On Sun Jan 29, 2023 at 5:35 PM CET, Mikhail wrote:
> Hi, I'd like to switch from xterm to st, but i want to keep xterm's
> default font, if I do
>
> xterm -fn '-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-120-75-75-c-60-iso10646-1'
>
> everything is ok - it's the font I want to use, but if i do
>
> st -f
On Thu Oct 6, 2022 at 11:23 PM CEST, Laslo Hunhold wrote:
> Dear fellow hackers,
>
> I'm pleased to announce version 2.0.0 of libgrapheme[0][1], a library
> for Unicode string handling.
>
> This version adds
>
> - word segmentation
> - sentence segmentation
> - detection of permis
On Wed Sep 21, 2022 at 8:21 PM CEST, NRK wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 21, 2022 at 04:24:28PM +0000, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > The other "interesting" one is genhtab, an alternative to gperf that is much
> > simpler to use and produces smaller binaries for big tables (but slo
embedded via a C11 u8"..." string literal (TODO: automatic conversion if
uchardet/iconv are available, C23/C++20 char8_t handling)
And that's all. Hope it wasn't spam to you. If you too have some small potatoes
stuff that doesn't warrant a project announcement but certainly make your life
easier, don't hesitate to follow.
Regards,
Hadrien Lacour
On Sat, May 28, 2022 at 08:32:57PM +0200, Markus Wichmann wrote:
> ultimately terminates on the terminal. But who knows if that is the
> case? Pipelines ending in a call to "less" will terminate on the
> terminal, pipelines ending in a call to "nc" will not. So the shell
> can't know, only the last
On Sat, May 28, 2022 at 07:58:40PM +0200, Markus Wichmann wrote:
> > You can use stdbuf(1) to modify that aspect without touching the
> > program source itself.
> >
>
> Had to look up the source for that. I had heard of stdbuf, but I always
> thought that that was impossible. How can one process ch
On Sat, May 28, 2022 at 03:33:16AM +, Rodrigo Martins wrote:
> Hello,
>
> The problem here is I/O buffering. I suspect it to happen in the C standard
> library, specifically on the printf function family. If I recall, the C
> standard says stdio is line-buffered when the file is an interactiv
On Fri, May 27, 2022 at 02:43:03PM -0400, Greg Reagle wrote:
> I have a file named "out" (from ii) that I want to view. Of course, it can
> grow while I am viewing it. I can view it with "tail -f out" or "less +F
> out", both of which work. I also want to apply some processing in a
> pipeline
On Tue, Apr 26, 2022 at 07:48:35PM +0200, Страхиња Радић wrote:
> On 22/04/26 05:39, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> >
> > Compare the output of env in the two situations. Something I noticed in one
> > of
> > your mails: you have en_US.UTF-8 in your locale output while here,
On Tue, Apr 26, 2022 at 08:20:34AM -0500, Robert Winkler wrote:
> Getting closer: I tried the compiled st in different window managers
> (thanks for the hint to test the binary in different environments!).
>
> In Plasma, spectrwm, and dwm, UTF-8 of st does not work.
>
> But SURPRISE: in Gnome (Wayl
On Fri, Apr 15, 2022 at 09:37:07AM -0500, Chibby Bromanson wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 15, 2022 at 08:34:51AM +0000, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 14, 2022 at 09:42:51PM -0500, Chibby Bromanson wrote:
> > > Greetings,
> > >
> > > I am very impressed with the
mance reasons.
Said daemon could also do stuff like Windows -> POSIX and/or character encoding
path translation if more portability is wanted.
Regards,
Hadrien Lacour
On Thu, Apr 14, 2022 at 09:42:51PM -0500, Chibby Bromanson wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> I am very impressed with the suckless software movement and I am doing
> my best to try to create my own tool that follows the philosophy. I
> still have a lot to learn with the C language but so far I am proud of
>
On Fri, Feb 11, 2022 at 02:54:24PM +0100, Hiltjo Posthuma wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I would like to share my project I've been using and tweaking over the years:
>
> sfeed is a RSS and Atom parser (and it has some format programs).
>
Another thank for your project, which completely replaced newboat (and it
On Wed, Sep 08, 2021 at 08:35:33PM +0200, Laslo Hunhold wrote:
> On Tue, 31 Aug 2021 14:28:29 +0100
> Nick wrote:
>
> Dear Nick,
>
> > Any thoughts, experiences, recommendations?
>
> the discussion has been very fruitful. Let me share my thoughts.
>
> Wayland the protocol is actually rather simple
On Tue, Aug 31, 2021 at 03:49:43PM +0200, Maarten van Gompel wrote:
> Hi Nick et al,
>
> With Sxmo we're currently also moving towards wayland (we'll have to
> reinvent what the X in our name means then). We found that, especially
> on the Pinephone, the performance under Wayland is simply superio
On Sat, Aug 07, 2021 at 02:54:18PM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
>
>
> > On Sat, Aug 07, 2021 at 10:34:00AM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> >
> >> Just 1 thing needs to be done, make easier for a majority to use minimal,
> >> secure software and make it harder for majority to use gigantic, malware
>
On Sat, Aug 07, 2021 at 06:59:08AM -0600, Lincoln Auster wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > Anyway, you're correct, and that's why modularity (which needs a
> > better interchange format than UNIX's stream of bytes, to be honest)
>
> This is pretty irrelevant to the original email, but in terms of IPC
> protocols,
On Sat, Aug 07, 2021 at 10:34:00AM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> Just 1 thing needs to be done, make easier for a majority to use minimal,
> secure software and make it harder for majority to use gigantic, malware
> injected software. And things would become better.
Sadly not possible, as the who
On Sat, Aug 07, 2021 at 08:02:31AM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> I have written this article at the link below.
>
> https://designman.org/sagaracharya/blog/pretend_computer_security
>
> It enhances the value of suckless by pointing the problems in gigantic
> softwares. Let me know what you think.
On Tue, Jun 29, 2021 at 01:48:51PM +0200, Mateusz Okulus wrote:
> sxhkd complicates the setup with little additional benefit.
The point of sxhkd isn't really itself, but having your daemon I/O completely
available through IPC. This is a big advantage, as it allows the most
power/freedom when inter
On Tue, Jun 22, 2021 at 08:26:40AM -0400, Greg Reagle wrote:
> All over the place (tutorials, manuals, articles, questions and answers) I
> see the advice to use the null feature of find (-print0) and xargs (-0) to be
> able to handle any kind of wacky file name (e.g. filenames with newlines).
On Sun, May 02, 2021 at 08:37:54AM -0400, Greg Reagle wrote:
> I just "discovered" programming language Nim. Has anyone tried it? Any
> reviews? Looks very interesting.
>
> https://nim-lang.org/
>
Seeing some examples on RosettaCode, it certainly doesn't look bad, but isn't
radical/high level
On Sat, Apr 10, 2021 at 08:14:08AM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> If suckless wants this to become mainstream philosophy
That's where the fallacy is. I suppose suckless devs aren't naive and simply
know that people aren't the same (dare I say "not equal"), so they simply make
software for themselves
On Fri, Apr 09, 2021 at 01:07:01PM -0700, Jeremy wrote:
> On 04/09/21 09:07PM, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > On Fri, Apr 09, 2021 at 08:24:35PM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> > > I have studied Engineering Physics at IIT Delhi. There, Computer Science
> > > guys are insane
On Fri, Apr 09, 2021 at 02:54:31PM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> P.S. Shifted completely to dwm this week. Can't even think of anything
> theoretically better than this!
Now, try bspwm :)
On Fri, Apr 09, 2021 at 08:24:35PM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> I guess this is where I diverge, user centric things always work better and
> have more power.
More features != More power.
> One can always add a few more simple things, keeping minimalism of suckless
> intact. One can create dwmd
On Fri, Apr 09, 2021 at 12:10:54PM -0400, Greg Reagle wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 9, 2021, at 11:42, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > Where do we stop, though? For me, sh (even with all its braindamage)
>
> Speaking of the brain damage of sh, I highly recommend rc [1] which is
> available
On Fri, Apr 09, 2021 at 02:54:31PM +0200, Sagar Acharya wrote:
> I recently wrote this article
>
> https://designman.org/sagaracharya/blog/trusting_no_one
>
> being absolutely unaware about suckless and this was brought to my attention.
>
> Suckless's philosophy is hands down amazing and crucial wr
On Mon, Mar 22, 2021 at 03:15:35PM -0400, Sebastian LaVine wrote:
> On 3/22/21 12:20 PM, Nuno Teixeira wrote:
> > please don't! I use i3+st for about 10 years!
> > Why?
> I don't think it is you that Wesley was referring to, Nuno, but rather this
> one:
>
> > > On Monday, March 22nd, 2021 at 12:59
On Sun, Jan 03, 2021 at 02:38:30PM -0500, Greg Reagle wrote:
> I am in the habit of using printf rather than echo because of the drawbacks
> of echo as explained in
> https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/65803/why-is-printf-better-than-echo.
> For
> echo relinking
> specifically, it doesn
On Wed, Nov 25, 2020 at 05:49:56PM +0100, Laslo Hunhold wrote:
> On Wed, 25 Nov 2020 07:51:22 -0500
> Cág wrote:
>
> Dear Cág,
>
> > A quick question: for "POSIX tar archive (GNU)" files tar prints
> > tar: unsupported tar-filetype L
> >
> > Is GNU tar support out of scope?
>
> there's probably no
On Mon, Apr 06, 2020 at 01:38:09PM +0200, Laslo Hunhold wrote:
> On Mon, 6 Apr 2020 13:27:21 +0200
> Laslo Hunhold wrote:
>
> > I'm definitely not an expert in terminal emulators (Roberto, Hiltjo
> > and Christoph are), but the case is pretty clear to me when I look at
> > scroll[0], which Jan and
On Mon, Apr 06, 2020 at 10:40:32AM +0200, Laslo Hunhold wrote:
> On Mon, 06 Apr 2020 08:48:38 +0200
> "Silvan Jegen" wrote:
>
> Dear Silvan,
>
> > I honestly never use tmux either. If I think I may need the output of
> > a program, I just redirect it to a file/editor/pager.
>
> yeah, same here. Bu
Fool that I am, I forgot to link it. Here it is:
https://git.sr.ht/~q3cpma/posix-build
e, no need to bolt so much
on make, and with a different syntax to boot.
If this can help other people rolling complicated makefiles, I guess it could
be nice. Criticism is welcome.
Regards,
Hadrien Lacour
On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 02:24:22PM -0500, Greg Reagle wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 20, 2020, at 13:07, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > A much more accurate mesure of disgust is the number of syscall made for
> > such a
> > simple task:
>
> That's very interesting, thank you. Do
On Thu, Feb 20, 2020 at 12:22:53PM -0500, Greg Reagle wrote:
> Hello. I am amazed at how fast Lua is to start up and shut down. Is my
> benchmark defective in any way? Lua seems to start up and exit faster than
> bash, python, rc, and ksh. Dash and mksh are faster. These interpreters are
> all p
On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 09:56:50PM +, sylvain.bertr...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi,
>
> As some may already know I am sueing the french administration which recently
> (a couple of years) broke the support of no js web browsers.
>
> The follow up would be to deal with this issue at the EU administrat
On Sat, Jan 25, 2020 at 06:22:18PM +0100, Quentin Rameau wrote:
> Hi Jesse, Hadrien,
>
> > > In regard to "replace webkit with something sane" from the TODO.md
> > > fileincluded within surf. I'm not sure if you all are aware of this:
> > > https://github.com/SteveDeFacto/zsurf
> > > Little aban
On Sat, Jan 25, 2020 at 05:20:19AM -0500, Jesse Limerick wrote:
> In regard to "replace webkit with something sane" from the TODO.md
> fileincluded within surf. I'm not sure if you all are aware of this:
> https://github.com/SteveDeFacto/zsurf
> Little abandoned project in the vein of surf, but
https://git.sr.ht/~q3cpma/mus
Regards,
Hadrien Lacour
On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 04:54:17PM +0600, Enan Ajmain wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I want to add a keybinding to ST to spawn a new ST window in the
> current working directory. How do I do that?
>
> Thanks,
> Enan
>
Hello,
personally, I put
bindkey -e -s '^[t' 'st >/dev/null 2>&1 &!\n'
in my .zshrc
On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 12:44:57PM -0700, Evan Gates wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 12:42 PM Hadrien Lacour
> wrote:
> > That was just shitposting. I use `find` to avoid most of the UNIX
> > braindamage
> > in this case.
>
> Which is good as long as you use -exec
On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 09:30:14AM -0700, Evan Gates wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 23, 2019 at 9:24 AM Hadrien Lacour
> wrote:
> > What if "$1" is empty? POSIX sh doesn't have the nullglob shop, you know.
>
> [ "$1" ] || exit # add a message if you want
> [
On Mon, Apr 22, 2019 at 01:35:02PM -0700, Evan Gates wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 22, 2019 at 1:25 PM Adrian Grigore
> wrote:
> >
> > ls -1 "$1" | while IFS= read -r p
> > do
>
> Not sure about the preprocessor stuff, but this right here is terrible
> practice. Use a for loop and glob. Assuming that "$1"
On Sun, Apr 14, 2019 at 03:24:34AM +0300, Ivan "Rambius" Ivanov wrote:
> Hello,
>
> The st terminal has -e option that executes a specific command instead
> of the shell. However, st closes immediately after the command has
> completed. Is it possible to hold the st's window after the command
> has
Same on bspwm, here.
Does that mean that some kind of simple fallback mechanism will be implemented?
A bit like Lemonbar allowing to specify multiple X fonts.
Your very mail is bloated, mate. Did you really need all of this to tell "back
up your claims"?
How do you reconcile love of minimalism with the big added runtime complexity
of a garbage collector (when you need to support multithreading and balance
latency, throughput and memory usage)?
Personally, I think that a high level language that can easily interact with a
low level one is a good so
I had similar problems before (I use startx to start X). They vanished when I
put `export PATH=$HOME/bin:$PATH` in my .xinitrc in addition to my .zshenv.
Hello,
I'm trying to make slock work with a french keyboard and the character £, but
after reading the source, am I correct in saying that it doesn't support
multibyte encodings? l179-180 of slock.c makes me think so.
Mentioning it in the README would be quite useful.
Regards,
Hadrien Lacour
On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 03:29:14PM -0800, Andy Valencia wrote:
> > I've just finished a simple project of mine to replace cmus with something a
> > bit more UNIXy and I think it could interest some people.
> I wrestled with various ways of conveniently playing my music,
> and eventually came up wit
Hello,
I've just finished a simple project of mine to replace cmus with something a
bit more UNIXy and I think it could interest some people.
Here's the link: https://repo.or.cz/mus.git with an excerpt from the README:
+
> > On 12 Nov 2018, at 05:28, Markus Wichmann wrote:
> Please, do tell if you find such a library. The ones I found were either
> the wrong language (Tk, Qt, FLTK), or hopelessly obtuse (gtk). Or pretty
> much no assistance at all (xaw, motif).
I never used it, but someone showed xforms (http://x
On Mon, Nov 12, 2018 at 11:25:44AM +, Alessandro Pistocchi wrote:
>
>
> > On 12 Nov 2018, at 10:05, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> >
> > On Sun, Nov 11, 2018 at 09:43:12PM -0700, Anthony J. Bentley wrote:
> >> Markus Wichmann writes:
> >>> Why woul
On Sun, Nov 11, 2018 at 09:43:12PM -0700, Anthony J. Bentley wrote:
> Markus Wichmann writes:
> > Why would you do something so pointless? First of all, licences only
> > matter if you plan on redistribution, so most here won't care. Second,
> > all the GPL demands is that you distribute the source
On Mon, Sep 24, 2018 at 04:08:17PM +, sylvain.bertr...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 24, 2018 at 05:44:40PM +0200, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > Of course, the range:font mapping is more granular, but I find it a little
> > bit
> > more complex to configure than this typ
Couldn't this be done like rxvt-unicode (or the current st fontarray patch)? You
specify a list of fonts, and the program iterates on it until it finds one that
provide the required character. With a very basic cache, it's pretty simple and
doesn't causes problems.
Of course, the range:font mappin
On Sun, Aug 12, 2018 at 03:58:29PM +0100, ra...@airmail.cc wrote:
> Hello!
>
> This post is an announcement releasing makes version 2.0.
>
> makes is a minimal build tool that cleanly separates the user interface from
> the core algorithm that actually performs the build. It supports
> incremental,
On Sun, Dec 31, 2017 at 01:50:50PM -0800, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 31, 2017 at 10:15:24PM +0100, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > I'm trying to do
> > `st -e "tmux a -t cmus"`
>
> Use `st -e tmux -a -t cmus` as documented in st(1) which reads "-e
> co
Hello,
I'm trying to do
`st -e "tmux a -t cmus"`
but it only gives me `child finished with error '256'`.
* `tmux a -t cmus` works perfectly in an already open st.
* `st -e tmux` works fine (there's an `erresc: unknown private set/reset mode
1005` message, though).
* `tmux new -A -s dash
On Sun, Dec 24, 2017 at 03:11:57AM -0200, Guilherme Vieira wrote:
> I'm looking for a good terminal font, with no anti-aliasing /
> smoothing non-sense. I'm also looking for a nice compatible icon set,
> and the one from the following screenshots looks just perfect:
>
> https://dwm.suckless.org/scr
On Wed, Dec 20, 2017 at 10:37:37AM -0600, Jorge Ga wrote:
> the commands i used:
> ~ dmenu
> (search for any app)
> - hit enter
> - nothing happens
>
> Same result for hit i3 dmenu shortcut (mod+d), dwm shortcut and execute dmenu:
>
> dmenu /usr/bin/dmenu_run
>
> 2
On Wed, Dec 20, 2017 at 10:19:48AM -0600, Jorge Ga wrote:
> OS: Debian 9 WM: i3
> When i open dmenu (mod+d on i3) i can search any app, but when i try
> to open, it just don't open.
> I try to debug the commands using i3 debug mode but i'm kinda lost,
> also i find on some arch linux post that mayb
ebVTT file for each combination of a timing file and
> language.
>
> Thank you for everyone's input
>
> Hadrien Lacour writes:
> > It may be possible to do this with mpv and lua scripts.
>
Thanks for reporting back, I'm sure this'll help a lot.
On Fri, Sep 15, 2017 at 09:24:55PM +, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 15, 2017 at 09:41:32PM +0200, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > I basically wanted a way to open a terminal with the beginning of a
> > command ("pass -c " in my case) already typed.
> >
>
On Fri, Sep 15, 2017 at 07:24:51PM +, Kamil Cholewiński wrote:
> echo 'echo mytext' >> .zshrc
>
> P.S. please remove "in-reply-to" headers when starting a new thread
>
Yeah, sorry. Just noticed. Your solution isn't "input" text, it's just
displayed. I basically wanted a way to open a terminal
Hello,
I'm trying to do what the subject says but I have some troubles. Maybe someone
already have a solution. Here's what I tried:
#!/bin/sh
tty=$(mktemp)
st -e sh -c "tty >\"$tty\"; exec \"$SHELL\""
sleep 1
printf 'mytext' >"$(cat "$tty")"
rm -- "$tty"
I get the text, but the shell (zsh here)
On Sun, Sep 03, 2017 at 10:06:35AM -0700, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 03, 2017 at 06:31:44PM +0200, Hadrien Lacour wrote:
> > I see, thanks. Don't know why I thought it was like this. Well, I'll try it
> > but fontconfig is indeed a big pain in the ass (editing XML
On Sun, Sep 03, 2017 at 06:24:13PM +0200, Quentin Rameau wrote:
> > Hello,
>
> Hello Hadrien,
>
> > I'm trying view Japanese text but I don't manage to. Here's what I do
> > with urxvt (it works):
> > $ urxvt -fn "xft:xos4 Terminus:size=12,xft:Misc Fixed:size=11"
> >
> > with st (it doesn't; I get
Hello,
I'm trying view Japanese text but I don't manage to. Here's what I do with
urxvt (it works):
$ urxvt -fn "xft:xos4 Terminus:size=12,xft:Misc Fixed:size=11"
with st (it doesn't; I get blank spaces or squares):
$ st -f "xos4 Terminus:size=12,Misc Fixed Wide:size=11"
Am I doing something wro
On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 08:04:26AM +, Thomas Levine wrote:
> I want to write some subtitles for some videos. I found several subtitle
> editors through web searches, and their documentation doesn't make them
> look very good. What's more, I haven't managed to install any of them
> properly, whi
On Sun, Aug 27, 2017 at 03:47:52AM +0200, isabella parakiss wrote:
> On 8/27/17, Laslo Hunhold wrote:
> > On Sat, 26 Aug 2017 23:59:27 +0200
> > isabella parakiss wrote:
> >
> > Hey Isabella,
> >
> >> https://i.imgur.com/79U7mcO.png
> >> side by side screenshot against less
> >> your face looks h
On Sat, Apr 01, 2017 at 10:26:33AM +0100, Joseph Graham wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 01, 2017 at 02:46:36PM +0530, Aditya Goturu wrote:
> > As we know, the greatest weakness of suckless apps is their dependence on
> > bloated build systems like make.
> >
> > I tried porting to to gnu autotools, but while
On Thu, Feb 09, 2017 at 07:56:42PM +0100, Cág wrote:
> Hadrien Lacour wrote:
>
> > If you want the Noice of music player, there's cplay. If you want something
> > a
> > little bit more like ranger/vifm, there's cmus. I personally use mpd and mpc
> > w
On Tue, Feb 07, 2017 at 08:25:02PM +0100, Cág wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for something that looks like noice when I'm in my music
> folder: basically a list of file names and the current song's name and
> length at the bottom. No need for colours and album/year; ideally
> it'd be customised by
On Tue, Jan 17, 2017 at 06:41:02AM -0800, Greg Minshall wrote:
> Cág,
>
> > Okay, try re-installing webkit, both -dev and
> > the package. I'm not really sure what's the
> > problem.
>
> no change, sigh. i guess i'll just leave this "open" for the time
> being.
>
> > By the way, if you are an e
On Thu, Jan 12, 2017 at 07:25:06PM +0100, Patrick Bucher wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I'm using st and dwm at the same time, and today I discovered a little problem
> when using the default config of both programs. st uses Alt-Shift-C to copy
> text
> into the clipboard, dwm uses Mod1-Shift-C for closi
So this is a bit like Vapoursynth?
On Sun, Dec 18, 2016 at 03:19:11PM +, Amadeusz Żołnowski wrote:
> I have forgot to attach the "utftest1.txt" file. Sorry. Here it goes.
>
> Cheers,
> -- Amadeusz Żołnowski
> REVERSED HAND WITH MIDDLE FINGER EXTENDED: 🖕
Actually, I tried using "Terminus:pixelsize=16" (on gentoo too), and it
On Sun, Dec 18, 2016 at 03:19:11PM +, Amadeusz Żołnowski wrote:
> I have forgot to attach the "utftest1.txt" file. Sorry. Here it goes.
>
> Cheers,
> -- Amadeusz Żołnowski
> REVERSED HAND WITH MIDDLE FINGER EXTENDED: 🖕
Work here. Using GNU Unifont and st-0.7
While this can seem relatively unimportant to some, the use of proprietary
screws (Pentalobe) really does sum up Apple's stance toward its client base.
On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 18:14:25 +0100, Cág wrote:
>[0]: http://repo.or.cz/fbpdf.git
Thanks, it seems acceptable. Even if it'd be better if mupdf could do djvu
(but I'm daydreaming here).
On Tue, Sep 13, 2016 at 10:46:58PM +0300, ilab...@gmail.com wrote:
> Why would you want to do this? It makes som
Hello,
I'm becoming interested in converting all my PDFs to Djvu, but I don't
seem to find a relatively not bloated viewer (like Mupdf). Looked at
zathura-djvu, djview and apvlv. They all require some sort of toolkit
(Qt or gtk+3) and even the dbus cancer.
Any recommendation?
On Fri, Aug 05, 2016 at 08:26:42AM -0300, Marc Collin wrote:
> I got introduced to s6-rc [0] lately.
> Do you guys have any experience with it?
>
> [0] http://skarnet.org/software/s6-rc/
>
When I compared daemontools, runit and this one, I thought it was the best.
Nice comparison: http://skarnet.
On Fri, Aug 05, 2016 at 11:58:25AM +0200, FRIGN wrote:
>
> Of course, runit is only a service manager. But runit+sinit+misc is a
> whole other story.
>
> Cheers
>
> FRIGN
>
> --
> FRIGN
>
What? I'm pretty sure runit can do init.
As for the systemd controversy, I used for a long time on Arc
I'd say cwm instead of evilwm. When I had to use an ant screen laptop, it was
pretty nice. The only thing I lacked is workspaces.
On Wed, Aug 03, 2016 at 07:25:56AM +1000, Timothy Rice wrote:
> Hi Pat,
>
> > http://incise.org/not-so-tiny-window-managers.html
>
> On that list I see evilwm. Appar
On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 10:07:36AM -0400, Greg Reagle wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 10:45:10PM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openmailbox.org
> wrote:
> > I've recently changed from urxvt to st and noticed a bug when using nano
> > which will be easier to describe with a short gif:
> > https://a.cocai
On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 03:41:07PM -0700, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 12:30:45AM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openmailbox.org
> wrote:
> > The problem might be hard to reproduce, so here's a simpler one
> > https://a.cocaine.ninja/jihcdl.gif
>
> I tried that, and it also didn't give my
On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 12:23:22AM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openmailbox.org wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 12:04:22AM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openmailbox.org
> wrote:
> > On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 02:22:00PM -0700, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> > > On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 10:45:10PM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openma
On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 12:04:22AM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openmailbox.org wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 02:22:00PM -0700, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> > On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 10:45:10PM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openmailbox.org
> > wrote:
> > > I've recently changed from urxvt to st and noticed a bug when
On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 02:22:00PM -0700, Eric Pruitt wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 17, 2016 at 10:45:10PM +0200, hadrien.lac...@openmailbox.org
> wrote:
> > I've recently changed from urxvt to st and noticed a bug when using nano
> > which will be easier to describe with a short gif:
> > https://a.cocaine
Hello,
I've recently changed from urxvt to st and noticed a bug when using nano which
will be easier to describe with a short gif: https://a.cocaine.ninja/xtlajf.gif
This issue happens ONLY when I change "static unsigned int tabspaces" from 8 to
4 in the config file.
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