After almost a year of using joshuto, I have decided to switch to yazi.
The latest joshuto update broke my image preview configuration, and it
didn't make sense trying to figure out the issue with yazi already
having built-in image support and more.
Other notable improvements from this change include:
- Simplified configuration since defaults no longer have to be
re-declared
- Faster directory loading, especially for /nix/store/ and symlinks to
/nix/store/
- Text files are more likely to show previews without manual
configuration
- Videos now have working previews again, similar to ranger
This fixes an issue where the hot area would be triggered with full
screen applications. Alternatives include using the 4 finger swipe
gesture or simply using the key bind if a touchpad isn't available.
This fixes an issue where hycov would prematurely exit when using the
Alt+Tab keybind. Instead, it's preferred to use the navigation keys to
switch focus and press tab again to close hycov.
This cool plugin makes it possible to press "alt+tab" in order to switch
between all windows in Hyprland, particularly useful if a certain window
you want to focus is a few workspaces away from your current one.
It's also possible to swipe up with 4 fingers to show hycov, from which
you can then use 3 finger motions to switch between the shown windows.
Finally, it's possible to show hycov by simply hovering over the bottom
right part of the screen, similar to the "show desktop" functionality in
certain desktop environments and GNOME's hot corner feature.
- Removed old hyprlang/hyprlock overlays that are now in nixos-unstable
- Replaced pnpm-shell-completion with the one upstream
- Changed old GPG option to new one
Recent updates to neovim and/or its plugins made neovim start to crash
when typing curly braces like {}. I narrowed the issue down to vim-endwise,
which I no longer need since the current languages I use prefer curly
braces over end keywords.
Related: https://github.com/tpope/vim-endwise/issues/144
Fixes an issue where the latest version of pqiv would become
unresponsive when browsing images in directories with large
subdirectories. Also makes selecting multiple images work again.
See: https://github.com/phillipberndt/pqiv/pull/204
Logseq is slow but convenient. Ultimately it probably makes sense to use
Logseq as it's "good enough" instead of trying to make a neovim setup
work (which is more suited for programming).
cargo-audit has been dropped to fix an issue with libgit2, which should
be fixed in 1-2 weeks or so. Additionally, nvim-base16 has been renamed
to base16-nvim, which is currently only recognized on -small.