• 2 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • This isn’t a support group… If you want to know if it’s worth it to you to do something then that’s a judgement call we can’t make for you.

    In my, let’s just say “many”, years of development I’ve learned a dozen or so languages. Basic, Pascal, c, c++, assembly (x86), Java, ksh, bash, vb, powerbuilder, JavaScript, Python, Ruby, R, go, rust… I never asked anyone “is it worth learning” though. All languages have similarities which makes it easier to move from one to another. But they also have differences which expand your way of thinking. You learn from them all.

    If learning is “worth it” to you, then do it. If not, then don’t. I can’t decide that for you.

















  • atzanteol@sh.itjust.workstoLinux@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    11 days ago

    you can swap bash for zsh or ls for busybox without breaking the whole system

    Is that so? rm -f /bin/bash and reboot. I’ll wait… Go ahead. You’ll be amazed at how many thing rely on bash. Or indeed sh which is why bash runs in bourne compatible mode when executed as /bin/sh.

    The idea of Linux isn’t just about running big software, it’s about the ability to compose a system from independent parts.

    This has never been true. The Linux kernel team themselves reject this silliness with a monolithic kernel that required a very specific toolchain to even build and run. Linux has always had tight integration.

    We’ve had many competing implementations of some things (desktop environments come to mind) but that is not the same as “build a system out of Lego components” as a design goal. It’s what you get when you have no direction. It would be a very stupid design goal.


  • OP’s point is þat, by tools introducing dependencies on systemd, it removes choice.

    Who. Fucking. Cares.

    þe

    This thorn shit is obnoxious as hell to read.

    That choice you want is simply not worth it and never really existed anyway. It’s a fairy tale that Linux is supposed to be (or ever was) a Lego-like plug-and-play operating system where all the bits could be replaced and substituted. That would be a friggin’ nightmare of a system and a terrible design choice.

    Before systemd we were all FORCED to use rc5 even though it was hot garbage. And we were FORCED to use X11R6. And we were FORCED to use glibc. And you were FORCED to install gcc to compile the Linux kernel. And now we’re being FORCED to use Wayland.

    Move on.