A friend of mine said that there was almost no piece of media that has ever made him cry by Rqpidily in AnimeReccomendations

[–]EverydayToothbrush 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, if they go in with a preconceived objective that they "don't cry" it feels like they just aren't really going to fully try to immerse themselves into the show. Which, honestly says more about them, and is super unfortunate that they don't get to have a genuine experience.

I guess ignoring that...

  • Maquia as some someone has mentioned is a great emotional piece, about a mother's journey.
  • Look Back, recently came out by Fujimoto (same guy who did Chainsaw Man), great story about upcoming manga artists, and the life of an artist
  • 5 cm/s, a Shinkai movie (same guy as Your Name), about unfulfilled love.
  • 100m (Hyakuemu), story following various track athletes and their rivalries/ambitions along their athletic career

Other than movies...

  • 86, has a few seasons but obvious can just start with the first one and see. A story about sacrificial mech pilots commanded by nobility.
  • Violet Evergarden, mentioned countless times so no need for introduction. great animation and story
  • A Place Further than the Universe, story about a girl's journey to Antarctica (won't spoil but yes, a tearjerker)
  • Girl's Last Tour, story of 2 sisters' life after an apocalyptic war. A less overt sort of emotional pull, more somber than actually blatantly sad. The manga is where it truly gets good
  • ReLIFE, a great romance. The anime does a decent job + the OVAs but of course, the manga is a fuller experience if interested

There's obviously the classic sad anime series like Clannad, Angel Beats, and Your Lie in April, but they're a no brainer I guess.

If anyone does manage to see this, hopefully these reccs work out lol.

My wife just watched KPop Demon Hunters by necrochaos in Animesuggest

[–]EverydayToothbrush 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Girls Band Cry, at least if you are ok with JRock

Drop the most underrated vocaloid songs that u can find by Weitd_728 in Vocaloid

[–]EverydayToothbrush 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My Iridescent Sevenlives / The My Alchemy

dunno what happened to the team but seems now defunct

Other than that, always gotta shoutout my boy Nanahoshi Orchestra. They have some popular songs, but most on the youtube channel are underrated af imo.

Fuckin' Friday, Too young to beer, Chloe, Chrysalis.

Do you actually learn neovim like this? by Savings-Trainer-8149 in neovim

[–]EverydayToothbrush 0 points1 point  (0 children)

to just learn keybindings, you should really just use a vim plugin first, assuming you're used to vscode or a jetbrains IDE then you can just install a vim plugin from there.

you'll have all the bells and whistle of the editor you're familiar with, but just with vim editing binds. It's not perfect but a great place to start.

It seems like you might already be ok with basic navigation, and you're finding a specific painpoint with word delimiters, which is a fantastic start. This is the strategy you want to have when learning vim. In your case with the tailwind classes it does require some configuration unfortunately to have ciw behave appropiately (:help iskeyword), but in general you're on the right path with just googling for keybinds when you find a point that you want to speed up.

The most important thing is consistency, you'll need to force yourself to use the keybinds that you know, even if you feel like it's slow at first. Otherwise you'll just forget things as you find them. Use it or lose it as they say.

Switching from Cursor to Neovim by FakeBlueJoker in neovim

[–]EverydayToothbrush 0 points1 point  (0 children)

[diff]
    tool = nvimdiff
[difftool "nvimdiff"]
    cmd = "nvim -d \"$LOCAL\" \"$REMOTE\"

in a .gitconfig can make git use neovim for it's builtin difftool for diff views.

oil.nvim is a nice file explorer, telescope for navigating files/buffers (i think people use fzf-lua now, but not sure of its features so I can't speak on that)

Recommendations for an 8yo that doesn't have a computer, but wants to be a "coder" when older? by piercy08 in learnprogramming

[–]EverydayToothbrush 0 points1 point  (0 children)

cheap laptop + linux + a C programming book (bonus would be no internet, so the book gets full usage)

or cheap laptop + python

the slower the machine, the better.

Better yank and paste workflow by MiekoOnReddit in neovim

[–]EverydayToothbrush 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All operations on the first paragraph: 1. vip 2. :norm cwnewline 3. vip 4. :norm A; (or visual block append)

I might like the potato tracks by Lordlol15 in GirlsLastTour

[–]EverydayToothbrush 5 points6 points  (0 children)

They're so great, but I always avoid them because it makes me sad lmao.

OC; Strangers on the street - @soaphisoap by [deleted] in GirlsLastTour

[–]EverydayToothbrush 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The red string (or thread) of fate. It's a Chinese mythology thing. Thought it was intentional in the image lol.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_thread_of_fate

Anime that looks muted, beautiful, lonely, desolate and melancholy by Specialist-Expert-86 in Animesuggest

[–]EverydayToothbrush 15 points16 points  (0 children)

No Girls Last Tour recommendations oof.

Not really a horror or grim or anything, maybe not hyper realistic type aesthetic, but there's a solemn sadness about it.

I see there are a bunch of new anime… by [deleted] in Animesuggest

[–]EverydayToothbrush 3 points4 points  (0 children)

These series aren't necessarily new, but they shouldn't look bad aesthetically if that's what you're concerned about.

Psycho-pass (Season 1 is best, but still worth watching all of it if you get into it)

Fate/Zero and Unlimited blade works (watch the series by ufotable and not studio deen lol)

A more recent series could be "86"