firenvim
guix
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firenvim
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The Emacs Curse: When Everything Else Just Feels Inferior 😱🧙♂️
Also not Emacs, but https://github.com/glaucambre/firenvim is quite impressive
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What do you use to edit code?
I use neovim 100% of the time. Whether for small scripts or large. On all of my machines, and on my main one in the browser as well (with firenvim). The speed and power are unmatched and unmatchable.
guix
- Nix – A One Pager
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Pkl, a Programming Language for Configuration
> So what we are missing now is a 500GB framework that can write the config file for the programming language that is writing a config file for the actual program I wish to use.
That exists since 1960. It's called LISP. The e.g. https://guix.gnu.org/ uses with great success, the Guile Scheme dialect of LISP, to be precise. And FYI the "framework" is:
$ ls --human-readable --size $(readlink $(which guile))
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NixOS: Declarative Builds and Deployments
> inventing a brand new purely functional language programming language.
ISTM that if you dislike that, then there's GUIX.
https://guix.gnu.org/
Very briefly, AFAICT, it's "Nix but using Scheme".
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Linux saved my life
And just wait till you discover Arch Linux, Gentoo, Guix, or NixOS.
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The nicest web browser of 2023 uses Lisp.
https://guix.gnu.org for example. It did load before an update but it doesn't anymore.
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Java community welcomes kotlin, c/c++ community welcome rust and go and Javascript community welcomes typscript except emacs community who still refuse to welcome gnu guile.
Is it? Seems to me it's used for some pretty cool stuff, heard of Guix?
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Lua: The Little Language That Could
I think a "competitor" to Lua would be Guile [1], but I am not sure if it gets close to Lua in terms of lightweightness... it was designed to be used in the GNU project, with similar objects as Lua: to be light, easily embeddable. It's a Scheme (Lisp) so maybe not for everyone's taste... its "coolest" use i know of is for configuring Guix [2] (the GNU version of Nix).
[1] https://www.gnu.org/software/guile/
[2] https://guix.gnu.org
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Immutable OS suggestions
No one said Guix yet, might be worth a look: https://guix.gnu.org/
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What are some of the more innovative linux distributions?
GNU Guix! A fully functional package manager and distro heavily inspire by Nix. The primary difference between it and Nix being that it is almost entirely written and configured in GNU Guile, an implementation of Scheme (Lisp) and the official extension language of the GNU Project (originally intended to be for GNU what emacs lisp is for emacs).
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Rust Offline?
You should perhaps utilize guix for your projects. It provides rather acceptable rust resp. crates support and in a perfectly reproducible build environment. But be aware, that it even tries to build even the rust compiler from source by going through all this nasty steps of its iterative bootstrap process. This can be a little bit complex and time-consuming, if you need an up-to-date version of rustc.
What are some alternatives?
org-jira - Bring Jira and OrgMode together
nix - Nix, the purely functional package manager
spartan-arch - Collections of script to create a minimal dev environment based on Arch Linux.
t2sde - T2 SDE Linux
org-caldav - Caldav sync for Emacs orgmode
live-bootstrap - Use of a Linux initramfs to fully automate the bootstrapping process
emacs-everywhere - Mirror of https://git.tecosaur.net/tec/emacs-everywhere
ungoogled-chromium - Google Chromium, sans integration with Google
steam-runtime - A runtime environment for Steam applications
ublue - A familiar(ish) Ubuntu desktop for Fedora Silverblue.
flatpak - Linux application sandboxing and distribution framework
com.valvesoftware.Steam