I think GET /api/v3/resolve_object
should work:
curl --url-query q=https://feddit.org/post/2401677 \
https://lemmy.ml/api/v3/resolve_object \
| jq .
(note that the value of q
is url-encoded by --url-query
)
Japanese Speaker. I can read/write some English but not well, so corrections are always appreciated.
プログラミングや音楽に興味があります。最近はEmacsでよく遊んでます。
I think GET /api/v3/resolve_object
should work:
curl --url-query q=https://feddit.org/post/2401677 \
https://lemmy.ml/api/v3/resolve_object \
| jq .
(note that the value of q
is url-encoded by --url-query
)
Yes. In a typical live USB session, all changes are written to the RAM, so they are lost on the shutdown. Some live USB supports persistent storage, but I think it’s not so common.
I see. Before the switching, you may want to try Linux on Windows using WSL2 or VirtualBox, etc. Also, Mint and other distros provide bootable image, so you can try it without installing Mint on your machine. Good luck!
Kernels are usually intalled in ‘/boot’, and we usually install new kernels via a package manager (gnome-software, pacman, dnf, etc.). What distro and package manager are you using?
New kernel may introduce regressions. See this similar issue on kernel 6.10.3, or try another version of kernel on startup if it’s possible.
Can you try true
instead of True
?
https://specifications.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/value-types.html
Values of type boolean must either be the string true or false.
You can get 50 items at most with limit=50
. Try
https://lemmy.ml/feeds/c/lemmy_support.xml?sort=New&limit=50
Please note that many users of FOSS are also developers or contributors. Who wants to report a bug or send a patch if the community is worse?
- Gimp to batch edit pictures in a script (I know about ImageMagick but still)
It seems to exist: https://www.gimp.org/tutorials/Basic_Batch/
Bash should be fine. On typical Bash installation I think this will work (please try to understand each command line before you actually try):
$ cp ~/.bashrc ~/.bashrc.bak
$ cp ~/.bash_history ~/.bash_history.bak
$ printf 'set +o history' >> ~/.bashrc
$ printf "sudo apt update\nsudo apt upgrade\n" > .bash_history
$ (Press Ctrl+D to logout)
For the next bash session you can refer only the two commands from the history with Up/Down/C-p/C-n.
Long ago I made such restricted shell with filtering the shell command history file then disabling command history logging. With some shell scripting, I think you can get more sophisticated version. What shell are you using? (Bash, Fish, Zsh, etc.)
Not a direct solution but GET /api/v3/site
may help.
The repository has Makefile so you can build the executable with make
:
$ cd /tmp
$ git clone https://git.sr.ht/~leon_plickat/lswt
$ cd lswt
$ make
$ ./lswt
$ sudo make install (optional)
I think https://git.sr.ht/~leon_plickat/lswt may work.
Some applications can’t display some Unicode strings like s̵t̵r̵o̵k̵e̵, so replacing Markdown element like ~strike~
with Unicode equivalent (s̵t̵r̵o̵k̵e̵ ) may not be a good idea if you want portability. I opened your post in text editors and noticed that neovim-qt drops s̵t̵r̵o̵k̵e̵’s combining characters (issue on Github) and just displays
stroke instead of s̵t̵r̵o̵k̵e̵; GUI Emacs with my font settings (Noto) doesn’t combine
the characters and displays s-t-r-o-k-e-
(as I said, this may depends on font settings).
One of the reasons is it makes moderation (including soft moderation by users like downvotes or reports) harder. Users not familiar with Japanese can’t decide whether the post follows the rule and is on topic.
Thanks for the clarification. I switched from Xfce4 to GNOME many years ago because the former doesn’t support Wayland at that time, but I still miss the manual quarter tiling with the shortcut keys.
IIRC Xfce4 supports quad manual tiling like that.
I’d try other (lightweight) distros for that case. Since your PC is old, it may not fulfil the latest Ubuntu’s system requirements.