guides
ebuku
guides | ebuku | |
---|---|---|
28 | 8 | |
87 | 90 | |
- | - | |
3.2 | 2.9 | |
about 2 months ago | 6 months ago | |
Shell | Emacs Lisp | |
Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
guides
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I Didn’t Learn Unix By Reading All The Manpages
i agree with this piece, as someone who likes man pages to the extent of having ported significant amounts of the s6-ecosystem docs to mdoc(7), and as someone who has also written a number of guides.
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Compiled kernel vs pre compiled kernel?
And the -bin kernel can be used to easily get many of the settings you'll need when you build your own kernel.
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Is there anyway to extract the first page of an epub as image so I can use it in lf previewer
Gah, didn't even consider that the OP might have meant the cover image! Probably at least partly because i know that EPUBs don't necessarily need a cover image - i learnt this as a result of learning how to create a minimal EPUB. (And i actually have many EPUBs without a cover image.)
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I really want to use Gentoo but I'm tired of the compiling
The point is to be able to customise where you want/need to, and to not have to when you don't. The -bin packages for FireFox, LibreOffice and Zig meet my needs, so i use them. i used the -bin package for the kernel to help me create a minimal kernel for my hardware, because messing around with kernel configuration is not my idea of a good time. But more generally, compiling allows me to specify things like: "i want packages compiled with USB and PCRE support where available, but i don't want them compiled with GNOME support."
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Is it all about tuning?
Even though D-Bus is probably most often encountered by people in the context of GUI sessions, it's not specific to that; it can be (and is) used outside of such contexts. The widespread misunderstandings i've encountered about D-Bus over the years led me to write a short guide, "D-Bus: the essentials".
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Freedesktop Notification Error!
(Some related background you might find helpful: a guide i wrote about D-Bus and X sessions).
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Trouble creating OpenRC kernel from gentoo-sources
But more generally, you might find it helpful to refer to this guide i wrote on creating a minimal Gentoo-patched kernel via gentoo-kernel-bin (which can then be regularly updated just like any other Gentoo package).
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Gonna switch to Gentoo
Take advantage of savedconfig where appropriate, e.g. for kernel builds. In particular, this can be used to easily create a minimal kernel for your hardware.
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How to I get sound on Gentoo. I thought I installed the right sound card in my Kernel, but its not working
(Further to this, you might be interested in my guide to creating a minimal kernel for your hardware.)
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The square root symbol looks incomplete, with the extension hanging outside
[a] i've actually written a quickstart guide to writing man pages with mdoc(7), to try to encourage others to use the semantics-oriented mdoc(7) macros for man pages, rather than the presentation-oriented man(7) macros.
ebuku
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Tags, links, subtrees: how to categorize my captures?
Another option is to use something like ebuku.
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Is there anyway to extract the first page of an epub as image so I can use it in lf previewer
i remember looking at that Google style guide a while back, and not being enthused about it. It's true my style across my POSIX scripts isn't yet entirely consistent, as i'm new to writing POSIX shell scripts, and am still working out what's best for me, as the person who's going to be the primary maintainer. Still, i believe my style to be basically consistent within a given script. Having been programming for a few decades now - although i only started coding-for-pay in the late 90s, starting with Perl - i've developed my own preferences regarding code layout (such as in my ELisp packages, e.g. Ebuku), and nowadays take the approach: I'll follow others' style in others' projects, and will generally try to follow common style standards in my own projects, but will modify them as needed when i find they're not conducive to my work.
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PSA: You can't build GCC 11 with mold
Well, indeed, i certainly wasn't expecting you to do so! But i already have more than enough volunteer FOSS stuff on my plate as it is (e.g. Ebuku, pulseaudio-control, s6-man-pages, execline-man-pages and guides, amongst various other things), and not using mold with gcc 11 is no problem for me at this point. So i've just noted the issue with the patch on the wiki page, and the patch will have to be updated by someone for whom it's more important.
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Unix legend, who owes us nothing, keeps fixing foundational AWK code. "'I have tested this a fair amount but clearly more tests are needed,' Kernighan wrote in the email ... 'I will try to submit a pull request. I wish I understood git better'"
Fair point. Still, as a FOSS dev myself, i feel that the title might serve as a useful reminder to a number of their readers. Particularly when so many people use FOSS developed by large corporations, and see themselves as 'customers' entitled to 'responsive service'[a] that those of us who aren't a corporation aren't necessarily in a position to provide (even if we do try to provide 'best effort'). The contents of the screencap for one of my FOSS projects is not random. :-)
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How to organize bookmarks using emacs?
Based on your post headline, i was going to suggest my Ebuku package, an Emacs frontend to the buku Web bookmark manager - i use it myself, and it has support for both tags and comments on links. But it doesn't meet your requirement of capturing from the browser; i copy-and-paste the URL from the browser into an Emacs prompt.
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Compiling OpenBSD's Kernel with -O3 to spot bugs in code idea taken from Phoronix and Linux?
Me asking for actual data about the the extent to which various arguments to the -O flag is me "trying to argue with you" and "having a bad day"? Er, what? i'm saying your assertions might well be correct, but as a dev myself (here's some of the stuff i've been doing during our exchange), i want some concrete data in support of this, because "premature optimisation is the root of all evil" (cf. "Rob Pike's 5 Rules of Programming").
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Desktop setup
Not beyond playing around a bit with Squeak. i like Smalltalk's message-passing approach to OO, and i like how thoroughly modifiable the environment is. i haven't spent enough time to know how easily it can interface with the system on which the image is running; one of the things i like about Emacs is that, in addition to being so modifiable itself, it provides lots of support for interacting with software outside of itself. (E.g. i wrote an Emacs package which provides an Emacs UI for the CLI-based buku Web bookmark manager: Ebuku.)
What are some alternatives?
modprobed-db - Keeps track of EVERY kernel module that has ever been probed. Useful for those of us who make localmodconfig :)
execline-man-pages - mdoc versions of the documentation for the execline suite
org-capture-ref - Extract metadata/bibtex info from websites for org-capture
gentoo-install - A gentoo installer with a TUI interface that supports systemd and OpenRC, EFI and BIOS, as well as variable disk layouts using ext4, zfs, btrfs, luks and mdraid.
pandoc - Universal markup converter
Gentoo-Stuff - Gentoo kernels, Portage configs & Linux things.
s6-man-pages - mdoc(7) versions of the documentation for the s6 supervision suite
mold - Mold: A Modern Linker 🦠
tzc - Time Zone Converter for Emacs
hotfiles - 🏠 A collection of personal configuration files for various rices I have made.
pulseaudio-control - Control PulseAudio volumes from Emacs, via `pactl`.