That's a lot of text to basically say "categorize your data and give the files descriptive names".
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Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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Thx for the tldr
When I moved from BeOS after they went belly up (F) I took a few concepts with me, not the least of which is ~/config and ~/config/bin the latter of which is added to $path. Highly recommend it as a place to home scripts and small compiled programs that don't need to be system-wide.
Isn't ~/.local for such manually installed stuff, like /usr/local instead of /usr?
.local is a pretty recent convention for somebody who has used BeOS.
I long ago just created $HOME/bin and added it to my path. And it works when I compile things with "--prefix=$HOME".
OpenSUSE automatically adds ~/bin and ~/.local/bin to your $PATH if they exist.
Nice, other distros may do it now too. It's been a part of my .bash_local for so long I wouldn't notice...
Any reason why yould have it in .bash_local over .bashrc? I use zsh but even when I used bash or fish, I'd add to my $PATH via .bashrc and config.fish respectively.
Just to simplify things when I use lots of Linux distros that create different default .bashrc files. Makes it easier to distribute via ansible this way. No other reason really.
~/.local/bin
Source goes in ~/Source and gets checked into git, important stuff goes into ~/Documents and (when I get around to setting it up) gets backed up somewhere, downloads go into ~/Downloads
Otherwise, stuff gets dumped in home and I use fzf, grep and jump to get around quickly
Whole system gets wiped and rebuilt when it gets to cluttered, anything I care about persisting is kept somewhere else and nixos puts my system back
I think organising more than the bare minimum is a constant waste of time when search tools exist
For me:
My strange sorting
- Git: for git stuff
- Distrobox (home dirs separated with
--home
to prevent dotfile conflicts)- build (and also apps)
- tests
- Downloads: for chaos
- many subdirs
- Backups
- Laptop
- Phone
- SYNC (complete dir with syncthing, I put as much stuff there as possible)
- Pictures, Music, Downloads (because Android sucks, also synced with syncthing)
- TOPICS
- Personal
- Hobby 1, 2, 3
- Movie Torrents
- ...
- Work
- Seminars
- Documents
- Study
- EBooks
- Tech
- Distros (ISOs)
- Commands
- Guides
- Packages
- Appimages
- Windows
- RPMs
- packages
- spec files
- General
- Documents
- living stuff
Works pretty well. I symlink lots of stuff, especially the synced phone directories. I keep some pictures local, some synced etc.