I don’t think you answered the question on the title. Why should most people not use Slackware?
I don’t think you answered the question on the title. Why should most people not use Slackware?
This website is amazing, thank you for sharing
Simple, but effective. Liked the meme in the readme
If you don’t want to use PowerShell in Linux, there’s also nushell, which is another (non-POSIX) shell that can process Excel files
I liked your guide, but the vocabulary feels a bit too technical for people who have never used Linux before and aren’t tech savvy.
Did you end up posting any implementations to ticalc.org ?
How do you think one should get started with Emacs? Should they start start with regular GNU Emacs or should they install one of the “distros”?
No matter how good or bad the books are, their cover art is so cool
Knowing if a command failed and capturing stderr (which contains stuff like error messages) are not the same thing.
I checked the docs, and I’m a bit confused with one thing. They show that you can capture the stdout of a command into a variabe, but they never show stderr being captured. How would that work?
Pretty interesting theming, I must say
Thanks for the recommendation
h
and l
are overrated, use w
, b
, e
and f
instead.
It’s funny.
deleted by creator
![]()
) for an image to be displayed![a cute black and white cat]()
). This is helpful for blind people to know what your image is about.You made it so that only the currently focused window has 100% opacity, while making the others really transparent. Isn’t that impractical when you are, let’s say, writing some document while checking other windows for information related to what you’re writing? Has there been any situations where something similar happened to you? Since this is your own “rice”, there’s no problem if you never used your computer for stuff like this, but I’m legit curious about it.
Great work :)
I’m afraid this answer isn’t 100% correct. There are ways to find out a file’s type beyond looking at an extension. For example, there are lots of file formats where all of the files start with a specific sequence of bites, known as a file signature (or as “magic bytes” or “magic numbers”).
You can try the
file
command line tool to check that you can find out a file’s format without resorting to its extension, and you can read the tool’s manpage to learn how it works.