Wring
Why Choose Wring?
If u r a dev that hates context switching, this is pretty much ideal if ur workin on a mac. Insted of huntin through browser tabs or standalone apps whenever u need to debug a JWT or check a hash, everything sits right in yer menu bar. It’s super handy when yu’re deep in the flow and need something fast without leavin your code editor behind. The biggest plus here is the privacy angle. Most online converters track ya or leak data, but Wring runs totally offline. No sign ups, no analytics, nothing sendin yer secrets over the net. That makes it safe enough to handle env vars or internal tokens without worryin bout compliance or leaks messin up yer workflow. One thing to note though, it’s mac only really so if u share machines with Windows folks, its outta luck. Also while it covers most daily tasks, heavy lifting might still need a proper IDE plugin. But for quick tweaks and sanity checks? Def worth grabbing.
Wring is an offline macOS menu bar app with 12 developer tools for JWTs, hashes, regex, JSON, Base64, timestamps, cron, colors, UUIDs, diffs, load monitoring, andenv secrets. No account, no analytics, no network access.
Wring Introduction
What is Wring?
Wring is a macOS menu bar app built for devs who need quick access to coding utilities without switching windows. It bundles twelve essential tools right into the top status bar like JWT decoding, regex testing, and JSON formatting so u dont hafta hunt around. Best thing is its totally offline meanin no account setups, zero analytics, and yer env secrets stay locked down locally since nothin leaves your mac.
How to use Wring?
so basically once u download the .dmg just drag it into your apps folder, thats pretty much the whole install process. no fancy sign up or email verification needed, which is nice. after launching it, head up to the menu bar and find the little wring icon. theres zero setup required, it just sits there ready to go. to actually use it, just click that icon and you get a dropdown menu with all the tools inside. pick whatever u need like decoding a jwt or checking a diff. i usually throw my json payload in and hit enter, works offline so its fast. the interface is simple enough that you wont get lost looking around for the hash generators or color pickers. pro tip: leave it running in the background most of the time. whenever u need to generate a uuid or check cron syntax, its just one click away instead of searching google. nothing gets saved though so dont expect it to remember your last inputs between sessions, but for quick checks its exactly what u want.
Why Choose Wring?
If u r a dev that hates context switching, this is pretty much ideal if ur workin on a mac. Insted of huntin through browser tabs or standalone apps whenever u need to debug a JWT or check a hash, everything sits right in yer menu bar. It’s super handy when yu’re deep in the flow and need something fast without leavin your code editor behind. The biggest plus here is the privacy angle. Most online converters track ya or leak data, but Wring runs totally offline. No sign ups, no analytics, nothing sendin yer secrets over the net. That makes it safe enough to handle env vars or internal tokens without worryin bout compliance or leaks messin up yer workflow. One thing to note though, it’s mac only really so if u share machines with Windows folks, its outta luck. Also while it covers most daily tasks, heavy lifting might still need a proper IDE plugin. But for quick tweaks and sanity checks? Def worth grabbing.
Wring Features
Privacy First
- ✓runs totally w/o internet
- ✓zero analytics trackin
- ✓no accounts requried ever
- ✓data stays local only
Dev Tool Suite
- ✓JWT encoding made simple
- ✓regex tester built in
- ✓json formatter handy
- ✓base64 conversions easy
System Watch
- ✓check cpu load live
- ✓cron jobs helper
- ✓view diffs quick
- ✓timestamp conveter
Quick Access
- ✓pick colors fast
- ✓gen UUIDs fast
- ✓env secrets safe
- ✓menu bar stays clean
FAQ?
Pricing
Pricing information not available