.
two modes:
- Favorites TXT: dumps your favorites list to a text file, one per line, usefull if u wanna search em all for availability and shiet again.
- Results CSV: exports currently visible results as CSV ... if u want that.
will warn u when u bouta overwrite ur precious files and also last used export paths get remembered for faster extorting.
if you resize the terminal too small, hoardom will refuse to work and complain about being claustrophone! please respect its feelings and dont scare it like that
- you can pass
--import-list alongside --tui to import a list and jump straight into the TUI with it
--verbose works in TUI too, it prints debug stuff to stderr (which you wont see in the TUI itself, but its there if you redirect it)
--no-color also works here for your 90's dial up crt tty