Home/About
About

About this independent DeepSeek TUI and CodeWhale guide

DeepSeek TUI Guide is an independent documentation and troubleshooting site for people who still search for DeepSeek TUI, but need practical help with the current CodeWhale naming, install paths, configuration, modes, MCP, comparisons, and common terminal errors.

This site is not the official CodeWhale project, not the upstream repository, and not an advertising landing page. Its purpose is to turn scattered release notes, command names, setup routes, and error cases into clearer decision pages that a user can follow before opening deeper technical documentation.

How the site is edited

Pages are written around concrete user tasks: installing the current package, checking which binary is active, understanding whether an issue belongs to the shell, provider, config file, or upstream behavior, and deciding which page to read next. The site links to source documentation where source verification matters, but the value of the site is the practical path around those sources rather than copying them.

When upstream naming or commands change, the high-priority pages are updated first: the home page, install pages, provider setup, command-not-found troubleshooting, comparison pages, and rename explainers. Older mirrored documentation pages may be kept for reference, but they are not treated as the main editorial value of the site.

What makes the guide useful

  • It separates the old DeepSeek TUI search term from the current CodeWhale product name.
  • It explains which package manager or provider path fits a user’s actual workflow.
  • It focuses on common failure branches instead of only listing commands.
  • It gives users a route from broad confusion to a specific install, config, mode, or troubleshooting page.

Corrections and updates

If a command, package name, provider behavior, or migration note becomes outdated, please send a correction through the contact page. Useful reports include the page URL, the command or paragraph that looks wrong, the platform you tested on, and the current source or output that shows the issue.

Last reviewed: June 10, 2026.