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360 results for “myTerminal”
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Just updated my terminal setup to get roasted by my Linux shell history. Every command I run gets judged by a local LLM, and the verdict goes straight to my window title. 😅
Including a few favorites:
"Oh, I see you use Arch, by the way..." when I update pacman
"Looking for your Brains?..." when I ran simonw's llm tool
"pwd, after ls? How lost are you?", after... well runinng pwd when not recognizing the files in my cwd.GIF shows it in action
#linux #terminal #llama32 #llm #archlinux #shellshaming #ramtospare
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Just updated my terminal setup to get roasted by my Linux shell history. Every command I run gets judged by a local LLM, and the verdict goes straight to my window title. 😅
Including a few favorites:
"Oh, I see you use Arch, by the way..." when I update pacman
"Looking for your Brains?..." when I ran simonw's llm tool
"pwd, after ls? How lost are you?", after... well runinng pwd when not recognizing the files in my cwd.GIF shows it in action
#linux #terminal #llama32 #llm #archlinux #shellshaming #ramtospare
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Just updated my terminal setup to get roasted by my Linux shell history. Every command I run gets judged by a local LLM, and the verdict goes straight to my window title. 😅
Including a few favorites:
"Oh, I see you use Arch, by the way..." when I update pacman
"Looking for your Brains?..." when I ran simonw's llm tool
"pwd, after ls? How lost are you?", after... well runinng pwd when not recognizing the files in my cwd.GIF shows it in action
#linux #terminal #llama32 #llm #archlinux #shellshaming #ramtospare
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Just updated my terminal setup to get roasted by my Linux shell history. Every command I run gets judged by a local LLM, and the verdict goes straight to my window title. 😅
Including a few favorites:
"Oh, I see you use Arch, by the way..." when I update pacman
"Looking for your Brains?..." when I ran simonw's llm tool
"pwd, after ls? How lost are you?", after... well runinng pwd when not recognizing the files in my cwd.GIF shows it in action
#linux #terminal #llama32 #llm #archlinux #shellshaming #ramtospare
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Just updated my terminal setup to get roasted by my Linux shell history. Every command I run gets judged by a local LLM, and the verdict goes straight to my window title. 😅
Including a few favorites:
"Oh, I see you use Arch, by the way..." when I update pacman
"Looking for your Brains?..." when I ran simonw's llm tool
"pwd, after ls? How lost are you?", after... well runinng pwd when not recognizing the files in my cwd.GIF shows it in action
#linux #terminal #llama32 #llm #archlinux #shellshaming #ramtospare
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When I started my pre-Master in Computer Science, I had no experience with programming, command lines, git, Linux, ssh, ...
The pre-Master consisted of Bachelor-level courses from all three Bachelor years. Hence, from day 1, I had to be able to program at the level of a 3rd year Bachelor student, in multiple programming languages.
Unsurprisingly, this was a steep learning curve for me. Being surrounded by people who had been writing code since they were 8 years old contributed massively to my sense of insecurity and anxiety. Being surrounded by mostly men, who in some cases really felt the need to put me in my place whenever I showed any sign of competence, really didn't help me feel better.
This has kinda stayed with me. Even though I sometimes encountered people who were way more clumsy than I was in working with these tools, I still felt massive imposter syndrome.
Just now, a software developer sat next to me as I typed commands into my terminal. Afterwards, he remarked that I clearly know my way around the command line.
I wouldn't say that I'm healed now, but this for sure felt like a win.
#GreatColleague #SoftwareDevelopment #Linux #CommandLine #Programming #Coding #AcademicChatter #AcademicMastodon #WorkLife #WomenInSTEM #WomenInTech #WomenInComputing #WomenWhoCode
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#TheGate for #Amiga
My terminal simulator is arising!
Implemented:
- Scrolling (only up like an old style term)
- Labels
- Jump to labels
- Variables Increase & decrease by 1
- JIFEQ -> Jump to label if variable is equal to a certain valueThe shot shows the terminal executing a loop for 2 times increasing a variable, when the variable reaches 3 the program jumps to a label and prints the last line.
IT WORKS! IT WORKS!! 😃
note on the left the source program (# = comments)
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A few months ago my terminal colours were suddenly messed up. I have no idea what caused that since I didn't touch any related settings for years.
Now I have a lot of pink on pink, which is obviously not readable.I managed to partially fix it by deleting some colour definitions from #Xdefaults.
Did someone else experience the same?
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Bad: Apparently the SSH daemon on my web server died
Good: I've got Puppet running, so it got restarted
Bad: The server is running Ubuntu, so I'm not convinced that it won't happen again
Good: I'm also running Tmux, so my terminal session resumed perfectly 🙂 -
I am using #Thunar as my #filemanager and #Ghostty as my #terminal. One thing that bugs me is that clicking "open terminal here" in Thunar opens Ghostty in the default working directory instead. I just fixed this today by changing the command to `TERM_PROGRAM=dumb exo-open --working-directory %f --launch TerminalEmulator`, i.e., adding an environment variable `TERM_PROGRAM`. The value does not matter, but it has to have some value for exo-open to work. No idea why.
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I am using #Thunar as my #filemanager and #Ghostty as my #terminal. One thing that bugs me is that clicking "open terminal here" in Thunar opens Ghostty in the default working directory instead. I just fixed this today by changing the command to `TERM_PROGRAM=dumb exo-open --working-directory %f --launch TerminalEmulator`, i.e., adding an environment variable `TERM_PROGRAM`. The value does not matter, but it has to have some value for exo-open to work. No idea why.
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Recently I added #direnv to my terminal. Now when I cd to a :python: repo its .venv is automatically sourced. Including picked up by :neovim: when running it there. All needed is that .envrc with "layout uv" in the repo root.
And, as seen in the screenshot, #starship is also picking it up.
Adding this kind of cleverness on system level, instead of a GUI monolith, takes using and developing to completely new levels.
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#Linux
#Server
#TerminalProgramsUsing Tmux in my terminal emulator (Terminology) I am wondering something.
I can do the same thing using the emulators functions. This feels more like it be more useful if I wasn't using a Window Manager and needed easier functionality in a headless terminal.
Might try setting it up on an ssh server.
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#Linux
#Server
#TerminalProgramsUsing Tmux in my terminal emulator (Terminology) I am wondering something.
I can do the same thing using the emulators functions. This feels more like it be more useful if I wasn't using a Window Manager and needed easier functionality in a headless terminal.
Might try setting it up on an ssh server.
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#Linux
#Server
#TerminalProgramsUsing Tmux in my terminal emulator (Terminology) I am wondering something.
I can do the same thing using the emulators functions. This feels more like it be more useful if I wasn't using a Window Manager and needed easier functionality in a headless terminal.
Might try setting it up on an ssh server.
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#Linux
#Server
#TerminalProgramsUsing Tmux in my terminal emulator (Terminology) I am wondering something.
I can do the same thing using the emulators functions. This feels more like it be more useful if I wasn't using a Window Manager and needed easier functionality in a headless terminal.
Might try setting it up on an ssh server.
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Every time something stops working on my work computer, I suspect the IT/Security team to have changed a secret policy to prevent certain apps from running. In this case, my terminal app Kitty stopped working. Inspecting the app bundle showed that the executable was missing. Copying the app again to the /Applications folder removed the executable. What the hell is this? And why?
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I like to switch from my terminal to magit or dired in my emacs
I have a made a zsh function that works to launch a function in emacs and focus it:
function _emacs_action() {
emacsclient -u --eval "($1)"
(( $+commands[osascript] )) && osascript -e "tell application \"Emacs\" to activate"
(( $+commands[swaymsg] )) && swaymsg '[app_id="emacs"] focus'
}and use it like this:
alias magit="_emacs_action magit"
alias dired="_emacs_action dired-jump" -
Déjà vu: #Ghostly CVEs in my #terminal title https://dgl.cx/2024/12/ghostty-terminal-title
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Guake has long been a favorite application of mine. If you’re new to Guake, it’s a terminal application for Linux that stays out of site until it’s summoned with a hotkey, like the console in Id Software’s Quake games.
Hit F12 or whatever combo you set up for it, and it slides into view over the top of other windows. When you’re done, bang the hotkey again and it slides back up out of sight. I find it super useful.
But, I’ve long wanted to be able to do that with other applications. Specifically, I’ve really craved a text editor that would be easy to summon like Guake so I could keep running notes and scratchpads for little snippets of text.
Technically I could just use Vim for that in Guake, but I wanted something a bit easier to copy and paste text in and out of. My previous searches never turned up anything I loved, so I stopped looking.
While looking for another GNOME extension today, I found Quake-mode. This is just the thing I was looking for. After installing the extension you can choose whatever application you like, set an “Accelerator” (hotkey) and you’re all good. You also have the option of setting a notification area icon if you prefer to mouse it.
Nice, simple, perfect for productivity. I’ve set it up to use Gedit but you could do whatever makes sense for you.
The only thing that would be better is if it supported more than one app. But I won’t be greedy, one is good enough, and it doesn’t conflict with Guake so I get my terminal and text editor too. Love it. Big thanks to the author of this extension.
#gnome #gnome-extension #linux
https://dissociatedpress.net/2023/02/14/my-new-favorite-gnome-extension/
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A shorter post talking about my favorite color scheme for #ricing my #terminal and #windowmanager
https://joelchrono.xyz/blog/my-favorite-color-scheme/
Day 4 of my 2nd attempt at #100DaysToOffload
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A shorter post talking about my favorite color scheme for #ricing my #terminal and #windowmanager
https://joelchrono.xyz/blog/my-favorite-color-scheme/
Day 4 of my 2nd attempt at #100DaysToOffload
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A shorter post talking about my favorite color scheme for #ricing my #terminal and #windowmanager
https://joelchrono.xyz/blog/my-favorite-color-scheme/
Day 4 of my 2nd attempt at #100DaysToOffload
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A shorter post talking about my favorite color scheme for #ricing my #terminal and #windowmanager
https://joelchrono.xyz/blog/my-favorite-color-scheme/
Day 4 of my 2nd attempt at #100DaysToOffload
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A shorter post talking about my favorite color scheme for #ricing my #terminal and #windowmanager
https://joelchrono.xyz/blog/my-favorite-color-scheme/
Day 4 of my 2nd attempt at #100DaysToOffload
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As a part of upgrading my terminal experience, I also wanted to upgrade my Python shell. The default one is a bit "painful" to use.
After checking out both IPython and bpython, I went with bpython. It has much less features compared to IPython, but it is also more convenient to use and looks a bit better out of the box.
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As a part of upgrading my terminal experience, I also wanted to upgrade my Python shell. The default one is a bit "painful" to use.
After checking out both IPython and bpython, I went with bpython. It has much less features compared to IPython, but it is also more convenient to use and looks a bit better out of the box.