Limitless_screaming

joined 1 year ago
[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 17 points 6 months ago

This isn't a replacement for cut & past. It's for creating a new folder and moving the files into it, not to an existing folder.

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 3 points 6 months ago (1 children)

It's not missing a feature here, it just has a different way to do it. Pick the Ellipse selection tool, make an oval while holding "shift", right click > Edit > stroke selection.

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 4 points 7 months ago (1 children)

It has been on unstable since Arch had it. Unstable is just mirroring Arch repos. So it wouldn't give you any idea of when the update will reach stable.

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 1 points 9 months ago (3 children)

How does pacman work compared to apt-get ? and how to find in which package an command lies. I struggled a bit to get lsinput (to configure a rudder pedal for flight sim)

Manjaro has Pamac installed out of the box. Its commands are much more readable:

Install: pamac install {software} Remove: pamac remove {software} Update: pamac update. You can just run man pamac and read that, it's concise and self explanatory.

You can also use Pamac-gtk (the GUI app-store). I recommend the GTK4 version. Just run sudo pamac install pamac-gtk it will prompt you to replace pamac-gtk3.

You can enable the AUR by opening the GUI store (it will be called "add/remove software" in the app menu) > three dot menu > preferences (will prompt for password) > third party > Enable AUR support.

Only use the AUR as a last resort; check if the app is on flathub first, then the official repos, and finally check the AUR. You can add flatpak support by installing the flatpak package and the libpamac-flatpak-plugin optional dependency.

If you want updates to be as fast as they'd be on Arch you can switch to the unstable branch, and now you can't blame Manjaro for your AUR problems.

and how to find in which package an command lies.

I am not sure what this means, but if you meant how to check what commands a package provides, then you can search for the package in the app-store and scroll down to "provides" everything under that section is commands the package provides.

I am struggling a bit with Zsh, like I ended up starting bash to configure an environment variable, any ressources on-it. Or shall I simply change my setting (and how) to use bash that I know a bit.

You can edit the ~/.zshrc file to add your aliases and permanent environment variables.

On Arch based distros you can also add environment variables in the /lib/environment.d file as KEY=value, for setting firefox to use Wayland for example.

If you want to switch from ZSH to BASH here's how.

It was the same architecture but with more nodes and data

So the architecture just needed more data to generate useful answers. I don't think that was an accident.

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 76 points 10 months ago (3 children)

Fedora 39
Manjaro 23
Ubuntu 23
Linux Mint 21
Debian 12

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 5 points 10 months ago

Kernel version 6 currently 6.7.0

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I'll try out Privacy Badger. I never got an ad on Firefox except for this one.

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 6 points 10 months ago (2 children)

There's a loud ad for "Duolingo super" that has a high chance of showing up after every lesson. Also using Firefox with Ublock installed, and it's still here.

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 35 points 10 months ago

Now he'll be having a few bad years.

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 3 points 10 months ago

Snap sucks, but not for the reason OP stated. There's a decillion reasons for why Snaps suck, why make up a reason that applies to other formats that are actually good?

[–] Limitless_screaming@kbin.social 5 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (4 children)

written in Rust.

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