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deleted by creator
Its kinda annoying for anyone not on debian or fedora (and derivatives) though.
Try using distrobox arch. I did that on nixos and after some troubleshooting I got it to work.
Looks like there’s an emacs package for elastic tab stops.
If you use org mode, you can use this https://github.com/misohena/el-easydraw. Its a basic drawing tool in emacs.
The nix package manager can be used on any os and doesn’t require usage of the nix programming language…
flatpak run also doing that
The org.foo.bar thing is done so that multiple packages with the same name can coexist. It’s a design choice, not something that gets fixed. It would be nice to be able to type in the name of the package and it looks for the package like in flatpak remove and install though.
I’m using a cpu from 2013 and gaming in containers seems to work as well as it does outside of containers.
Usually people like to maximize the height of windows, especially to have 2 windows side by side, so it just conceptually makes a lot of sense to have every window have the maximum height and just add windows horizontally so they are actually visible like in normal tiling window managers. Maximizing the width of windows doesn’t really make that much sense honestly, because most horizontal space is wasted because theres so much horizontal space compared to vertical space.
I’m on amd
In my experience, any HDMI’s or Display Ports plugged into my GPU have terrible performance on Wayland while working perfectly on X11, so it seems there are still problems. Though tbf X11 doesn’t work at all with HDMI’s plugged into my motherboard so it could be a hardware issue? I have a 11 year old motherboard so idk.
If you hold down the mouse button while hovering over the address bar, that starts selecting stuff. Is there a reason your usecase isn’t covered by this?
I just use distrobox on NixOS.
Ctrl-C halts whatever is running in your terminal though. To be fair, I’ve always just used Ctrl-Shift-C because thats closer to my hand.
There’s a guide here to show Japanese fonts by default and also how to configure your browser to show Japanese fonts by default.
Nix flakes are a feature of the nix package manager to make nix packages more reproducible.
There are extensions for obsidian compatability in Vim and Emacs.
I think he’s probably talking about Macbooks, since MacOS comes with zsh instead of bash and is certified unix.
osu! is a free and open source rhythm game. Its pretty much the best pc rhyrhm game.