In case you’re on Archlinux, the thonny 4.1.4-1 package in chaotic-aur unofficial repo works for me.
In case you’re on Archlinux, the thonny 4.1.4-1 package in chaotic-aur unofficial repo works for me.
For the ebook, install pandoc, then run this:
pandoc -f rst -t epub2 -o pkgsample.epub --metadata title=“nedbat/pkgsample: A simple example of how to structure a Python project” --metadata author=“Ned Batchelder” https://github.com/nedbat/pkgsample/raw/main/README.rst
Can you follow Dave Touretzky’s book? The 1990 PDF version is free.
My neighbor at the trailer park was a janitor at the university. I built my computer from parts he salvaged from the recycle bin, and put Redhat 5 on it.
On Debian, there is a package that displays system documentation including, if I remember correctly, man pages. I think I had to set up a local web server first.
On Archlinux at least, the glibc package includes info pages for C functions. Just type info libc at the command line, or use info inside emacs. There are hyperlinks in info pages, it’s a nicer interface than man pages.
PulseEffects can moderate the high-volumed sounds too. It has a complex set of controls and filters, and I’m not a sound engineer, so I just followed someone else’s recipe.
I don’t have any need to edit markdown, but I sometimes use Marker: “Simple yet robust Markdown editor made with GTK” as a viewer.
It might be possible to boot into a bootable image from grub so you don’t need to set up another bootable partition.
Or you could disable your display manager in systemd. This will start in console, then if you want X just run startx.
Or you could change your display manager to Lemur, which supports X, Wayland, and TTY sessions.
Or you could just press control-alt-F2 at the login screen to switch to a console.
No toca los PopOS!