What’s the difference? No matter how hard I look, most of their websites just consist of them advertising that they are immutable.
What’s the difference? No matter how hard I look, most of their websites just consist of them advertising that they are immutable.
Until you realise that you need to learn a whole programming language to run one executable outside of the package repos
I do respect nix, but it ain’t for me
I’d rather have YAML than the mindfuck of a language nix uses
[ This program prints "Hello World!" and a newline to the screen; its length is 106 active command characters. [It is not the shortest.] This loop is an "initial comment loop", a simple way of adding a comment to a BF program such that you don't have to worry about any command characters. Any ".", ",", "+", "-", "<" and ">" characters are simply ignored, the "[" and "]" characters just have to be balanced. This loop and the commands it contains are ignored because the current cell defaults to a value of 0; the 0 value causes this loop to be skipped. ] ++++++++ Set Cell #0 to 8 [ >++++ Add 4 to Cell #1; this will always set Cell #1 to 4 [ as the cell will be cleared by the loop >++ Add 2 to Cell #2 >+++ Add 3 to Cell #3 >+++ Add 3 to Cell #4 >+ Add 1 to Cell #5 <<<<- Decrement the loop counter in Cell #1 ] Loop until Cell #1 is zero; number of iterations is 4 >+ Add 1 to Cell #2 >+ Add 1 to Cell #3 >- Subtract 1 from Cell #4 >>+ Add 1 to Cell #6 [<] Move back to the first zero cell you find; this will be Cell #1 which was cleared by the previous loop <- Decrement the loop Counter in Cell #0 ] Loop until Cell #0 is zero; number of iterations is 8 The result of this is: Cell no : 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Contents: 0 0 72 104 88 32 8 Pointer : ^ >>. Cell #2 has value 72 which is 'H' >---. Subtract 3 from Cell #3 to get 101 which is 'e' +++++++..+++. Likewise for 'llo' from Cell #3 >>. Cell #5 is 32 for the space <-. Subtract 1 from Cell #4 for 87 to give a 'W' <. Cell #3 was set to 'o' from the end of 'Hello' +++.------.--------. Cell #3 for 'rl' and 'd' >>+. Add 1 to Cell #5 gives us an exclamation point >++. And finally a newline from Cell #6
I love writing yaml as a nix expression. That shit locks my flake.
Just ‘steam-run’ that shit. (It creates a regular linux-like environment without manually setting the LD path)
I use it to run random git repos.
Man doesnt even know distrobox exists
(Or flatpak of appimages or any other containers)
Good luck even finding something not in nixpkgs though
One of my favorite apps actually wasn’t in nixpkgs (don’t worry, I fixed that). But I was pretty surprised to learn that it wasn’t there.
I’d say what it is, but I’d be doxxing myself.
Well true but that ain’t native.
Also, great exemple: blender launcher. I work with multiple versions of blenders, and it’s a must have.
If you’d prefer native to using an unpopular tool thats archived since 2023, try this site.
All you have to do is click on the revision you want to install, and it provides instructions to install it (having the benefit of being actually using the native package manager instead of just storing some binaries somewhere exclusive to the app)
Surprised there was a non-nix way to achieve this honestly, even if it is a bit hackey
If you want quick and dirty, use steam-run!
I was more interested in using it as a server os, so I used it for mine… But would go to a classic Debian as soon as I need to rebuild the whole os due to some breakage. As a docker box? It’s fine.
You need to learn a whole programming language to install an AppImage or Flatpak?
Flatpaks are actually mutable. Appimage no idea.
But the claim is that you need to learn nix to install apps that aren’t in the nix repos, which isn’t true.
You can. And then you can even contribute that back upstream and make it available in the repos, but that’s not a requirement if what you need to to get an app to run on your system that isn’t currently packaged for it.