Rayquaza01

joined 1 year ago
[–] Rayquaza01@lemmy.blahaj.zone 20 points 2 months ago (8 children)

Wine GE is discontinued in favor of Proton GE. See https://github.com/GloriousEggroll/wine-ge-custom/releases/tag/GE-Proton8-26

I'm not entirely sure how Lutris updates proton, but it should be able to detect and use the Proton GE versions you installed to Steam with ProtonUp-Qt.

[–] Rayquaza01@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 9 months ago

You can't defederate from the bridge because it's not going to be the only instance of the bridge. Anyone will be able to host an instance of the bridge server, just like anyone can host an instance of any fedi software. Sure, you can block brid.gy, but then you also have to block every other instance, too. On the mastodon instance I use, there are 45 blocked instances of Birdsite Live, a (now defunct, one way) Twitter bridge!

Opting out with a hashtag technically works, but there is a character limit in the mastodon bio. It also depends on all bridges agreeing to the same hashtag.

Opt-in just makes a lot more sense, imo. It avoids different instances hosting duplicate mirrors and it avoids anyone (on bsky or fedi!) from having their posts scraped and mirrored to a different network without their knowledge.

[–] Rayquaza01@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 9 months ago

Is the LSP support in nvim better than what you can get with plugins? I'm using coc.nvim with vim and yeah it is really cool.

I didn't know about that :term difference. I think I prefer vim's behavior there.

If you have :set hidden, then the current buffer will be hidden when you open a different file, and you won't be prompted. Without it, vim doesn't allow hidden buffers and will discard the buffer when you open a different file (which is why it prompts you). Vim's defaults are very odd sometimes.

Huh, that cw behavior in vi does seem pretty jarring. Interesting, though. It makes sense why it was like that.

[–] Rayquaza01@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (2 children)

I mean, most of those things can be done in regular vim too. I'm probably going to switch eventually, but I haven't really had any issues with vim that would motivate me to switch, and I haven't really encountered anything super useful that nvim has that vim can't also do. Though, I'll admit lua is tempting, and better defaults are certainly a plus!

For search highlighting, the relevant options are :set hlsearch and :set incsearch. nvim just has those enabled by default. nvim also has a binding Ctrl+L to clear the search highlight. This isn't in vim by default, but the vim-sensible plugin also adds it.

What do you mean by cw putting a dollar sign? I don't think I've ever encountered that.

Edit: the vim syntax for Ctrl+L got eaten by markdown.

[–] Rayquaza01@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 10 months ago

If your history isn't working, it's probably because you're blocking s.youtube.com. If you whitelist that, history should work again.