

For me a web app IDE includes a DB manger, HTML previewer, etc.
A text editor edits text, an IDE is an Environment that Integrates Development tools.
Programmer by day, burnt out by night.
For me a web app IDE includes a DB manger, HTML previewer, etc.
A text editor edits text, an IDE is an Environment that Integrates Development tools.
Funny you say that, I dual boot Bazzite and Mint, for gaming and everything else including programming, respectively.
Bazzite is a pain to install and use CLI applications in, but it’s got a great default setup for gaming!
I didn’t have terminal transparency available OOTB, and it didn’t find my Nvidea GPU drivers, either.
Ubuntu-based Mint does, for me.
Okay now I got it from your explanation, thanks!
By the way, the first two Shadertoys aren’t working for me, I just get “:-( We either didn’t find the page you were looking for, or there was an internal error.”. The third one works, though…
You can eat an elephant, just one bite at a time!
How about one example for starters, to whet our appetites?
LMAO they’re not they’re into lean-buff, babyface Korean actors and anime guys.
Exactly, you’re only going to learn that they’re going to be a dick (𓂸) to you right now, that’s about it.
Exactly, they’re the ones caring about a 50 cents packet of garlic sauce, green text OP is caring about this system falling apart!
Maybe I’m misunderstanding you but isn’t that screen tearing?
User name doesn’t check out.
I interpreted your message wrong, now I get it, thanks!
Thanks for the clear explanation!
If I found the correct repo it seems like it’s MIT licenced which is very permissive, as well.
- ability to rollback to previous versions
I think apt
handles this, as well, no?
All the other reasons are very valid, though! Especially the transactional updates!
And they give you more control over the permissions that you give the application; packages from apt, yay, etc. get full filesystem access by default even if they contain a bug or malicious code, flatpaks can be walled off by you very well.
That’s some Morrowind face texture looking stuff.
I feel like an edit with USB buses is in order.
Aii caramba, that’s pretty… Well standard for the US by now, but still.
I’ve found it needed a lot of extra steps, plus fidgeting with the OSTree defeats some of the safety/stability of it all. Bazzite, at least, recommends against using OSTree blindly as that’s meant for sysconfig and recommends using Homebrew instead, as this lives in your user space and touches very little; but even installing
libqalculate
gives memory issues. Most things I attempted to install did, actually. The Ruby interpreter installed just fine, and was the only CLI program that installed just fine IIRC.Now, I feel like it’s less of a hassle to Just Use Mint®, especially since I’ve got it installed anyway.