Then I offer my apologies for speaking too harshly. And thank you for another perspective on software, I did not think about shapes much before
Then I offer my apologies for speaking too harshly. And thank you for another perspective on software, I did not think about shapes much before
Also, vim-like mode in IDE gives me a headache too :)
Tried, it irritates me. And nope, I never said my workflow is the best. I answered to your “wild” part. There is nothing wild in coding in vim. And yes, people proclaiming vim family is the greatest thing there is are no better than people proclaiming that only full-fledged IDE can get any job done
So I re-state the same n-th time over: I, and many other devs, have no need to draw anything. So I, and many other devs, will choose whatever works for us, and there is exactly nothing wild in doing so
It may be, but really it doesn’t even matter to me. I will choose the tool that can do that using command line anyway
It’s wild to me that people that people use VIM in professional software development settings
Ya, sure. wild that professional software development does not begin and end with 3d shapes. Great worldvew, thanks
Lol I am not making 3d shapes in the first place. Anyway, here ya go: 1,2,3
4,5,6
7,8,9
10,11,12
Do you need an explanation for that?
Yup, last time I installed Ubuntu it was that, one partition. So now, what has @henfredemars got “not right”?
which is so much better and intuitive than Linux installer creating exactly one partition, right?
that is not VSCode default, so nah. once again: I have no time for battling against software
and if I do not want the GUI part, how come it surprises you that I do not use that superset?
Aand why the hell does it do that? And why the hell count is more than one? And while we are at it, what is so deadly and frightening with Linux installer creating a partition?
You have overdone the pedantic part, so I will do the same: GUI has objectively way more visual noise, so exactly in professional software development setting I prefer using NeoVim with plugins, configured by me for my convenience, because I have no intention of spending any extra effort, and more importantly, thought, on whatever the IDE decided I must need. I want to think about the task at hand, not memorize the finger-twisting magical shortcuts or mouse-clicking several menu layers to do one damn simple thing
Lolwat. Last time I installed windows it literally created 3 partitions exactly when I told it “this clean disk - here ya go”
I would say “why not, to each their own” if not the thought about what else the filemanager is going to do with root access (like downloading data from web for file preview). But the general sentiment still stands, it is absurd to think that computer must be used only in one way by all people
Easier solutions for what, exactly? Changing desktop wallpaper? Adjusting volume level? Connecting to a WiFi?
Ehm, your friend should really hold ma beer.
Windows: ok, where files of program N? Let’s check: C:/Program files? Or Program files (x86)? Why do I happen to see same program in both?
Ah, Documents/N? Maybe. But empty
C:/AppData/(or whatever that is called)…fucking_hell? With fucking invisible folders? Really?
As to the actual question, I remember just googling the standard, got some idea back then. Now found https://linuxhandbook.com/linux-directory-structure/ should be good enough (I guess, being used to reading software docs does change views on what is good/bad and also builds tolerance to detailed descriptions)
The point was that you have to manually remove them, not create
Or maybe I missed the EFI partition when run gparted after installation, it being much smaller than rest of the drive