jaeger changed the topic of #crux to: CRUX 3.6 | Homepage: https://crux.nu/ | Ports: https://crux.nu/portdb/ https://crux.ninja/portdb/ | Logs: https://libera.irclog.whitequark.org/crux/
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<cruxbot> [opt.git/3.6]: thunderbird-bin: updated to version 102.0
<cruxbot> [opt.git/3.6]: nvidia: updated to version 515.57
<cruxbot> [compat-32.git/3.6]: nvidia-32: updated to version 515.57
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<SiFuh> ppetrov^: https://dpaste.com/FLABY5V9E.txt This happened to me today as well ;-)
<ppetrov^> i already forgot what package I had to install
<ppetrov^> the name was long
<SiFuh> python3-typing_extensions
<ppetrov^> python3-typing_extensions
<ppetrov^> yep
<SiFuh> It was listed in the deptree for me
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<farkuhar> ppetrov^: why should previewing the rendered markdown be the job of a text editor? Many Gemini and Gopher browsers can already render the markdown, letting your text editor do what it's specialized for.
<ppetrov^> because I would like to see the outcome as i write it
<farkuhar> if that's what vscodium has been doing for you, i would characterize it as an IDE rather than a text editor.
<ppetrov^> well, i guess it is
<farkuhar> my own workflow involves a lot of editing within an SSH session (no X11 forwarding), so I never invested the time in learning my way around an IDE. Just compile the document at the command-line, scp it to the machine I'm logging in from, and view the output with whatever software is associated with that filetype.
<SiFuh> emacs ;-)
<dlcusa> farkuhar: Me, too. And I use passwords for those scp commands, too. I'm not paranoid, though (I think).
<farkuhar> SiFuh: emacs would be viable if I hadn't already spent so many years getting comfortable with vim. As it is, I think my learning curve for emacs would be steeper than for something like this: https://ejmastnak.github.io/tutorials/vim-latex/intro.html
<SiFuh> farkuhar: I switched to emacs from vi/vim after using vi/vim for 25 years. Now I am using both comfortably
<SiFuh> I must admit though, I sometimes use vi commands in emacs or visa versa. But I have been doing that for decades when using Soffice, Ooffice and Libreoffice
<farkuhar> As a daily driver web browser, I currently use nyxt, which mimics emacs in that its extensions and configuration are all coded in Lisp. But after setting up the desired configuration, I still navigate in nyxt using its vi keybindings.
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