Jonas Bernoulli

@tarsius
40 Followers
33 Following
35 Posts
Maintainer of Magit and the Emacsmirror
bloghttps://emacsair.me
githubhttps://github.com/tarsius
magithttps://github.com/magit/magit
openpgp7e108e46f316cba0ce3c8d20fc61b7237c7155b7
@dennisgentry Thanks for letting me know!
I've just released Transient v0.4.0. https://emacsair.me/2023/05/10/transient-0.4/ #emacs #magit
Emacsair! Transient 0.4 released

Blog of Jonas Bernoulli

@[email protected] Nothing wrong with features after some polishing, but I am happy with my Borg for now.
@[email protected] Well Straight's author got a bit inspired by my Borg and asked me for comments when he was getting started. I thought some of the additional features would got in the way. I haven't looked into Elpaca, but understand it is intended to address Straight's shortcomings, and I assume that that means that the features I expected to get in the way are now being improved to the point where they no longer get in the way. 😆
Writing an elisp package manager is the new writing a static blog generator.
@arialdo Thanks for the offer, but no, I would like to stick to how the Emacs manuals do it too.

I've implemented a new command magit-update-default-branch, which might come in handy, considering that I just renamed the default branches of all my repositories. You can just press "M b" and confirm. That's all there is to it now.

If you would like to rename the default branches in your own repositories, you can do so using the new forge-rename-default-branch on "M b r".

(The latter currently only works for GitHub and the binding for the former changes to "M b u", once Forge is loaded.)

#GNU #Guix 1.4.0 released! 🎉
https://guix.gnu.org/en/blog/2022/gnu-guix-1.4.0-released/

So many exciting things since 1.3.0, starting with ‘guix shell’ and Guix Home. Check it out!

Plus, it comes with cute artwork by @luis_felipe.

GNU Guix 1.4.0 released — 2022 — Blog — GNU Guix

Blog posts about GNU Guix.

Hot Butter - Pop Corn (Dance)

YouTube
Ancient grammatical puzzle solved after 2,500 years

How a determined student made Sanskrit’s ‘language machine’ work for the first time in 2,500 years

University of Cambridge