I also found this, It’s for a RaspberryPi but surely can be adapted:
https://gist.github.com/seffs/2395ca640d6d8d8228a19a9995418211
I also found this, It’s for a RaspberryPi but surely can be adapted:
https://gist.github.com/seffs/2395ca640d6d8d8228a19a9995418211
You can look at the source of the snap and check what it does
I don’t have any experience with your exact question.
But I would look into xinit and try if you can start just mpv.
If this doesn’t work look for a slim WM and configer it that the applications are displayed in fullscreen and launch mpv after the WM.
Probably any of the tiling window managers should work: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Window_manager
I agree, I wouldn’t suggest arch to a newbie either, but OP said he has experience with arch
I daily drive Arch for about 7 years, therefore I’m clearly biased. But I love Arch for the AUR and the ease of getting packages. For me, it is the best OS on desktop to get things done. For other use cases, I would probably choose a different OS, but desktop is Arch all the way.
But you’r mileage may vary.
So many forks for something that can be solved entirely with bash inbuilts
+1 for nix, but I wouldn’t recommend it as a first distro
If you create an image of the disk in the current state from a live boot or an other machine. You can try fixing it without having to risk making things worse
I agree on your take, but I don’t think that “future scaling” is a concern for the most home users.
How could you tell it was secure?
Just mount it to a fixed location in /etc/fstab
, but use a mount option like nofail
or nobootwait
(quick search showed that this is the option for ubuntu users), so your machine still boots when the drive is not connected
Maybe he is just seeding Linux ISOs on the private trackers
I have a custom split keyboard (lily58) and use the neo special character layer as my lower layer
Just use any distro you like and install the packages you need. Done.
Sounds good,
but would the preferred way be to use a wrapper type, which holds either the data or the error and avoid exceptions completely?
I’m currently learning functional languages and have only limited knowledge, but from what I’ve read now you are right. Throwing exceptions is pure, but catching them is impure.
In this case I guess the printLine function can throw an exception therefore the calling function must be declared with Exception?
Yes, in functional programming you want to use pure functions. Exceptions are impure, therefore it has to be declared.
Other functional languages don’t even have exceptions
There are no imports, these are type annotations
I would remove the keybinding Ctrl + Alt + T for opening the terminal in the README for distros like Arch and Gentoo.
It depends on the installed DE/WM and can be incorrect depending on the users config
*qbittorrent