sudo su logs you in as the current user with sudo privileges, it prevents loading current user environment variables,
even when running su -l to login as root, it's not loading root user enviroment variables either because it's logging in as root under sudo privileges instead as root,
this relates to [question about su #334](https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/LARBS/issues/334)
aliasing pacman to always prepend sudo to the command, causes the pacman -Qs libxft-bgra command from .config/shell/profile
to run a sudo login prompt right after logging in as the user on SSH, and even sometimes on the desktop itself.
try sourcing .config/shell/profile after your logged in, it will ask for your sudo password ..
find is slow, instead use zsh globbing to add '~/.local/bin' to $PPATH
as it achieves the same effect but runs faster, plus the substitution
that was used in the previous command is actually a bad substitution
programs launched after xrdb may look for resources before it has finished loading them.
this also solves the Xresources/pywal resources not being loaded to dwm on login.
upon fresh install .config/abook and .config/mpd/playlists and .cache/zsh is not created
because of it abook can't create a addressbook and returns a error when launched,
while ncmpcpp can't add songs to playlists as the folder doesn't exist,
and zsh doesn't create history because the folder doesn't exist
solved by adding a .gitignore in those folders and telling git to ignore all files in the folder except .gitignore
A custom filename and directory can be specified with startx command,
which in this case is $XINITRC variable that indicates
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/x11/xinitrc
There is no reason for the URL of Luke's main RSS feed to be transferred over unencrypted HTTP. That's why i changed it to HTTPS. Nothing big, it just mildly infuriated me.
While removing trailing newlines is a good idea, it is a problem when
editing C files which "must" have an empty line at the bottom.
So we leave just a single newline, if there were any.
Co-authored-by: Spenser Truex <truex@equwal.com>
* Compatibility for FreeBSD's paste(1)
According to FreeBSD's
[paste(1)](https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=paste&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+12.2-RELEASE+and+Ports),
the extra `-` is needed (tested by myself).
This obviously works for Linux as well, tested on Void Linux at least.
> Create a colon-separated list of directories named bin,
> suitable for use in the PATH environment variable:
`find / -name bin -type d | paste -s -d : -`
* Compatibility for FreeBSD's paste(1)
According to FreeBSD's
[paste(1)](https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=paste&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+12.2-RELEASE+and+Ports),
the extra `-` is needed (tested by myself).
This obviously works for Linux as well, tested on Void Linux at least.
> Create a colon-separated list of directories named bin,
> suitable for use in the PATH environment variable:
`find / -name bin -type d | paste -s -d : -`
Letting zathura use the standard clipboard by default makes using it more intuitive.
We just have to select the zone to copy with our cursor and then it is directly usable with a CTRL-V in any windows.
* sort and add src; dt
I sorted them by category, so it isn't confusing, and also added `~/.local/src` & `~/.local/share`, and changed `~` for `$HOME`.
* sort alphabetically
sort alphabetically