Use <leader>t to start up nsxiv in thumbnail mode where it displays the
contents of the current directory.
You can do whatever you want with nsxiv, enlarge files with <Enter>,
flip them with | or - or delete them with D - the full bandwidth of
nsxiv is available.
If you mark pictures with m (or M) before exiting vifm will build a
custom filtered view containing only those files ready for further
filesystem operations with vifm.
Closes#11.
Also adds another layer of file previewer. If none of the other previewers
match (e.g. pdftotext for pdf, pandoc for docx, exa for directories, etc),
this viewer will be used and display the first couple hundred lines of a
file.
Essentially it means that unknown text files will be displayed using
this, but also binary files for which it displays the hexdump
automatically.
Added tui display manager to my system and I've been quite enjoying
using it, may come in handy as well if I ever want to have dual X11 and
Wayland setup or go back to a more rounded DE experience.
(Not that I intend to, but still enjoying the little style ly brings to
the boot screen.)
Added python-docs for offline python documentation availability, removed
long-overdue polybar package which I have not been using for a couple of
months.
Package list is now a single tab separated list. That should make
several automations in the future much simpler.
The table is built as follows:
`Name Description Source Target`
with one line per package. Source denotes official repositories or AUR,
and target is kept for future potential of creating different
deployments per target automatically (e.g. different package list for
desktop and server, and so on).
There is an updater script `bootstrap/update_package_list.sh` which will
automatically populate the table, removing uninstalled packages, adding
new ones and (making its best attempt to be) keeping the selected
targets as they are.
The git commit hook comparing installed and committed packages has also
been rewritten to use the new table and be a little simpler overall.
Fixes#2.