I had an idea of trying to use fstab to make it mount the same way as any other drive, which lead me to this page:
https://github.com/astrada/google-drive-ocamlfuse/wiki/Automounting#mount-using-fstab
Hopefully you can find some clues in there.
I had an idea of trying to use fstab to make it mount the same way as any other drive, which lead me to this page:
https://github.com/astrada/google-drive-ocamlfuse/wiki/Automounting#mount-using-fstab
Hopefully you can find some clues in there.
100 % agree. I don’t mind developers asking for donations, but this seemed too intrusive. Especially with the 20-second timeout to dismiss it. The developer also seemed to have a bit of an attitude in their response.
Oh awesome, thanks for sharing!
I think the name initially referred to WINdows Emulator and was later changed, though I can’t find a good source for it. I wonder why they insist on not calling it an emulator.
Don’t you mean du
?
So I guess vim is also an IDE then? My setup can do all of that.
1. Where do you find what shows/films to watch?
I don’t discover it any certain way but once I know what I’m looking for I just search in qbittorrent. For anime I have RSS feeds set up.
2. Do you stream for convenience or download for superior quality?
I download.
3. Where do you store media?
Internal storage, currently some SSDs.
4. What software are you using to watch it?
mpv + fsr/Anime4K shaders.
5. How do you keep track of your watchlist, which episode you already watched or where you left off in a movie?
I use trackma/taiga with MAL for anime, for regular shows/movies I don’t use anything.
Ooh, neat. There’s also puepy, which was linked further down in this thread. It’s really cool to see more WASM projects pop up.
Somebody should write a python to javascript transpiler for the web…
(please don’t actually do that)
Duck typing moment
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I think odin could be a good fit. I haven’t used it myself. It seems to focus on 3D and game dev.
Maybe it’s still using the borked config because all sessions were not exited? Try exiting it and then make sure no tmux process is still running, by for example running ps -aux | grep tmux
.
Otherwise there must be some tmux config still lying around in your $HOME.
Edit: I don’t know anything about Macs so I’m just assuming it works similar to linux.
Does fzf search hidden folders? You could also try with this, to make extra sure: find $HOME -name "*tmux*"
.
Using a the ubuntu 24.04 docker image for testing, I was able to disable automatic indentation with this config in ~/.config/nvim/init.lua
:
vim.cmd("filetype indent off")
If you prefer using vim
syntax it would instead be the following in ~/.config/nvim/init.vim
:
filetype indent off
Note: it seems this file is not loaded if a init.lua file is present in that directory
Edit to add:
So the reason this is required is, similar to vim (so you may already be familiar with this), there are filetype-specific configurations loaded. These usually reside in /usr/share/nvim/runtime/<plugin/indent/syntax/etc>/<filetype>
. You can configure what files to load using the :filetype
command.
There’s more info here: https://neovim.io/doc/user/filetype.html
Second edit:
Also when filetype indent/plugin/syntax is on, it seems to be loaded after your user config, so it overrides it. You can investigate if your actual config was applied or not by running, for example, :set autoindent?
or :set cindent?
. If the values do not match your configuration, it was likely overridden by :filetype
. This was the case for me.
Are you using treesitter? I think that has an option to handle indentation, but I’m not sure if it’s enabled by default.
I’m swedish and I use EurKEY. It’s basically US but makes it possible to use Å/Ä/Ö through altgr + W/A/O. I don’t write that much swedish so I’m not too bothered, meanwhile the coding advantage is huge for ' " \ | / ? | [ ] { }
.
Oh, and further down, there’s a way with systemd instead.