

Alternatively:
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/io/manip/endl
p.s. The site isn’t entirely mobile friendly
(I’m a cppref lover tbh)
just a trans girl who likes to code and play music
Alternatively:
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/io/manip/endl
p.s. The site isn’t entirely mobile friendly
(I’m a cppref lover tbh)
I’m not entirely sure. It could be similar to HDR support (only available on Wayland), but I would need to look into it to be completely sure.
I’m pretty sure you can disable caps lock (or at least rebind it)
I currently have caps lock rebound to backspace. Maybe it’s a Wayland only feature and you’re using x11? idk
Yeah, it’s pretty difficult. Think of assembly as just one step above writing 1’s and 0’s, and you’re probably around how difficult it can be
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If you’re interested in fedora atomic desktops, I would check out one of the uBlue projects (you can even switch back to plain old fedora atomic if you want)
A website similar to 4chan, but much much worse. They’d dox pretty much anyone they didn’t like, often LGBTQ+ people and allies
Yeah I mostly said that because some distros have different difficulty getting them last I checked, but the wording was unclear to say the least
I use bazzite, and it admittedly isn’t the best for out-of-the-box development work because of it being atomic
You can just make a container for your development, but I’d rather not (I just layer packages atm and I’m working on making my own image based on it that has the stuff I want)
I typically recommend pop!_os over Manjaro
Realistically, though, most distros will work well for gaming if you install steam, proton-up, and maybe lutris so long as you don’t need Nvidia drivers
I disagree. I’ve used KDE’s discover thingy to install stuff basically through dnf on fedora. It’s incredibly possible for the average user, who basically just browses the web and maybe writes documents.
I’d be willing to bet it’s people fearing another xz-like situation
NixOS configuration is done entirely through code, so all of your packages are in a list (although that list can be spread across multiple files; it’s a bit to explain)
I’ve found it can be easier to manage what you have installed, since you can just look at that list and go “oh, why do I still have xyz installed, idek what that does anymore”
I appreciate the way things are configured a lot, but I would not recommend it unless you really like coding and you have time to tinker. It’s not too hard to get simple config setup, but I spiraled down a deep rabbit hole really quickly.
EDIT: If my comment for some reason persuaded you to use NixOS, I recommend you get a basic config setup before installing it. I’d also recommend you look at how annoying it can be to run dynamically-linked applications (i.e. you download a random executable off the Internet and try to run it, or you try to run something you downloaded with npm)