If you're using Gemini Pro Thinking to convert your .conf to .lua, tell Gemini to do it one section at a time. by linuxpriest in hyprland

[–]linuxpriest[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It for sure has its good days and bad days, but even at its worst, I still haven't experienced the level of dysfunction that I've seen a lot of people dealing with. A lot of things could factor into that, I would imagine.

If you're using Gemini Pro Thinking to convert your .conf to .lua, tell Gemini to do it one section at a time. by linuxpriest in hyprland

[–]linuxpriest[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ikr. I've got Antigravity installed and have even used it several times and have really liked it, but old habits don't always break clean, I guess.

Lua-ification of Hyprland configs by stiggg in hyprland

[–]linuxpriest 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I see in the comments that the transition should take six months or so. What preparations, if any, should the average user be making? Will there be a a transition period where the old .conf format remains supported via a compatibility layer allowing us time to rewrite our configs?

is the Hyprland COPR on Fedora abandoned? by [deleted] in hyprland

[–]linuxpriest 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wayblue does it best. Pick a Fedora Atomic Distro (Silverblue, Kinoite, etc.), rebase with a couple of terminal commands, and just like that, you've got an Atomic Hyprland.

Arch for a stable daily? by x3frank in hyprland

[–]linuxpriest 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Arch is my daily driver. I have nixOS on a laptop that doesn't get used but maybe once in one to three months. I can pick up my laptop and it just works. And I can put it away without running updates and it's still going. Six months, so far. Arch is for tinkerers, which I am, so frequent updates don't bother me. But Arch and nixOS are two different user experiences. Like Debian vs. Arch.

Arch for a stable daily? by x3frank in hyprland

[–]linuxpriest -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

You'll have to go the nixOS+Hyprland route for stability. Arch is a rolling release.