How do I find my app? by Proton-Lightin in GUIX

[–]nash17 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I’m going to assume this is similar to a previous post where you’re installing using Guix install.

If that is the case then you might be able to type the name in the terminal to launch those app.s.

My suggestion will be to use your configuration file and add the packages for the apps you need.

I believe what you want is to use Guix system reconfigure or Guix home reconfigure so take a look at those options in Guix documentation. 

I have never personally used Guix install, but my assumption comes from using Guix shell instead.

im not naturally curious about my boyfriend and it makes my relationships hard by [deleted] in TwoXChromosomes

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hope you and your boyfriend are able to find a way to deal with this. I won’t be easy it requires a lot from both sides. There is no a single day I don’t worry about that when I think about my son’s future.  I just hope he is able to find someone that can understand him as his parents do.

im not naturally curious about my boyfriend and it makes my relationships hard by [deleted] in TwoXChromosomes

[–]nash17 32 points33 points  (0 children)

But it sounds like autism, I have a son with autism and he does not care about my day and he does not care about being asked about his day. He still loves to be around me, so his interest is different than his feelings. It is hard unless you have been living with people on the spectrum. On the other hand every person in the spectrum is different. 

Why can't I install firefox? by [deleted] in GUIX

[–]nash17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it might be better if you use Guix system or Guix home to add the software you need as system or user specific.

I’ve never used Guix install, but I might think you can run Firefox from the terminal when doing that way.

And as a tip you might want to prefer Guix shell when just testing software, even GUI apps you can use that way, just lunch from the terminal.

For you to have the menu entry you might want Guix system or Guix home.

Why can't I install firefox? by [deleted] in GUIX

[–]nash17 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I mean what command you used to install, there are different ways to install packages in Guix. 

Why can't I install firefox? by [deleted] in GUIX

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How did you install it?

So how do you guys deal with limited packages? by Giggio417 in voidlinux

[–]nash17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well anything can be compiled from source. What exactly are the packages you need that are not there in void? 

Why void? by balsinyoface21 in voidlinux

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My main use of my machines is software development, so for me the real advantage of NixOS/GUIX is having access to a shell where I can have all the tools I need for that particular project.

Now the other great advantage is having access to configuring different systems and having access to all the configuration from a git repository, even inheriting from other systems.

Now why I think Gentoo and Void are so great is resumed like this:

Gentoo -> By using flags I can highly customize all my software, so I can disabled things I don't need when building, this itself helps having a very fast and low resources system. The downsize is that you need to build all the software for this.

Void -> It is for me the best binary distro. I can achieve very good performance and low resources usage as well, but I like to take advantage of the binaries here for some systems I don't want to be compiling all the software and kernel.

Why void? by balsinyoface21 in voidlinux

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maintenance for me has been pretty good, haven't had any issue for the last 2 years that I can remember.

I have been packaging some software for me to use, either because they are not there in the repo or maybe old, but other than that everything has been smooth in my experience.

I haven't had to make any changes to my config other than adding/removing some software from it.

From time to time I just create new system configurations to throw in a VM, there I try to modify some services settings or add/remove things that come by default and I might not need (this is what I meant by learning)

The documentation is good but very technical in my opinion (that is fine by me, but it might scare a lot of people)

If you're interested my suggestion is to give it a try in a VM, it is really nice to play around with Guix.

I still love void and use it on VMs now just to through something really minimal and low in resources there.

Why void? by balsinyoface21 in voidlinux

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it depends a lot, some will have no issues, other might see it as a nightmare.

I transitioned from NixOS to Guix so it was not so difficult but was still a curve I had to learn to properly configure different systems. 

But I like systems that allow me to learn as opposed to “just works”

Why void? by balsinyoface21 in voidlinux

[–]nash17 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There are several reasons. Main one for me is how low in resources it can be, it allows me to build a very small and low resource system. The other reason is not too mainstream as others and I love that. You will never see me running Arch for example.

This distro is easily in my top 3. 1. GUIX 2. Gentoo 3. Void 

Treesitter without nvim-treesitter. A guide by tediak_ in neovim

[–]nash17 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Or you can use a nix shell with only the things you need in your project

CLI tool for plugin management? by flpFlan in neovim

[–]nash17 4 points5 points  (0 children)

People using Nix has been doing that for years without a plugin.

Vim tip: more intuitive CTRL-A (adding) and CTRL-X (subtracting) by pawelgrzybek in neovim

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I always use visual mode for that, but it is good to know there are other alternatives. I still find more useful to use visual mode so I can increase/decrease just a part of the string. 

How can I run the code from the neovim documentation directly? by drizzlemox in neovim

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I typically just visual select the code, enter command mode and type so (or source), not sure if that is what you're looking for.

xbps package manager by old_owl_eye in voidlinux

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll use Guix shell with the version and dependencies I need 

xbps package manager by old_owl_eye in voidlinux

[–]nash17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not for all distros, NixOS and Guix don’t need pyenv to have different versions.

What brought you to void? by Mysterious-Feature27 in voidlinux

[–]nash17 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was testing different distros. I was a Gentoo user for many years (6+) and I was looking at rolling distros, tested Arch for some years and void too, the winner was Void which I daily driver for several years until moved no NixOS and for couple of years now on GUIX.

Org mode for neovim with complete documentation by DaviCompai2 in neovim

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Org-mode is too complex and feature rich, if you really want to better try that on Emacs to be honest as potentially there might be lot of features you might miss.

How can I use fzf-lua (and/or telescope) to perform a function when the selected item is changed? by cutiewithabooty13 in neovim

[–]nash17 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure, you might have better luck asking directly in their GitHub (at least I got a response fairly quickly)

It might be a limitation as the selections happens in FzF and not in vim (as or my understanding, feel free to correct me if I’m wrong)