I just prefer the vim bindings and motions, not an obsession. I use diff tools almost daily and can manage in them with no issues, but whenever I can use vim binding I will because they just feel better to me.
I just prefer the vim bindings and motions, not an obsession. I use diff tools almost daily and can manage in them with no issues, but whenever I can use vim binding I will because they just feel better to me.
That’s why for tables and katex equations I used plugins to help me with then to not be rough.
As for other stuff than vim, minimize the nees for them if it really gets hard.
Mkdnflow is the one that I used to use and it does so many things amazingly for writting markdown easier
Why would you wanna quit if vim works for you?
Plus vim can be an amazing markdown editor with a few dedicated plugins.
Imaginr living somewhere where tap water isn’t clean.
Gnome*
It has support for it tho.
FFmpeg enters the chat
Sed comes into play there, or :%s in vim, whichever you prefer ;)
I tend to grow my fleet of servers every couple months, and that requires me to once again setup everything from the beginning, settings, sshd, update debian if old version, new user for ssh, docker/podman, …
Quite literally added new vps to my fleet yesterday and spent 4 hourson setting all that up, when it could have been a simple ansible script.
Luckilly no, just self interest.
Fun fact: I actually run nixos on my main pc.
This sounds amazing!
You have any good resources to recommend for learning ansible?
Do I seem like I can see your face whike you are making this post and realize it’s a joke?
Yea it’s really amazing
Sorry if I made you feel that way.
I selfhost audiobookshelf for all my podcast needs.
It’s discord like interface and I plan on only having selfhosted related content on it, mostly just for people to help one another in a more “well known” way of discord and real time chatting.
Sure, will test out today or tomorrow.
I was talking for the op in that part tho, it can be seen from the context