Guix is so good that it doesn’t need flakes
Bio at @optimal@calckey.social
Guix is so good that it doesn’t need flakes
There are right click menus in Fragments, I don’t see why other apps don’t have them.
GNOME isn’t based around GTK, it uses a fork of Clutter that now lives inside of Mutter.
I’m sorry… Gentoo? Mom’s Laptop? …
Give tmux or emacs a try. Or just use Kitty.
GTK2->GTK3 was a major leap. For something like a GUI toolkit, changes and advancements are inevitable. A GTK4 port would be much less difficult, as the developer-facing changes are an order of magnitude smaller.
You should know, Shepherd is extremely power. Because you do everything in scheme, you can use regular programming constructs and hack on it with a REPL. It’s written in Scheme (Guile) by itself, the same Scheme used for Guix.
Fucking hate YAML. With every fibre of my being. YAML needs tO GTFO
blursing.
I went Fedora. Haven’t regretted it.
Emacs, if you’re willing to go down that rabbit hole.
Even native apps usually use cross-platform toolkits which usually have very good Linux support. E.g. Qt, .NET, WxWidgets, GTK (maybe)
I use Pano. Very handy little thing.
I don’t know, that was my experience on KDE. I got it to behave and look the way I wanted, but it was slow, buggy, and prone to crashing. I’ve never gone near anything “customizable” since.
the KDE users really are being salty with this one
I’m sure you could make it look like whatever your head meat blob can come up with, but eventually you’re five hours deep in a rabbit hole nobody has ever gone down and uncovering software bugs that god himself didn’t know about, just trying to make the damn thing usable.
On GNOME, I don’t have to worry about any of that - the OOTB experience is just fine. For anyone.
The way you work might not be the best way to work. That’s kind of the realization I had to have to use GNOME - now using anything else feels like a chore.
also, IRC logs are usually public and searchable. that’s actually how we got hunter2