I wish it was only about software…
I wish it was only about software…
Please.
If I wanted to read Musk, I’d follow him.
If I wanted to see someone’s tweets all day, I’d be Twitter instead of Lemmy.
I use Lemmy to read Lemmy, not to be reading screenshots of Twitter in Lemmy.
Thanks.
I’d say nothing that can’t be achieved by docstrings.
Is it like show formatting marks / show hidden symbols in modern software, that shows ends of paragrahs and tabs?
Sure, just as I said, this would work id you don’t need menu or fuzzy matching. But I would recommend using fzf history search anyway, it’s just too good.
Let me tell you that you can also add comments to your terminal commands and use them to search history using fzf. This might sound confusing but basically you do this:
commandwithweirdoptions --option1=value1 --option2=value2 # run the usual thing
Then you press Ctrl+R and type anything like «the thing», it uses fuzzy matching and finds the command in history, with a menu of other similar commands. Press enter, done.
Note that you need to have fzf installed, otherwise there is no fuzzy matching and no menu of matching history results.
I’m pretty sure it was a joke.
Everyone did this at some point, but nobody would admit such a silly thing happened to them.
It’s worse when you have a bugged function, try to fix it, and no matter what you change it’s still bugged because an hour later you realize there is a function with the same name that redefines the function you were changing anyway somewhere else in the code.