

" i shouldn’t have to memorize commands"
the up arrow:
what are you doing in my lemmy profile
mastodon · @callyral@furry.engineer
" i shouldn’t have to memorize commands"
the up arrow:
Draw a circle with the ellipse selection tool
So it does have what is effectively a circle shape tool. I don’t know why people are saying it doesn’t.
Because a shape tool requires non-destructive vector layers.
No it doesn’t, why not a bitmap shape tool?
does GIMP not have a circle/shape tool? Why?
Yeah, it is incovenient when you play Java and other people you know play Bedrock (or vice-versa). There is a community-made plugin called Geyser that allows Bedrock players to play on Java servers (it can be buggy sometimes but it is the closest we have to Java-Bedrock crossplay).
Bedrock makes it easier to play with friends, it also has cross-platform support (except for Linux and Mac). Console players can only play on featured servers (unless they use workarounds).
Java is better in most other aspects (I am biased for it though, since it’s what I play): you can mod it, play older versions, use custom shaders (with mods), no microtransactions, play on any server you want, (apparently) less game-breaking bugs, etc.
On console you can get texture packs and add-ons… from the marketplace.
On other bedrock platforms (Windows or Mobile) you can install textures and add-ons from your own files. The problem is that Bedrock add-ons are significantly less capable than Java’s mods.
why, nixOS? Why?? is this what i get for using the unstable branch?
😁😁i cant 😁see any of t😁😁😁hese at all, for me😁😁😁 this message has 😁😁no 😁emojis😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁
edit: fixed it by reinstalling nixOS, still have a minor nerd font issue. i also switched to nixOS 24.11 in the stable branch
Documentation is different from technical support and neither should be done on Discord.
• systemd is an init system commonly used in distros like Linux Mint, Arch, Manjaro, Ubuntu, Debian, etc.
• init systems have a process id of 1 and manage services like a login manager, network, firewall service, etc.
• a process id is assigned to every process in a linux system.
the average user usually doesn’t worry about the init system, although more experienced/techy users may care about it.
holy hell