- &&
means execute if the command before ended successfully
- ||
means execute if the commnad before failed
- ;
just means execute the command - no matter if succeeded or failed
私、気になります!
- &&
means execute if the command before ended successfully
- ||
means execute if the commnad before failed
- ;
just means execute the command - no matter if succeeded or failed
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Use &&
to use multiple commands one after the other, don’t use ;
.
You could also add Iceraven’s collection.
- Collection Owner (User ID) - 16201230
- Collection name - What-I-want-on-Fenix
- Settings - About <browser-name> - *tap on logo 3(?) times* - Custom Add-on Collection - *add your own collection*.
It does work with Redirector.
Reddit to Old.Reddit
http*://*.*/r/linux/
http*://*reddit.com/*
https://old.reddit.com/$3
BTW, for AUR helpers, you don’t use sudo
.
I would do:
pacman -S --needed firefox
Instead.
You can replace pacman
with AUR helper (I’d suggest installing Paru or YAY) if you’re using one.
‘On my machine it works’ is not a strong argument, and is highly unlikely, due to the language it was written in.
Pacman is written in C, APT in C++, DNF in Python, and Zypper in C++ as well.
So, no. Pacman ‘wins’.
What truly matters is which tool is best suited for your use case.
> Me, a fake Arch user who never installed both of them
Isn’t ImageMagick available on Windows too?
I’d also suggest, like other commenters here, to learn CLI tools, CMD and PowerShell commands, and DiskPart too.
For me, the fastest way to learn is by playing with it, and it sounds like you’re the same.
If you prefer to avoid installing it ‘bare metal’, you can have it on a VM.
I’d suggest specifically QEMU, or VirtualBox.
QEMU, because of the performance, and VB, for its universality, and cross-platform compatibility.
Honesty? Nowadays Linux is just easier for me.
Sometimes you forget that a lot of tools you are use to have in Linux don’t even exist on Windows (like watch
and cut
). On Windows there are some problems you don’t even have to deal with on Unix-like systems.
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In Pop!_OS, you have the Pop!_Shop, and they added their own repos for software aren’t included in Ubuntu’s repo or exist mainly as Snap packages; they also included Flathub.
Under the app name you want to install, you’ll have a little drop-down box with option to choose (if there’s more than one option) where to download the package from.