Gatekeeping the word “software” here?
Here’s something not in the AUR. Tested on arch
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Gatekeeping the word “software” here?
Here’s something not in the AUR. Tested on arch
If it’s C or C++, I get the source from the project’s GitHub / GitLab / Source Hosting thing and compile it for myself.
For programming languages that I don’t read, I usually use the AUR.
Also,
I hear what I say and it feels unpleasant.
Also, I don’t like adding senseless* words in my speech.
* Unless it’s funny or sth.
I see. When using X11, I was using xinput
to set MMB scrolling, but at that time, it had the problem of activating the MMB paste function, if I didn’t click and hold properly.
Over time, my habits changed and I kinda stopped using it. But maybe I’ll try again once it comes in Plasma 6.2 (it’s actually in beta rn)
Should’ve Open Sourced the CENC. Now they pay the price.
Everyone* saw it coming.
Firefox will still cause a paste though, so you have to disable it separately over there.
As an “arch btw” user, you should know, you need to configure your stuff yourself.
Otherwise, you’re just an arch user.
KDE once made it easier with a GUI https://pointieststick.com/2024/07/05/this-week-in-kde-autoscrolling/
This should be coming in 6.2, I suppose. Until then, you can do it with libinput
I wish that worked everywhere, but it doesn’t.
Unless you’re on Linux
Macintosh heat sinking into ice-caps.
Wise Mac users move to Antarctica to prolong the life of the badly cooled devices.
OIC. Good to know in case I ever have to work on some old CentOS 5 box lying around ever again.
It also looks kinda proper, using that instead of the , so when making shell scripts, I might want to prefer this.
I didn’t get that.
Checked the man
and it’s not deprecated. So what does it have to do with “old”?
I would have a problem if a terminal app were to do something like this, but for GUI apps, it is expected for them to make stuff easier.
And I feel like, if you were to use a slash in a file name, it would most probably be either an “or” slash or a fraction slash, so the substitution is fine in my books.
illegal characters
Not sure about calling it that, considering it is a standard UTF-8 character. (0x2044 in UTF-16)
Well, considering that I am with coworkers who don’t remember when to and not to put the ‘/’ at the start of the file path (despite me explaining it to them multiple times), “slash e t c” is probably the better way.
Yeah, but we don’t know if we can do the case sensitive thingy on that, or do we?
Just tried. It processes the escape first and then finds the path with it. Essentially, making it look into a directory made by the characters before the \/
.
The above was when I tried:
echo "asd" > asd\/dsa
But then I tried using Dolphin (GUI File Browser) to make a file and:
❯ ls
1 2 3 4 'asd\⁄sad.txt'
❯ ls
1 2 3 4 asd⁄sad.txt
In the first one, the backslash is not the escape character, but part of the text.
Turns out Dolphin just replaces the forward slash with U+2044 “Fraction Slash” character, hence, not requiring any escape. I’d call that cheating, but it works well.
Isn’t there an application on Windows that allows you to open ext4? You check it out on that
I too expected it to be “et cetera”.
I used to pronounce it like yuzr, knowing that it wasn’t user, but not knowing what it was.
Now I have better context. Maybe I’ll go with U.S.R.
I don’t intend on pushing that one to the AUR. It’s not worth it.
Maybe I’ll make an AppImage at most.
I don’t know any formal requirements for it being on AUR, but I just feel like this one does not fit there.