A CLI tool is not an app, and none of you are reading the docs as carefully as you think you are| becca.ooo
I recently revamped how I manage my dotfiles1 and I thought I’d share the setup. There are a couple of different places that I work in most days: A Macbook running OSX. A Debian server. An as…| Mark Biek
Geeking out on tech, craft, films, photography, nature and cats since 2002. If you stick it out for long enough, blogs become cool again.| but she's a girl...
thoughts, talks, docs and unpopular opinions| www.dgt.is
So I’ve been using git to managing my dotfiles since [checks git log]… 2018. At first, I was going to write some inevitably brittle shell script to handle symlinking from the dotfile repo to where each file should be, but before I got about to implementing it, I discovered stow. Now, after using stow for dotfile management for over 5 years, I figure I should really document exactly how I go about managing my dotfiles, with an aim to help other people who want to have an easy to manage dot...| Mildly interesting
Contents| myme.no
Contents| myme.no
How to organise and deploy dotfiles using GNU stow.| alex.pearwin.com
While moving to an image based operating system has been a gamechanger for me it's important to remember that if it's doing it's job it's invisible. My graphical applications are already handled by Flatpak, so I thought I would take some time investing in modernizing my command line workflow. Toolbx| Jorge Castro
Background My dotfiles turned 4 years old a few months ago (since 9th Jan 2017) and remains one of my most frequently updated projects for obvious reasons. Going through the changes reminds me of a whole of posts I never got around to writing. Anyway, recently I gained access to another HPC cluster, with a standard configuration (bash, old CentOS) and decided to track my provisioning steps. This is really a very streamlined experience by now, since I’ve used the same setup across scores of ...| Rohit Goswami