I want to preserve my /home, but when I set the mountpoint for the old home partition to /home, it seems to duplicate it, taking up all available disk space.
Does anyone know how I can have just one instance of /home
Would have been nice to have had that idea before spending an hour getting Anaconda to work, but now I finally got it to be how I want it I'm not touching anything.
Should I create a new user, and should it's name be the one in my existing /home
@Phoenix You have to create a new user. If you use the same name, your home directory (including the settings therein) will be preserved. If you want that depends on why you're re-installing (I assume) Fedora.
@Phoenix openSUSE's pet DE is KDE. Iirc you can choose which one you want though. Since Leap 42, the installer is quite big and comes with a lot of stuff.
KDE lets you customize a lot of stuff. To turn GNOME into a sane DE, you need extensions. In my experience, these make GNOME even more unstable than mutter does by default, and they'll all break with the next update.
What it looks like is a rather large part of the workflow. You can't have a task bar without an extension. You can't disable the hot corner without an extension, etc.
Given an input string S, print S followed by a separator in the following way:
Step 1: S has a 1/2 chance of being printed, and a 1/2 chance for the program to terminate.
Step 2: S has a 2/3 chance of being printed, and a 1/3 chance for the program to terminate.
Step 3: S has a 3/4 chance of be...
Mutter is a window manager initially designed and implemented for the X Window System, and recently has evolved to be a Wayland compositor. It became the default window manager in GNOME 3, replacing Metacity which used GTK+ for rendering. Mutter uses a graphics library called Clutter giving it OpenGL capability. The name is a portmanteau of Metacity and Clutter.
Mutter can function as a standalone window manager for GNOME-like desktops and serves as the primary window manager for the GNOME Shell, which is an integral part of GNOME 3. Mutter is extensible with plugins and supports numerous visual...
I just noticed we have both anagrams and permutations. Is there any reason not to make anagrams a synonym of permutations? If so, how should the tags be used?
@Lembik Are you using swap? The reaper will become active only when all virtual memory is starting to fill up. A large swap partition means there's a lot of disk trashing before anything gets killed, and that can take some time...
@Phoenix I used to have a job with an 0530 start time, which meant me being up by 0400. My day's work would be done by 1430, though, giving me time to actually live life outside work. It was heaven compared to the "9-5" life.
just a quick noob question, given a hypothetical challenge where I had to print hello world to stdout, would this submission be acceptable? (with Go's imports and the main function in the header/footer fields and my one line function I want to submit as the actual 'code' on TIO): tio.run/##S8//…
What are good online sites/ebooks where I can find good non-trivial C programming challenges to solve, to supplement reading K&R ? (Solving the programme should require some amount of non-trivial thinking; and shouldn't require much knowledge of C syntax) ?
Well it would be better if I couldn't fool myself - i.e I can upload the programme (or a concrete solution, as in PE) and they would run it against test cases.
I like the this will eventually stop challenge, because the longer the program runs the lower it's chance of terminating, which leads to some interesting probabilities
In Java lambda expressions, for example, this (ungolfed): s->{s = s+6;System.out.println(s)}, sometimes you might add a semicolon to make this a valid statement when it is a function: Consumer<Integer> consumer = s->{s = s+6;System.out.println(s)};, but if you pass it to a function, you don't need a semicolon: insertFunctionNameHere(s->{s = s+6;System.out.println(s)});. So, my question is: do semicolons at the end of Java lambda expressions count in the bytecount?
The problem
In France, we have a really common electronical device on every building. It's called a digicode. It's basically a numpad on which you type in a code to open the door of your building. The code is usually a 5 digit number followed by a letter (A or B), but let's simplify this and con...
In The Jailhouse Now
code-golf ascii-art
Stop Playin' Cards
Given an integer n (where 4<=n<=10**6) as input create an ASCII art "prison door" measuring n-1 characters wide and n characters high.
Example
╔╦╗
╠╬╣
╠╬╣
╚╩╝
The characters used are as follows:
┌───────────────┬─────────┬─────...