Tsprint Terminal Works Review

If you spend any time working in the terminal, you know the power of seeing data flow in real time. Log tails, live metrics, build outputs — they all tell a story as it happens. But what if you could take that concept further? What if you could print, filter, and transform terminal output with microsecond precision, directly from streaming data sources?

[14:23:05.123456] "type":"ping" [14:23:05.123478] "type":"pong" Notice the 22‑microsecond delta — perfect for race condition analysis. for i in 1..100; do echo "data $i"; sleep 0.01; done | \ tsprint --timestamp --relative | \ grep "data 50" 3. High‑volume log tailing with rate limiting tail -f /var/log/nginx/access.log | tsprint --rate 10 --format json Only 10 lines per second reach your terminal, but every timestamp remains accurate. How tsprint differs from ts (moreutils) | Feature | ts (moreutils) | tsprint | |-----------------------|------------------------|----------------------------| | Timestamp precision | Second | Nanosecond | | Output formats | Plain text | JSON, CSV, custom template | | Non‑blocking I/O | No | Yes | | Rate limiting | No | Yes | | Real‑time streaming focus | Partial | Designed for it | Getting started Install tsprint (assuming it’s packaged or available via cargo/go): tsprint terminal works

tsprint --help Let’s simulate a sensor emitting temperature readings every 50ms, and use tsprint to see exactly when each reading arrives: If you spend any time working in the