“PacHub provides a GTK4/libadwaita GUI for pacman and AUR, so you can avoid the terminal. PacHub can install/uninstall packages, perform upgrades, and provide

  • Mactan@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    I’m in camp “people should learn about their systems no matter what”. we’re in an era where people can’t tell what’s a file and what’s executable , can’t unzip things or edit a plain text file. sure there should be mechanisms to easy people into the learning but it should still happen, there shouldn’t be this rampant incuriosity

  • dil@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    It honestly baffles me why people install a distribution explicitly designed for granular, terminal-centric control, only to immediately try and hide it behind a GTK wrapper.

    If the goal is to avoid the terminal while managing system packages, AUR builds, Flatpaks, and Snaps all in one place, distributions like Manjaro or Ubuntu already exist for that exact use case. Bolting a two-month-old GUI on top of pacman and yay or paru is just a recipe for a broken system down the line.

    When a PKGBUILD fails, a PGP key needs importing, or a manual dependency intervention is required, you need to see the actual terminal output. Hiding those critical prompts behind a shiny interface just obscures the exact information Arch relies on you to manage. If you are trying this hard to avoid the terminal, Arch is probably the wrong tool for you.

  • antsu@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 days ago

    “AUR without touching the terminal”

    Am I wrong to feel that if you don’t want to touch the terminal, you probably shouldn’t be messing with the AUR? The potential for disaster seems very real.

    • Solar Bear@slrpnk.net
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      4 days ago

      I’ll go further and just say they shouldn’t use Arch at all. The “stop being a gatekeeper, I shouldn’t need the terminal” to “everything just suddenly broke itself after an update” pipeline is so real.

      I straight up just think these tools that simplify the install process or package management shouldn’t exist. The difficulty in Arch was never in the install processes. Anybody who can follow the instructions on a box of mac and cheese can eventually stumble through the process to install Arch and use pacman. The challenge was not digging your own grave post-install to the point that you need to wipe and start fresh, an experience basically every Arch user goes through at least once. The problem is that the further you abstract these tools and divest the user from hands-on experience, the less they understand about why it broke.

      Basically, these tools don’t make the hard parts easier, they make the easy parts easier in a way that leaves new users less equipped to understand the hard parts.

    • ☂️-@lemmy.ml
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      4 days ago

      inb4 another newbie that comes here to complain about linux instability is actually using this tool because someone insisted it’s really easy.

    • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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      4 days ago

      With most AUR helper there is basically no difference between “yay -Syu package” vs clicking in the GUI. Most ppl probably skip the pkgbuild and so on anyway.

      As long as its communicated clewrly, its fine imho.

      • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        I use paru and manually turn off pkgbuild review.

        Fuck it, if the GitHub passes the vibe check it’s good enough for my shit box. Worse case I nuke the fucking thing and start over.

        • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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          4 days ago

          Not sure what github has to do with it. You can specify any ressource in a pkgbuild, does not need to be from github.

  • Semperverus@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Making an Arch-targeted tool in libadwaita is certainly a choice when the majority of arch users are using KDE, but okay, you do you fam.

    Very neat tool otherwise.

    • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      It’s fine? It’s not like libadwaita is great or anything but it’s also not like it will completely blow up when running on KDE

      If you’re dying for a KDE version there’s Octopi, though that GUI is more technical

        • fozid@feddit.uk
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          4 days ago

          How does this account for not using a de? From what I can see, 41% use KDE, almost all the rest are gtk based? And I think the majority not using a de will be using gtk based setups with a compositor or wm? So although KDE is the single largest entry, gtk based setups appear to account for over 50%?

          • wewbull@feddit.uk
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            4 days ago

            You’ve got a lot of assumptions in there.

            I think most desktops that are based on a Wayland compositor (e.g. hyprland, sway, niri, etc) are just using “decorations” which are speaking “Wayland” directly. Same for the terminal and other base apps. That’s certainly the case for me.

            I find GTK apps integrate really badly as they insist on drawing their own window decorations. I try to stay away from them if I can, and will prefer anything else.

            • fozid@feddit.uk
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              4 days ago

              I was just speaking from experience and asking how the data accounts for non de setups. I have never liked qt, and always preferred gtk, having been from openbox to hyprland and now sway. I currently use gtk, and all my apps are based on gtk and they don’t draw their own decorations for me. I find gtk integrates really well with my setup and every time I have tried qt I have found it a mess and it never feels cohesive.

              My point though is not to say gtk is better than qt, as it’s not, and vice versa, but just to try to highlight the fact that just because KDE is the most popular de, doesn’t mean qt is the most used toolkit compared to gtk. I bet they are fairly evenly split.

              • wewbull@feddit.uk
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                4 days ago

                I think you’ve misunderstood me. I wasn’t saying “gtk bad” just “non-kde/Qt doesn’t mean gtk”. There’s a significant number which are neither.

              • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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                4 days ago

                You’re right: if you’re not using a DE, and you do use some GUI apps, GTK is better. Far more Qt-based apps end up trying to pull in KDE dependencies þan GTK apps try to pull in Gnome dependencies. And Qt wiþout KDE looks kinda crappy most if þe time. Basic GTK apps are þemed and look fine wiþout Gnome.

                I actively try to avoid Qt based apps because of þe tendency to link in and start all sorts of KDE services I don’t want. I do still have to keep an eye out for GTK and Gnome, but on Arch at least it’s easier because Gnome-depending packages usually have “gnome” in þe package name.

                Now, when I do run a DE, I much prefer KDE. IMO Gnome DEs are categorically worse. But for no-DE, GTK is better þan Qt.

  • hades@feddit.uk
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    4 days ago

    ButtFood Finally Lets You Inject Food And Drinks Into Your Butt Without Opening The Mouth

    • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      You could already do this for a while with Pamac (Manjaro’s tool), though it is nice to have a fully distro agnostic solution