Yup, pull requests are an invention from git’s servers (I think github came up with that first). The built in way (famously used by the linux kernel) is git-send-email.
Yup, pull requests are an invention from git’s servers (I think github came up with that first). The built in way (famously used by the linux kernel) is git-send-email.
Oh, didn’t knew about Alt d
. Thx
When I’m unsure, I ls <the-glob>
, chek, then replace ls
with rm
.
Just use this one… or any of this 4 others.
This is the issue for us, python outsiders. Each time we try we get a different answer with new tools. We are outside of the comtunity, we don’t know the trend, old and new, pro and cons.
Your first recommandation is hatch… first time I’ve heard of it. Uv seems trendy in this thread, but before that it was unknown to me too.
As I understands it, it should be pip’s job. When it detect I’m in a project it install packages in it and python use them. It can use any tool under the hood, but the default package manager shoud be able to do it on its own.
On that note, I’m hesitant between writing my scripts in perl or python right now. Bash prevent sharing with Windows peoples… I just want to provide easy wrappers tools that are usually aroud 10 lines of shell, but testers ain’t on linux so they cannot use them.
I don’t know perl, but each time I interract with pyton’s projects I have a different venv/poetry/… to setup. Forget adout it the next time and nothing is kept easy to reuse.
I know simple fossify apps are appreciated by the comminity. I have yet to try them. I like Etar as a calendar. It is also on FDroid
Where can I learn what each colors means? Is it buried in man htop
somewhere? Or in a website?
and you won’t use At “just” for a bit of concurrency. Right ?
Is “At” a typo?
Yes I wanted to talk about the Qt Framework. But with that much ways to do concurrency in the language’s core, I suspect you would use this framework for more than just its signal/slots feature. Like if you want their data structures, their network or GUI stack, …
I’m not using Python, but I love to know the quirks of each languages.
Wow coming from C++/Rust I was about to answer that both are parallelism. I did not knew about python’s GIL. So I suppose this is the preferred way to do concurrency, there is no async/await, and you won’t use Qt “just” for a bit of concurrency. Right ?
We learn a little bit everyday. Thanks!
Yeah, I’d rather register cls play <id, name or path>
in streampi or other macro box.
Especially if cls let me add new sounds and configure things easily.
Like I see having multiples “public laughing”, so when starting the sound any can be played. Which provide a bit of variety in the stream. And allow to repeat the sound for a longer effect on the fly without being too repetitive.
I read that global hotkey is not possible in Wayland. Or, at least, not as easily as with XOrg. Did you achived it ? Can you link to where you are doing it in your code please ? I’m curious, especially since its the first time I heard global hotkeys from a terminal program.
I try not to use global hotkeys myself. Do you have another way of controlling the soundboard ? Either from websocket, DBus, launching a command, … I like to use streampi1 (open source streamdeck clone) for streaming and it may use any of this interraction methods. (Websocket may require to write a plugin for yëur program.)
1 Streampi as stopped developpment for now in its v2 snapshots. Still usable. But the dev want to rewrite in C++/Qt for a v3.
Did you tried UnCiv ? Feels like garbage to play to me. Maybe it is just too complete for my mobile game sessions… (And I don’t really like civilisation turn based games anymore.)
Mindustry (factorio like) plays badly on mobile (everything is too small, touch is not precise need to zoom a lot but you don’t see anything/can’t build long belt that way). But now I want to play it on PC.
On the other hand, Feudal Tactics is really nice to play on mobile.