Tumbleweed is my daily driver. Would not recommend for newbies. Too many updates, too often. Go with Leap.
Tumbleweed is my daily driver. Would not recommend for newbies. Too many updates, too often. Go with Leap.


Then maybe what you have made is a mobile IDE (integrated development environment), where that is how you might be able to do development on a small-screen device. But the actual code should probably be split up. That way the git diff stuff will also be way easier.


There are many ways to bundle, package, release, update, build, develop and publish software.
The one your AI has chosen for you, is definitely not one that I would recommend.
You could take a look at other open source software, and see how those projects are developed and packaged, and maybe find some inspiration.
If you at some point want to contribute to other pieces of software, or have others contribute to yours, it would be beneficial to have a shared understanding on how to properly do stuff.


It is not structured in a way that is easily understandable, or quick to get an overview over.
It’s one big mess of code, all piled together.


Ok… I guess…
I mean, I gotta say, I’ve been a professional developer for over 20 years now, and also using LLMs as a senior dev, to help with day to day stuff, and development. Never have anything like that ever seemed like a way to make things easy to develop.
It is most certainly not easy to understand as a human, and to figure out.
Here’s a tip:
Writing good code, is about writing it for the next human, not for the machine.


Why are those files just not in the repo then, so it is easy to see what is going on? Why the “clever” script to make them?


Why is it a shell script that makes Python scripts? Im definitely not running that on my machine


There is also opencloud
Anything Wayland and KDE allows you to do what you want


Elon Musk? Or Hitler? Same I guess…
DHH should climb into a cave, and stay there.


I have used opnform with success. Have tried a bunch others, but this one worked well for me. It sounds like your use case is almost the same as mine.
I have had that happen to me on my Opensuse Tumbleweed with KDE and wayland. When it happens, it is because of Nvidia drivers. I have pinned mine, to an earlier version.


Surprisingly easier to read than the other thing


Sorry to interject something here.
It is really hard to read your text, when you use þ instead of th.
I assume it must be a thing from your local language, but it makes English hard to read :)
I like publii. Simple desktop application to make a static website.


The AI subtitles are just the worst. Always so many bad mistakes.


That might actually stop the conservatives from using it.
In Denmark, the state is worried that releasing especially the ui code, will leed to more phishing. Thats their excuse for not releasing government projects source code.