I used to use Pragmata, but have since switched to Iosevka. It's similar in width and also supports ligatures.
xcape in Linux for this.
I assume it's because 1) it's not really needed, and 2) it prevents shady packages from executing scripts as root.
Is this from experience? I've switched back to regular vim from neovim because of platform support, but I've never had stability issues when I did use neovim.
Available in Canada too.
FYI, the display size filter is wonky. Filtering up to 13" ignores 13.3" when it should probably include it.
I'm assuming "high DPI screens" was the intention.
I don't disagree, but burden of proof.
Also adds Powerline symbols, which is great. Some of the patched ones don't work well. I'll try this new one alongside Input Mono which is my current monospace font of choice.
In vim, set separate timeout and ttimeout values to get around this. Specifically, set the former high fit regular commands and the latter low to avoid issues like slow Esc processing.
Do you mean daylight saving time? The time zone changes, but Unix time is UTC so it's unaffected.
Pretty sure there are some settings you need to enable in about:config to get H264 working in Firefox (assuming you have the right gstreamer stuff installed).
Well objectively it's less finger travel and more home row use, so it has its merits. The issue is that qwerty is such a de facto standard that you'll run into many layout issues using dvorak.
It's confusing when you address Linux this way. Most Linux distributions are not for-profit, so they're going to have any staff going to businesses. Plus, even if they did, they'd have to offer support, which they…
I used to use Pragmata, but have since switched to Iosevka. It's similar in width and also supports ligatures.
xcape in Linux for this.
I assume it's because 1) it's not really needed, and 2) it prevents shady packages from executing scripts as root.
Is this from experience? I've switched back to regular vim from neovim because of platform support, but I've never had stability issues when I did use neovim.
Available in Canada too.
FYI, the display size filter is wonky. Filtering up to 13" ignores 13.3" when it should probably include it.
I'm assuming "high DPI screens" was the intention.
I don't disagree, but burden of proof.
Also adds Powerline symbols, which is great. Some of the patched ones don't work well. I'll try this new one alongside Input Mono which is my current monospace font of choice.
In vim, set separate timeout and ttimeout values to get around this. Specifically, set the former high fit regular commands and the latter low to avoid issues like slow Esc processing.
Do you mean daylight saving time? The time zone changes, but Unix time is UTC so it's unaffected.
Pretty sure there are some settings you need to enable in about:config to get H264 working in Firefox (assuming you have the right gstreamer stuff installed).
Well objectively it's less finger travel and more home row use, so it has its merits. The issue is that qwerty is such a de facto standard that you'll run into many layout issues using dvorak.
It's confusing when you address Linux this way. Most Linux distributions are not for-profit, so they're going to have any staff going to businesses. Plus, even if they did, they'd have to offer support, which they…