

If everything else fails, there’s always an option of defining your own keymap and enabling it in initrc.
If everything else fails, there’s always an option of defining your own keymap and enabling it in initrc.
Admittedly, I’m probably not the best person to ask for recommendation of a noob-friendly distro, but I feel people are overthinking this. If someone produces a list which includes distros I’ve never heard of, I think they spent too much time on ‘Top 10 Noob Friendly Distros in 2025’ websites.
If you really care about my recommendation, just start with Mint.
PS. I should also add, this isn’t criticism of you or any other new user who does search online for recommendation. This is more a comment on state of the Internet where there are so many websites which seem to pad their list with obscure distros where really all such articles should give recommendation for one of the same three distributions. Which three I don’t exactly know.
src/*
will skip hidden files. You want rsync -avAXUNH src/ dst
which copies contents of src
into dst
. Notice the trailing slash in src/
. Without the slash, src
is copied into dst
so you end up with a src
directory in dst
. The AXUNH
enables preserving more things. You might also add --delete
if you’re updating the copy.
PS. I should also mention how I end up with -avAXUNH
. Simple:
$ man rsync |grep ' -. *preserve'
--hard-links, -H preserve hard links
--perms, -p preserve permissions
--executability, -E preserve executability
--acls, -A preserve ACLs (implies --perms)
--xattrs, -X preserve extended attributes
--owner, -o preserve owner (super-user only)
--group, -g preserve group
--times, -t preserve modification times
--atimes, -U preserve access (use) times
--crtimes, -N preserve create times (newness)
and then include all that. a
covers some of those options and those
don’t have to be set explicitly:
$ man rsync |grep ' -a ' |head -n1
--archive, -a archive mode is -rlptgoD (no -A,-X,-U,-N,-H)
What others wrote except don’t use dd
. Use rsync
or make a backup with tar
. dd
will waste time reading unallocated regions of the disk.
I meant what’s the link to use since the same Lemmy post can be viewed through different instances and on each it has a different URL. It’s a bit user-hostile that the link gets you out of your instance (unless you’re on the same instance as author of the post).
Yeah, my bad. I should have linked to the previous post: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/32637183 (not entirely sure what’s the etiquette for linking to posts on Lemmy is).
Yeah, it’s a bit philosophical.
bind -x '"\C-j":"echo a"'
in bash and Ctrl+J will do something different.stty
options which can change that though.Yes. So is Ctrl+J actually. Ctrl+J corresponds to line feed (LF) and Ctrl+M corresponds to carriage return (CR) ASCII characters. They are typically treated the same way.
Yes, I agree. But the dispute is what ‘sends EOF’ actually means. The article I respond to claims Ctrl+D doesn’t send EOF but is like Enter except that new line character is not sent. This is, in some sense true, but as I explain also misleading.
You could pass $1
and $got
through $(realpath -P -- ...)
to make sure all the path are in canonical form. Though now that I’m thinking about it, stat
is probably a better option anyway:
want=/path/to/target/dir
pattern=$(stat -c^%d:%i: -- "$want")
find "$HOME" -type l -exec stat -Lc%d:%i:%n {} + | grep "$pattern"
You want ++OK, actually not exactly. readlink -f
rather than ls -l
.readlink
won’t print path to the symlink so it’s not as straightforward.++
Also, you want +
in find ... -exec ... +
rather than ;
.
At this point I feel committed to making readlink work. ;) Here’s the script you want:
#!/bin/sh
want=$1
shift
readlink -f -- "$@" | while read got; do
if [ "$got" = "$want" ]; then
echo "$1"
fi
shift
done
and execute it as:
find ~ -type l -exec /bin/sh /path/to/the/script /path/to/target/dir {} +
I’ve Pulse 14 with plain Debian installation and so far didn’t notice any issues. Though admittedly, I’m not a heavy laptop user. Your mileage may vary I guess.
I used Claws Mail at some point in the past. Now notmuch+Emacs.
Why do you think it would affect performance?
You cannot write setuid scripts. It must be a binary.
The thread linked by the OP is Jarkko Sakkinen (kernel maintainer) seemingly saying “show your work, your patch is full of nonsense” in a patch submitted for review to the Linux kernel.
That’s not what he’s saying. He’s saying: ‘You’re using terms which aren’t that familiar to everyone. Could you explain them?’
If you have an SVG image you can either embed it directly on the website, or link it using img
tag. Whatever the case, there’s no need to export it to PNG.
And yes, that will likely result in a smaller website and furthermore images which can scale smoothly.
Another interesting part is that HTML5 supports embedding SVG. That is, you can put SVG code directly in your HTML5 document and it’s going to render correctly. You can also style it through your website’s CSS file and manipulate the elements via JavaScript.
Though as others pointed out, it’s technically not HTML but XML. For
example, you have to close all the elements and quote all the
attribute values. But when you embed it inside a HTML document, those
rules get relaxed to adhere with HTML. (I.e., you cannot write
<circle r=5>
in SVG (it must be <circle r="5" />
) but you can when
you embed it in HTML).
Who cares what anyone on r/macos thinks.