

OpenSuse Slowroll does pretty much that, a slightly delayed rolling release.


OpenSuse Slowroll does pretty much that, a slightly delayed rolling release.
Like someone noted in the vimtex issue you linked, I use UltiSnips together with snippet definitions from vim-snippets, which works pretty well with the begin snippet. vim-snippets includes a bunch more snippets too which I find quite useful, particularly for LaTeX. I don’t know the vsnip plugins you mentioned but they can probably do the same.
I really like kitty. It is fast and simple but gives me all the features I would want.
lemmy.made.me.look.at.this.each.time.i.open.a.terminal
Hostnames can be up to 64 characters long in Linux.
That’s sad that Mozilla has to take it into their own hands to provide a proper alternative to Snap Firefox.
Yeah, not gonna do that.


I have also switched to Colemak and my advice is to just not do that. Just learn Colemak without looking at the keyboard, it’ll make you a better typist anyway and you can get comfortable with it within a few weeks. In particular you don’t want to move the little knobs on the index finger keys (F and J).


The hexagon minecraft one is neat.


I want to make a joke about how terrible the name is with just throwing in an ‘a’, but I don’t think it would be right since I’m using Fira Code.


I still don’t see how having a flat subvolume layout would make that more problematic. You can still (even better in my opinion) choose what subvolumes to automatically snapshot, which to include in backups etc.


Yes, that seems correct to me. I would also say that the flat layout is preferable because it makes dealing with snapshots later easier. When snapshotting the rootfs subvolume you won’t have to keep track of where exactly the home subvolume is located and it is easier to boot into a different rootfs snapshot.


man -k
Everyone is having fun playing air guitar, though bad they may be at it. Except the beige dude who forgot his air guitar at home.


My experience is you should try to always use find over ls when writing robust scripts, and consider ls as just an end user tool, not a scripting tool.
I knew that shell files, especially in build systems can get hard to read, but this was absolutely painful to look at from start to finish, even with the very helpful explanations in between. Of course the obfuscation is mostly done by design in this case.