Me: "how can you tell that I'm mentally ill and gay??"
The books I own:
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seen from Singapore

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Me: "how can you tell that I'm mentally ill and gay??"
The books I own:
How to make your terminal suck less
There comes a point in any Linux user's life where they have to figure out which terminal emulator to use. Chances are if you are using a desktop environment like GNOME (default with ubuntu) or KDE you’ve stuck with the stock terminal and not given it any thought, right? But doing this leaves a lot out when it comes to having a comfortable experience on Linux.
There are may options for terminal emulators, you could choose the slick-looking Hyper.jsor the GPU accelerated alacrity maybe even the utility-focused terminator. Each of these inherently has its pros and cons but ill have to say, in my mind, there is a terminal to rule them all - st.
st, also known as suckless terminal, is a small, lightweight, and fast terminal emulator from the suckless community. Before we talk more about st, we must talk about the driving force behind suckless. The suckless philosophy is to ‘focus on simplicity, clarity, and frugality. [to] keep things simple, minimal and usable‘ which means a lot for their programs, they are all fast light and efficient but on top of this, they have unrivaled modularity and customizability due to the simple, readable nature of their source code. This means that the members of the community can develop patches and changes independently of the master source code.
So why does this make st so good?
I’m glad you asked because there are a lotta things.
It can run on anything
It’s speedy as
there are no messy config files
It supports UTF-8 out of the box
clipboard support
true 256 colors
To someone who hasn’t done much research around the topic, this all seems kinda lackluster, but when you find something like even the beloved URXVT has issues with the clipboard every feature you can get is a bonus. What makes this even more impressive is this
| Emulator | Lines of code | |----------|---------------| | xterm | 65K | | urxvt | 32K | | st | <5K |
How do I get started
Now, that's easy, the steps are:
Clone the source repo
Make any config edits
Run sudo make install
1. Clone source repo
I have a GitHub repo with the patches I use applied e.g.
follow URLs by pressing alt-l
copy URLs in the same way with alt-y
Copy the output of commands with alt-o
Compatibility with Xresources and pywal for dynamic colors.
Default gruvbox colors otherwise.
Transparency/alpha, which is also adjustable from your Xresources.
zoom/change font size
copy text with alt-c, paste is alt-v or shift-insert
and lots more view it here
Download my fork with:
git clone https://github.com/manfromth3m0oN/st.git
2. Config edits
Now st does not have ‘traditional’ config files, this is because you don't just download a binary and run it, you compile st from source. So to edit the config of st enter into the cloned folder with cd st Now open config.h with your favorite text editor (I recommend nvim). All of the options are commented so I won't go over them here. There is nothing essential to change, unless you don’t use sh then you need to change the static char *shell = "/bin/sh"; line to your appropriate shell (e.g. ZSH or fish etc)
3. Compile and install
This step is probably the easiest all you have to do is install with sudo make install This works provided you have make and gcc installed if you don't just use:
sudo apt-get install make gcc OR sudo pacman -S make gcc OR install make & gcc with whatever package manager you have
Now you can start using st
Now just start the st binary however your distro or wm/de does so for i3 edit your i3/config file
# start a terminal bindsym $mod+Return exec st (or whatever *termname is in config.h)
Closing thoughts
st is not a terminal built for someone who is brand new to the Unix ecosystem, but using it from the beginning can teach you a lot about how your system runs. Use st, and all the other suckless utilities for that matter, to help further your understanding of Linux so that you can be the most efficient user you can. After all, that is what the modern Linux philosophy is.
Thank you all for reading
~ M
I now know that Carpetboarding is NOT my thing... won't say who won or lost, but for the sake of the argument @bergerjacob89 found something he's good at. ⛾ #SuckLess #StyleMatters #BringBackStyle #Sk8 #Skate #Skateboard #Skateboarding #Carpetboard #Carpetboarding #CarpetMuncher #CarpetMunching #GoPro #GoProAthlete #GoProPhotography #GoPole #TeamGoPole #GoPoleReach #SixxIndustries #KissMySixx #HexTheDeck #AshFlowboards #FlowriderUtah • For full video and more links as always in the bio above or go to: YouTube.com/TwosdaysWithTk
Willam climbing trees
Everyone makes mistakes, but not everyone owns up to 'em. Think about that next time someone is "problematic" or "cancelled." Willam doesn't need me to come to his defense - he's a grown man. But damn, y'all gotta chill for a second and understand things in context.
15minute drag doodle! #suckless and #drawmore x .... #waynedidit #illustration #doodle #ink #drag #art #instadraw #willam (at London, United Kingdom)
Learning how to #SuckLess with Willam #DragCon #Willam (at Los Angeles Convention Center)
"Stick It"
The Pushing Boundaries Climbing Series
Feat. Justin K. On Route at the Hangar 18 Rock Gym in South Bay
Join Me every Tuesday/Thursday from 5-8pm for some climbing fun!
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Copyright Jovani Carlo Gorospe
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