Split the lists into two, with testing getting automatically updated on
packages added (and removed, but only if the package to be removed is
*not* in stable packages already).
This way, I can always be sure that I have my stable setup in the
repository, but packages that I am temporarily testing have a place
without being forgotten and I can more easily change them around until
they find a place in stable or get thrown out.
Never used the compile script for years now, and I neither see that
changing nor the files being of any use anymore. They were something I
whipped up when I first started getting into Linux and bash scripting
(and as such a little nostalgic I suppose) but nothing that has actual
purpose anymore.
Added a quick way to fix the last spelling mistake: Use <c-s> while
writing (in insert mode) or localleader-s while in normal mode.
It will fix the mistake and keep your cursor at the current position.
Extended active task listing to show both the active task from
taskwarrior, but also any currently 'tracking' task from timewarrior.
Ideally, those should be the same - but if they mismatch or timwarrrior
is not correctly tracking the active task, this is still good
information to have at a glance.
Add a simple alias to quickly use distrobox with `db` alias, and modify
pure prompt initialization slightly so that it displays a hostname when
in a distrobox container (akin to operating from ssh or normal container
usage).
HACKY implementation makes use of both an internal pure prompt api
(see here https://github.com/sindresorhus/pure/issues/585)
and a distrobox env var that I am not sure how exposed it is either.
Powerlevel10k uses a similar method though, so maybe it is fine
(see here 33916e91a7/internal/p10k.zsh (L8336)).
Added new quickselect mode to quickly open a displayed url. Changed
original quickselect to use leader-f mapping (instead of shift+f) and
made new mode callable through the shift+f version.
from: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/1362
Delegated scroll mode invocation to leader-b, as in original setup.
I rewrote and extended the nsxiv-rifle script recently, and this change
now: removes the old script, adds the new one as a submodule into the
repository and links a working binary into the path.
The new script is essentially still just an image grabber-and-opener,
but supports more image viewers, is a little more advanced and can for
example replace arbitrary parts of urls (and is documented a little more
nicely).
Make qutebrowser use new script and remove leftover references to
nsxiv-rifle. Qutebrowser also gets a third option of viewing images, now
there are:
,i -> open selected link in imageviewer
,I -> open current page in imageviewer
,<C-i> -> open selected image in imageviewer
Since the existing wayland module basically describes everything about
my 'desktop environment' setup already anyway, might as well rename it
accordingly. Additionally, mako is important for notifications in this
environment so it moves here as well.
mod-Shift-M to switch to an always-unused tag for all connected outputs
to simply hide all application that can currently be seen. Would
probably be more useful with an option to reverse but that probably
requires a more extensive script to implement (perhaps using `lswt`?) so
this will be good enough for now.
I am not even entirely sure how much I will be using it.
Podman rebels if it finds an explicitly set DOCKER_CONFIG file pointing
to a non-existent (due to using podman) configuration file. Since we are
not using docker anyway, this removes the env var.
I am mostly using the TUI Mastodon client tut for any social
interaction, so here I keep its configuration. Nothing big changed yet,
I mostly like the default options, with the exception of some layout
changes.
Added hacky script to quickly cut apart dual-screen wallpapers.
I run two 1920x1080 screens side-by-side, so I just cut double wide
wallpapers in two and display one on each screen.
Script is very inflexible on probably not too useful for the future but
it works for its purposes now.