I was going to point to visual.nvim as a possible middle ground, but it's now archived :(
Disclaimer: I haven't actually tested it myself
I was going to point to visual.nvim as a possible middle ground, but it's now archived :(
Disclaimer: I haven't actually tested it myself
It does, yeah. Still, having access to the official client too would be nice.
Very nice, I do hope that helps us finally get a Linux version sometime soon lol
+1 for bazzite, if I wasn't a NixOS cultist it's probably what I'd still be daily driving. Stable, easy rollbacks, keeps itself updated as long as you reboot now and then. Just a great experience all around.
Atomic distros are still distros, op never excluded that particular kind
I am not sure if JS has something similar, but this often helps by a lot
It does, the some/every array methods would achieve the same results. I use them quite often myself!
Damn, I didn't even realize that was doable lol. At least the nix part, the rest definitely sounds like stuff I might've accidentally done myself while learning the ropes.
Maybe consider a Hetzner storage box. They support borg, restic, rsync and probably more, there's no ingress or egress fees and you get unlimited traffic. Very nice for off-site backups if, like myself, you're on a limited budget.
Good point, I didn't get into reddit that early but it definitely rings familiar
Oh I don't think it's all techies, but they definitely make up a good chunk of the userbase. Hard agree on it feeling more chill too, I'd been kinda afraid to comment anything on reddit before I left.
I know it's arguably part of why it's intimidating to your average newcomer but I adore that it's mostly nerdy techies lol. I'm so used to dropping something vaguely technical and being met with the online equivalent of blank stares so people being willing and able to engage with that sort of thing is super nice!
Yeah I'm with you there, vanilla helix meets basically 90% of my needs so I'm not in any real rush to change