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forked from extern/nix-config
My NixOS configuration with Nix Flakes, Home Manager, Stylix, and Hyprland.
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Donovan Glover 7be289730b
Remove system aliases
Aliasing rm to "rm -i" and mkdir to "mkdir -p" is dangerous because
these same safeguards may not be present on the other machines you ssh
into. Using pwd instead of simply p (and showing the $HOME directory
as ~) is a way to reinforce the idea that the current directory is just
one part of a complete system, even if that directory so happens to be
in $HOME.
2018-09-19 14:31:40 -04:00
dots Remove system aliases 2018-09-19 14:31:40 -04:00
sh Add GRUB_TIMEOUT=0 2018-09-10 17:05:46 -04:00
waterfox Move user.js to stow 2018-04-09 16:28:02 -04:00
.editorconfig Always trim trailing whitespace 2018-01-20 23:49:22 -05:00
LICENSE Relicense under MIT 2018-08-16 17:21:15 -04:00
README.md Update README 2018-09-01 01:07:10 -04:00

Arch files

Vim is my editor, *nix is my IDE.

These are my Arch files. I use them with Arch GNU/Linux.

The sh directory contains scripts that handle common installation procedures and other commands required to replicate any part of my setup.

The dots directory contains all my dotfiles. The scripts in the sh directory are in charge of stowing these files as needed.

For peace of mind, make sure to place this repository directory somewhere hidden yet easily accessible, ideally as a dot directory in your home path.

What's Included

Arch Linux is great. You can turn it into whatever you want, whether that's a complete desktop environment or a DIY setup with a window manager, adding things piece by piece.

Here's what I recommend:

  • Install Xfce if 1) your screen is not HiDPI, 2) you plan to use a lot of GTK applications, and 3) you want a minimal but usable setup for daily tasks.
  • Install Plasma if 1) you want a desktop environment that supports HiDPI with minimal effort, 2) your computer is new enough that 1GB RAM idle is irrelevant, and 3) you want to take advantage of all the features a desktop environment can offer.
  • Install bspwm if 1) you are tight on system resources, 2) you're fine with using the terminal and keyboard shortcuts for everything, and 3) you want to work with an advanced tty with better graphics and some GUI support.

All setups aim to have the following features:

  1. Universal theming
  2. Vim-inspired keybindings
  3. Easily reproducible

Dots

I manage my dotfiles with stow. Different dotfiles are stored in different directories. You can "install" a set of dotfiles with stow <dir>, e.g. stow bspwm.

My dotfiles are sorted by directory based on 1) whether or not they are DE/WM specific and 2) whether or not they are software specific.

I try to document many things in both my dotfiles and scripts. If you don't know what something means, try searching on Stack Exchange or the Arch Wiki. When in doubt, just man software and /search for what you need to know!