@dcz
For the record:
I don't know if you've seen this. My first experience with git send-email was with this website, which explain things well enough for me that I've never had the problems you described with git send-email.
As with drafts, I've always assumed you just save your text as you would in any other text editor. In vim, I usually do something like `:w /tmp/email`, then later `:r /tmp/email`. There a probably people with mappings for this.
What you said about email patches being less than a commit, I'd say that's what `git request-pull` is for.
And for context, I use the aerc email client, which integrates nicely with all of this.
And Sourcehut too, which as you've said provides great continuity with git and email.
@mariusor
Firstly, what is the motivation behind "democratic moderation" as you describe it? Specifically, why would you want "mod courts"? It may be obvious to you, but I want to think critically in the open to allows us to see its implications.
Also, expanding the ActivityStreams vocabulary might be a good idea, before rushing and trying to shove new semantics onto existing vocab. Just some thoughts.
@lightone
Found another one via the same engine. I like the intro, better than my one.
I want to show you that that Internet you used to go exploring is still very much there. There are still tons of small personal websites, and a wealth of long form text from both the past and the present.
So it's a search engine. It's perhaps not the greatest at finding what you already knew was there, instead it is designed to help you find some things you didn't even know you were looking for.
@Seirdy
Makes me laugh how youtube-dl is probably the most cloned project in existance, at least up there with Linux.
@briar
The short code for Ukraine is UA. UK is for the United Kingdom.
@sotolf@fosstodon.org
Nice. Care to send this to @vim ?
@freakazoid @paul
> Maybe what we really need is language-aware line wrapping that is independent of the underlying formatting. For languages like Go with strict formatters that should be easy.
vim has the 'breakindent' option, which visually indent wrapped lines.
```
1 foo.
2 A single, indented
line, visually wrapped and
equi-idented.
3 foo.
```
By language aware, did you mean something like:
```
1 func(alpha, bravo, charlie)
2 foo...
1 func(
alpha,
bravo,
charlie
)
2 foo...
```
@Gargron
No.
That should be given a different word. "Censor" seems more appropriate, because you are locally censoring a person's existance from your timeline, not just the their posts.
Muting should strictly refer to the ignoring of one and only one's activities (primarily notes).
Bund.de is the official German government portal for doing government-related paperwork online.
They have now created their own Mastodon instance at social.bund.de which contains some official accounts. You can find them on the instance's directory page:
➡️ https://social.bund.de/explore (in German)
This is a really promising sign! The Fediverse can allow citizens to interact with public officials without having to give away personal data.
@namark
Behold, ropes & cords
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_%28data_structure%29
@rastinza
I generally use timelines for some reasons.
They're useful when you can't remember the name of something. You just kinda fumble through your history.
It's also nice to be able to jumps back "3 weeks", "9 months" or "4 years", etc. to see what you downloaded or listened to back then.
@rastinza
Maybe artist/album, if I have too many songs.
I'm a terminal user. Spreadsheets would work in a graphical setting, unless you meant some kind of plaintext format.
Music enjoyers: How do you sort your music files? What do you recommend?
Right now, for all music I download in 2022, I have:
music/2022/<artist>/<track_title>.ogg
But this has some issues. I want a general timeline of music by year of download, but then some songs by the same artist a separated into different years. Do I instead ditch the years thing and use/abuse the files' modified time stat? Do you have a different approach?
Libre software engineer with physics background.
Maintainer for @hare date/time.
.py .go .ha ...
en es ...
\t <dl> agpl posix 9p