Avatar

mindlessLump

mindlessLump@lemmy.world
Joined
2 posts • 39 comments
Direct message

That doesn’t necessarily mean it might not fix the issue. If you can find a GPU to borrow, plug that in and see if you still get crashes.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Running Windows? You could try a clean install

permalink
report
reply

Here is a real world example of someone doing some reverse engineering of compiled code. Might help you understand what is possible, and some of the processes. https://nee.lv/2021/02/28/How-I-cut-GTA-Online-loading-times-by-70/

permalink
report
parent
reply

PS5 and the Xbox are great consoles. I still have and use my PS4. I don’t think you would regret buying one to compliment your steam deck. Disclaimer: I own neither a PS5 nor a steam deck.

permalink
report
reply

I’ll have to check out this book. Just remember HTML cannot be parsed with regex

permalink
report
reply

Not sure about that. There may be a plugin, or you could write maybe write a script, but that is not default behavior.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Yes, you can debug with vim + plugins, but I haven’t taken the time to set it up. You can do the same in emacs. I haven’t tried emacs as an IDE. I’ve read that LSP support is pretty good at this point, and I’m interested to set it up. I think spacemacs makes that pretty easy. I have LSP hooked up in nvim and have near parity with VS Code, but I’ve been wanting to swap my config to a Lua based one.

I think running neovim as a standalone app is rooted in the desire to manage it with a window manager, but for me, being in the terminal is a huge plus. Pair that with tmux, and you can piece together an IDE outside of nvim as well, say, running gdb in a window compiling your app in another, and having nvim open in the next with convenient hotkeys to manage the windows and copy text fluidly between them.

permalink
report
parent
reply

I would roll your own config with both. I use NeoVim every day. It’s not my main IDE, mainly due to working with Java dev and needing a debugger. But need to edit a command? ctrl-x ctrl-e. Want to pipe output of a command to an editor? ‘| vim -‘ Vim macros can save you so much time, and are fun to implement. It’s an essential tool imo. As I understand it, eMacs is better used as a standalone application than in the terminal. My primary use for emacs is org mode. You can export org mode to multiple formats including markdown. Easy to share notes to a wiki or readme. You can also execute code blocks within org mode using babel. Have a csv that you want to turn into an ascii table? Org mode can do that as well, and you can add functions to columns. You’ll have to enable these packages in your config. Hint, figure out “use package” from the start. Back to my first bit of advice, figure out what you want to do in each, and pull in a few packages to your config. You’ll have the basics down. Then when you want to grab a batteries included framework, you’ll have some opinions on which one you might want to use. NvChad looks cool, but it almost seems too much for me, and I’m attached to my simple configuration. I don’t want tabs in vim because I have a cool fuzzy search for buffers. That being said, in eMacs, I have a package that implements tabs. Anyway, I say just start using them!

permalink
report
reply

You could create a Python script to do this. There is a library called psutil that would help. Basically,

  • iterate over mounted drives and see how much each has available
  • based on these values, iterate over your backup files and separate them into chunks that will fit on each drive
  • copy chunks to respective drives

Would be a fun little project even for a beginner I think.

permalink
report
reply

Another Henson classic, A Muppet Christmas Carol.

I might have to check this one out.

permalink
report
reply