Right, but like, you lost me at the root of the repo even. Was I supposed to dig through Gentoo or OpenBSD, and both look almost the same, and I didn’t know what program/script you are using to switch, and I was like, I’m not digging through everything here, there’s no order, no guide, no convention I’ve seen before when browsing dotfiles, so I just felt lost immediately. 😬
Well, like I said there is a system to it. Most files are contained in their default locations; where they would be on an actual system. The Gentoo and OpenBSD directiories are the root directories for each system. My neofetch is in the rice, so you can tell what OS it is. You are right that I need a guide. I might create one in the future. Feel free to move this conversation to a git issue on the repo.
Thanks for digging that out for me and everything but this was snarky enough for me to lose interest immediately.
I know you posted your dots. I looked through your dots. It wasn’t in any order I’ve seen before and I didn’t know where to look. Sorry.
Have a good day
I also hate navigating through dotfiles lol. I lay mine out like my actual filesytems.
Right, but like, you lost me at the root of the repo even. Was I supposed to dig through Gentoo or OpenBSD, and both look almost the same, and I didn’t know what program/script you are using to switch, and I was like, I’m not digging through everything here, there’s no order, no guide, no convention I’ve seen before when browsing dotfiles, so I just felt lost immediately. 😬
Well, like I said there is a system to it. Most files are contained in their default locations; where they would be on an actual system. The
Gentoo
andOpenBSD
directiories are the root directories for each system. My neofetch is in the rice, so you can tell what OS it is. You are right that I need a guide. I might create one in the future. Feel free to move this conversation to a git issue on the repo.