I went from GUI to terminal and I’ll never go back. Especially with interactive add, git add -i
I went from GUI to terminal and I’ll never go back. Especially with interactive add, git add -i
Portable monitors have been extremely convenient when I used to travel to a client site to program. A cheap one is worth getting.
Debian is 30 years old for a reason.
That’s really freaking cool! Thanks for sharing! What was the work effort for this amount of progress? I’d like to do this with my next house.
Do you mind sharing pictures of what this looks like?
What on earth is that picture?
Wait what
Just use Debian tbh
What is Zelda 3?
HP stands for heinous product.
And honestly, nano as the default makes sense, it’s lightweight and gets the job done. I still have that as my default.
Honestly, most of the defaults are good enough for me. I just run vi and it does the job well enough. If I need to configure a good dev environment, I’ll just install stuff with apt-get install and mangle stuff onto my PATH.
Java is absolutely not dying… unfortunately. Billions of people depend on spaghetti code written by corporations every day. I think Java will be the next COBOL. It won’t die and it’s unfortunate.
Debian, because I can just have a computer without needing to fiddle with a million things. I work in tech and don’t want to mess with any more code or configurations if I’m on my own computer. It’s worked for me for 5 years and has worked for others for 30 years.
Test driven development has really helped me understand bugs and functional changes well. Doing a red green change has done wonders for me over the years.
Try it out. It is a great utility.