meld | Rufus | |
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38 | 549 | |
18 | 26,906 | |
- | - | |
4.3 | 8.7 | |
5 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
meld
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Suggestions: A simple human-readable format for suggesting changes to text files
Even simpler:
Step 1: give me your edited `.tex` file.
Step 2: I selectively merge it into mine.
Step 3: There is no step 3.
To selectively merge, I use `meld` https://meldmerge.org/ but there are others.
Benefits of this even simpler approach:
- We continue to use the tools we are used to.
- We and our software don't have to learn a new inline diff format.
- Both files retain valid syntax before and during the selective merge.
- I can choose chunks to accept with a simple mouse click instead of editing a diff chunk.
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Spacedrive – an open source cross-platform file explorer
While we're requesting killer features, https://meldmerge.org/ style diffs, please.
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Ask HN: How do you merge two files with ChatGPT(etc.)?
Why do you need ChatGPT? There are hundreds of diffing tools available that do this quite well. Meld is my favorite: https://meldmerge.org/
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Diaphora, the most advanced Free and Open Source program diffing tool
Thanks, just today I daecided that the current status of Meld (https://meldmerge.org/) was untenable for me.
It used to be a fast program, with a reasonable interface.
For a long time now its interface has been "simplifed" following GNOME 3's User Interface Guidelines, and everything ended up being hidden inside a hamburger menu.
But what definitely made it untenable was not the UI, but its tendency to crash and being really slow under the slightest load.
I was considering contributing to the project, but honestly a better engineered alternative would be welcome.
Thanks for the info (and thanks Kai Willadsen for Meld).
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Best visual diff and merge tool on macOS?
I’m looking for recommendations for the best visual diff and merge tool available on macOS. I’ve done my research as below but have some reservations about the options I found. - Meld seems to get mentioned a lot but the website syas it is not officially supported on OS X. Are the third party binaries trustworthy? - Beyond Compare is also mentioned but the developer website doesn’t inspire much confidence.
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3 way merge tool as good as IntelliJ?
https://meldmerge.org/ ?
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Integrating Git and (Neo)Vim: LazyGit + Fugitive + MergeTool for maxiumum efficiency [Showcase]
So, I use Meld for viewing complex diffs (:silent !meld . &). For interactivity, of course, I use the terminal and Vim, such as lazygit and tig, and fugative and gitgutter (or equivalents).
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What a surprise
You bet. (Just copied the text of both into Meld and looked for genuine differences, in case you'd like to have an easy way for the future.) Thanks for doing all that you do here!
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Is it possible to compare 2 rpp files?
WinMerge would be my recommendation on windows, Meld on everything else
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Linux software list. Discussion and advice welcome!
Meld - visual diff and merge tool: compare files, directories, and version controlled projects
Rufus
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The Ultimate NixOS Homelab Guide - The Install
Get Rufus
- Warn if (Windows ISO) media will no longer be bootable after Q1 2024 (Rufus)
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How to Install Windows 11 On A Device That Does Not Meet Windows 11 Requirements
You can also use Rufus. It has options to customize Windows 11 and one of them is to disable the hardware module requirement.
https://rufus.ie
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Windows 10 end of life could prompt torrent of e-waste
You can use Rufus: https://rufus.ie/en/
To modify the ISO to turn off hardware check and TPM support for Windows 11 to install it on an unsupported PC.
https://github.com/pbatard/rufus/wiki/FAQ#user-content-Help_...
Besides Linux and BSD Unix there is: https://reactos.org/ https://aros.sourceforge.io/ https://www.haiku-os.org/ and https://www.arcanoae.com/arcaos/
I know some third-world nations still use DOS and the BORLAND DOS compilers because people donate old computers to their nations.
With the right OS, old computers are still usable. Please don't throw them away, e-cycle them so they get used by poor nations that cannot afford new PCs.
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Ventoy
3. NVMe drives may not gracefully handle sudden disconnections, because USB connections are inherently unreliable interfaces prone to physical disruption and loss of power.
If your drive decides to stop showing up, first try loading up the boot device selection screen in the UEFI, and then insert the drive. It may take several seconds to show up. If trying that a few times doesn’t work, the drive may be stuck in a bad state, and might be recovered with the power cycle technique https://dfarq.homeip.net/fix-dead-ssd/
Always set up automatic backups if you actually have non-replaceable data on the drive. They can and will just suddenly die forever with loss of all data, just like thumb drives. You have been warned.
All that said, there are generally less issues if you are simply putting ventoy on it to install from a loaded iso.
I have a dual raid1 sata enclosure that I use to boot a windows to go install created with Rufus (https://github.com/pbatard/rufus), which makes testing and benchmarking so much nicer to deal with. I’ve even stuck games on it, and other than relative filesystem slowness it works pretty great.
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Tried to create a RAID 1 array without researching properly
The author has extensive documentation and tutorial content. First steps: download CD image, download Rufus (http://rufus.ie), write the image to the flash drive, remember that this will clear the data on the flash drive and it will not be recoverable.
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I reset my pc but it only boots up with my EXTERNAL HDD INSTEAD OF SSD
Seems like you're an absolute newbie. Well, here is the website: https://github.com/pbatard/rufus Direct download link Youtube guide to create a bootable pen-drive
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Terrible CPU & GPU utilization (need help!!!)
You can use that to create a bootable usb stick using rufus: https://rufus.ie
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Need help with USB bootloading
Note: Once you have created the "persistent partition" on the pedrive (you can use Rufus),during the Ubuntu installation you have to select that partition as your /home
- Installed new hd cant get windows to load iso
What are some alternatives?
kdiff3 - KDiff3 updated for Windows
Ventoy - A new bootable USB solution.
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
shredos.x86_64 - Shredos Disk Eraser 64 bit for all Intel 64 bit processors as well as processors from AMD and other vendors which make compatible 64 bit chips. ShredOS - Secure disk erasure/wipe
diffuse - Diffuse is a graphical tool for comparing and merging text files. It can retrieve files for comparison from Bazaar, CVS, Darcs, Git, Mercurial, Monotone, RCS, Subversion, and SVK repositories.
MediaCreationTool.bat - Universal MCT wrapper script for all Windows 10/11 versions from 1507 to 21H2!
SpotTube
unetbootin - UNetbootin installs Linux/BSD distributions to a partition or USB drive
pornhub - crawl webm and mp4
Fido - A PowerShell script to download Windows or UEFI Shell ISOs
sublime_text - Issue tracker for Sublime Text
arch-linux-installation-guide - An easy to follow Arch Linux installation guide. This guide will show you how to properly install Arch Linux on UEFI/BIOS systems, ext4/btrfs file systems; using systemd-bootloader/GRUB and systemd-networkd/NetworkManager for networking. These are the given examples but I have provided links to sections with the information necessary to install any 86_64 system