The Handmaid’s Tale
We
Nightfall
The Terminal Experiment
I guess it’s time for a “mark this time so I can go back to it” feature, to reduce the need to pause. 🤷♂️
Tried a Typematrix. At the time, I was a roving freelancer who frequently worked with other people at their machines, so I decided that it was safer to stick with a conventional layout.
Having Enter on the thumb was interesting, but I never got used to it.
It looks like I have a great place to land if fzf ever starts to make my life difficult. Thank you!
I’m annoyed when things don’t work. I’m even more annoyed when something can’t be made to work.
I find the first kind of annoyance much more ephemeral.
Now I know where to go when I feel like I’m ready for native-level input in Swedish!
Omnibus.
I use copyq for this purpose. It doesn’t do exactly what you’ve asked for, but it solves a very similar underlying problem.
This is the reason I liked kakoune right away after I started using it: select, then act, and every movement is also a selection.
Computers don’t directly understand the code that humans write. Humans find it extremely difficult to directly write the code that computers understand.
Compiling is how we convert the code that humans write into the code that computers can run. (It’s more complicated than that, but that explanation is probably enough for now.)
Different computers understand different flavors of computer code. Each kind of computer can compile the same human code, but they produce the flavor of computer code specific to that kind of computer. That’s why you sometimes need to compile the human code on your computer: it’s easier for your computer to know how to compile human code than for a human to know how to compile human code for every kind of computer that exists now and might exist in the future. There are some common kinds of computer and many projects pre-compile human code so that you don’t have to, but that’s not always easy. Also, some people insist on compiling the code themself, rather than trust someone else to correctly compile the code for their computer.
As for how to compile, that can be complicated. When you find the human code (“source code”) for a software project, the README often gives you instructions for how to compile that project’s code. Many of the instructions look familiar, because they are similar between projects, but the detail can vary a lot from project to project. Moreover, different human programming languages have very different instructions for how to compile their flavor of human code into computer code.
I finally build something nontrivial in jq, then this happens…
A few times per year. Mostly janitorial work.
Thank you. What makes the learning curve bad in your opinion? I only tried it for a few minutes.
Now we need a comparison article about fff, ranger, and nnn. I chose ranger, but quite arbitrarily at the time. I tried nnn, but my fingers kept being used to ranger.
And just in case it’s helpful: https://github.com/phaazon/kak-tree-sitter
Write comments that explain why the code isn’t obvious just by reading it. Why did you do things the long way? What did you need to work around? Why didn’t you do the thing that anyone reading the code would expect you to do?
Also write comments that explain the purpose of the functions you use, in case the names of those functions don’t make it clear on their own.