Come for the memes, stay for the wiki and AUR.
Come for the memes, stay for the wiki and AUR.
My current laptop is 9 years old, I recently replaced the heat paste and added new RAM. It should definitely be more than 10 years, as my laptop is totally usable for everyday tasks like
This here is the best answer, i’d like to add:
Just use Markdown or Org-mode and then export to HTML. Most devices should have a browser capable of display this.
Org-mode is splendid and i use it almost every day, but i think what op is asking for is something different. If i want to write something like this:
s̵t̵r̵o̵k̵e̵
i would use +stroke+
in Org-mode. If i then set org-hide-emphasis-markers
to t
, the +
signs are hidden, but they are still there. If i save the file, and open it in another program, it is still +stroke+
, instead of the unicode variant.
The feature asked for was intended for the following use-case:
It would make reading plain text notes/todo lists cross-device simpler.
Which Org-mode would fail to deliver on.
This shouldn’t be too hard to implement in Emacs.
Knowing that it originates from bcache probably helps to prevent this confusion.
Nushell can be helpful to sift through structured data: https://www.nushell.sh/
You can just open a csv file and filter and select what you want.