Amazing thank you, just ordered the rust programming language book.
darkregn
Think about the words you and other people use and what they actually mean. Are you using a word that refers to a certain group of people who are part of some marginalised group? “Gay” used to be a very common insult, particularly in South Park. What about “lame”, “dumb”, “tard”, etc.
I switched to using this a few months ago from Tig. Tig was nice but lazygit is amazing.
I pretty much use it as a replacement for LGBTQIA+, but keep in mind that not everyone may consider themselves queer; it /is/ a reclaimed word after all, so people may have trauma related to it.
I don’t know if this is helpful, but I searched for “trans friendly doctors” and found some good doctors in my area.
Yeah labels also help me, esp since it makes it easier to find people who feel a similar way.
Non-binary exists, just mentioning that “boy” and “girl” aren’t the only labels.
For me LazyVim is just magic I don’t want to learn, along with preferring to have explicit control of the whole setup. Also migrating to something else takes more effort going from one magic to another magic. I’ve just finished migrating from packer to lazy.nvim and I like that I still have all the git history in my plugin/* files.
I’m very happy with my new “vanilla” lazy.nvim setup now.
I’m looking at implementing lazy.nvim, the package manager, but not LazyVim. Personally I like to be in control of everything and LazyVim takes too much away from me.
As a Letterboxd user, looks really useful, thanks for linking!
Thanks both @KooShnoo@programming.dev and @soulsource@discuss.tchncs.de for your input! I’ve ordered The Book so looking forward to getting started with that.