Removed by mod
This is me in eclipse.
Because I used to do the single save and it failed
Oh, eclipse. I’m still happy I don’t have to save in intellij .
I tried intellij years ago and never left it.
Ok here’s a question I should have asked like way sooner.
In Ubuntu (and similar distros), is there a hotkey to immediately kill the process? Like CTRL-C but harsher.
I use a process manager like btop for this.
My PC has a dedicated key to kill all processes.
sudo poweroff?
If you’re using X11, you can use xkill: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xkill
You can bind it to a key in gnome/kde (not sure how they handle custom keybinds. Otherwise add a call to xbindkeys to your .bashrc or equivalent). It kills any window you want, responsive or not.
As for the terminal, I don’t think you can send SIGKILL, but ctrl + \ will result in a core dump if you’re using bash.
CTRL-C – SIGINT CTRL-\ – SIGQUIT CTRL-Z +
kill -9 %1
– SIGTSTP + SIGKILL
MFRs are saving each keystroke the have access to.
Hell sometimes I’ll save just after having thought about writing something
I’m the same way. I think it’s just a matter of being conditioned to manually save for the majority of my computing life.
:w
:w
:w
:w
:w
i
esc
:w
:w
:w
:w
Average day in (neo)vim
This will allow you to ctrl+s to save. I tried to add this in a backtick code line/block but it removes part of the syntax.Sorry but I’m already used to :w stoo much and a lot faster with it than ctrl+s
:w before ZZ just to make sure
Is there any reason to use :w other than it being the default? I have mine mapped to CTRL-S and it makes sure to keep me in insert mode if I was in insert mode. Feels way faster and easier to spam than the 4 key presses it takes to execute “:w”.
I’m just used to it and I’m keeping ny time in instert mode at minimum.
You can use :wq only once
So choose wisely. All other editor instances must remain open forever.
*per open file
I use quake style terminals, and often start writing a file and completely forget about it and turn off the computer, and only remember what i left behind when i find the random recovery files around, so :w a lot is quite useful for me.
Quake? The FPS? I’m confused, though I knew a little about Linux
Yes, on classic fps you could spaw a console that will drop down from the top os the screen, some terminal emulators allow you to do that.
I like it because then i have the terminal always open that i just draw from the top of the screen with a keypress
On KDE i do that with Yakuake, and on gnome with tilix
:x
My biggest (mostly) irrational internet pet peeve is the proliferation of people suggesting “:wq” when “:x” is strictly better.
not mapping semicolon to colon
lel
Make all changes
:wq!
Force that bitch!
It’s because the first time doesn’t always work. I swear, sometimes it doesn’t!
Ctrl + C literally doesn’t work at times, it drives me crazy. It might be due to some shitty applications and websites overriding it or adding complexity (Like copying not only the text but additional information).
I’m often 100% sure I copied the text, change the window and an old clipboard entry gets pasted.
God I hate this so much. It’s especially frustrating on mobile where it takes like thirty seconds to try to get the right part of the text copied and use the fucking magnified blue dots… Ugh.
Mobile is an entirely different beast. Like sometimes my keyboard doesn’t show up. Or the text select refuses to work. And so on. It’s a mess. Even on a Galaxy S22.
No clue how people can exist without a proper computer at home and still do stuff online.
Some of us have PTSD from losing work back in the day. Now it’s just habit.
It’d be great if there were side kind of feedback, like the cursor quickly flashing a “C” or something… anything to let you know the operation occurred; better yet, was successful.
Check for an asterisk after the file name (in the tab/title bar), it means “unsaved changes”.
I actually disagree from a systems engineer perspective: The program doesn’t actually know shit if those bits hit any permanent medium, just that the OS told them “I’ll take care of it” it could be sitting in a write back cache when you save, see the “write complete” and rip the power and that’s all gone now. Basically, I don’t like promising durability when it’s not really there.
The same can be applied for editors as well
We can optimize this further:
unsatisfied = true while(unsatisfied) { key.dispatch( Keyboard::Ctrl, Keyboard::s ) }
…No, there is no instance where
unsatisfied
changes stateYou should just be able to
while(true)
It’s a joke.
That sounds like an excuse.
Don’t worry, most modern brains have a builtin jit compiler, so when a habit starts to form, the check will be optimised out. (It saves excess neurons from being generated.)
Meanwhile I, a gentleman
nmap <CR> :w<CR>
Binding the Enter key to save the current buffer. 🧐
sync
sync
sync
lol, me when I transfer shit to my USB thumb drive.
sync
⬆️↩️
⬆️↩️
😂
But then, if you’re forced to develop on microsoft 🤬, it’s late, you’re tired, you’re hand slides just a little to the right (win + d), aaaaand everything is gone, and you’re sitting there looking at you’re background wondering what the hell just happened 🙃.
Dude, win + d fucks, and it fucks hard. Just press it again if you can’t handle
I really should turn on auto save when vscode loses focus.
Ctrl-S? Are you writing code on Windows? 🤮
First of all, it’s fine to write code on Windows. In fact, many companies have windows-only development workflows.
Second of all, many Linux programs also use standard shortcuts like Ctrl+S. Linux is more than Vim.
Yeah! It’s also Emacs
There’s no Visual Studio for Linux, so yeah… especially as a .NET dev.
Visual Studio Code isn’t the same.