On 9/17/22, Maude Summerside wrote:
<.. snip ..>
> Screen reader or not, what don't you understand by STOP TOP POSTING ?
*plonk*
On Sat, 17 Sep 2022 11:19:51 -0400 (EDT)
Karen Lewellen wrote:
> I supposed you missed the I am using a screen reader memo?
Hi, Karen. It is possible that he didn't know what a screen reader is,
or missed its significance. I didn't know what a screen reader is until
I looked it up just now.
--
On 2022-09-17 11:55, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Given in my first post I *stated was using a screen reader* the sight
> factor was stated.
> Not that searching for shellworld contributed to my question being
> answered, or its solution.
> For the record, another company owns
>
> Screen prompted me for something like a filename, but it seemed to remove
> the prompt within a couple seconds, before I could copy it for email
> documentation purposes. (I *hate* it when things don't give me time to
> read and ponder a question or an error message.)
>
> B
redacted. The bigger the organisation, the harder it becomes
to maintain that privacy. All of which leads me to conclude that
shellword is small operation. Of course, that isn't always a bad thing.
Anyhow, this is all a distraction from your question, for which I
apologise. A question for whi
Given in my first post I *stated was using a screen reader* the sight
factor was stated.
Not that searching for shellworld contributed to my question being
answered, or its solution.
For the record, another company owns shellworld now.
On Sat, 17 Sep 2022, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote
On Sat, 17 Sep 2022, Curt wrote:
That is not what is conventionally meant by a screenshot, which is a
digital image of a computer display. Maybe we should ask Karen what she wants
and what she means, specifically, by 'screenshot' before launch.
Because if all she wants and needs is a text dump,
documentation purposes. (I *hate* it when things don't give me time to
read and ponder a question or an error message.)
Because I didn't respond quickly enough to the prompt, screen assumed an
answer, and generated a file named "hardcopy.0" in the current working
directory.
unicorn:~$
On Sat, 17 Sep 2022, Brad Rogers wrote:
Hello David,
Since a whois query comes back with "redacted for privacy" about almost
everything, I'd say it's a pretty safe bet that the OP is the domain's
owner.
You would lose that bet.
Shellworld is a hosting service where I have both a personal
the number of characters in that file and if that number is
greater than 0, you have some or all of your hardcopy available to send.
And here is the answer to my finding the file question.
would ls -l work as well?
thanks,
Kare
Jude "There are four boxes to be used in
defense of liberty:
On Sat, 17 Sep 2022, mick.crane wrote:
If it's a one off thing take a photo and send that.
mick
I supposed you missed the I am using a screen reader memo?
smiles,
Kare
On 2022-09-17, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
>>
>> http://links.twibright.com/user_en.html#subsubch-save_as
>
> But if you try it, you'll see that saves the page as HTML, not as a
> snapshot of the displayed text.
What 'displayed text'? She asked for a *screenshot*.
>> Save as
>> Stores
?
Similar comments might apply if you mean something different by 'links', as
I asked in my opening question.
Further assistance or more specific guidance might be possible if you
provide the information requested.
I remain hopeful that you will reply to my previous message.
> On 2022-09-17, David wrote:
> >
> > The documentation website for 'links' is at:
> > http://links.twibright.com/user_en.html
> >
> > and says:
> > "You will find here a complete guide for using the Links web
> > browser"
> >
> > and it contains nothing at all about a '-dump' option.
>
>
On 2022-09-17, David wrote:
>
> The documentation website for 'links' is at:
> http://links.twibright.com/user_en.html
>
> and says:
> "You will find here a complete guide for using the Links web browser"
>
> and it contains nothing at all about a '-dump' option.
us means, including
liberal use of whitespace and minimal use of (obscure?) jargon, abbreviations,
acronyms, and references.
If someone else has already responded to a question, decide whether any
response you add will be helpful or not ...
A picture is worth a thousand words -- divide by 10 for e
On Sat, Sep 17, 2022 at 04:03:11PM +0800, Bret Busby wrote:
> I do not understand why you do not simply use the button on your computer
> keyboard; if you cannot easily use a Take Screenshot application within
> whatever operating system you are using to view the web page, on a standard
> 101 key
On Sat, 17 Sept 2022 at 21:38, Curt wrote:
> On 2022-09-17, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > links does have the facility to dump the text to an output file.
>
> That is not what is conventionally meant by a screenshot, which is a
> digital image of a computer display. Maybe we should ask Karen
Karen Lewellen wrote:
> I suppose you are suggesting that links, the browser I am actually using,
> works like Firefox, the browser to which I have no access whatsoever?
No, I'm missing the context of your subject line in your message
body. My mistake.
-dsr-
On 2022-09-17, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
>
> links does have the facility to dump the text to an output file.
That is not what is conventionally meant by a screenshot, which is a
digital image of a computer display. Maybe we should ask Karen what she wants
and what she means, specifically, by
On Fri, Sep 16, 2022 at 10:51:16PM -0400, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Hi folks,
> Does the browser have the ability to create a screenshot after a fashion?
> Need to document something for a site owner that will show for them, even if
> my screen reader presents it differently.
> Thanks,
> Karen
>
>
On Sat, 17 Sept 2022 at 19:21, Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Sat, 17 Sep 2022 18:28:40 +1000 David wrote:
> >been unable to find any information at all about shellworld.net.
> >If you could provide a link to any documentation or information
> >about shellworld.net,
>
> Since a whois query comes back
On Sat, 17 Sep 2022 18:28:40 +1000
David wrote:
Hello David,
>been unable to find any information at all about shellworld.net.
>If you could provide a link to any documentation or information
>about shellworld.net,
Since a whois query comes back with "redacted for privacy" about almost
On Sat, 17 Sept 2022 at 16:07, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Hi Karen
> While I respect those questions, they are not relevant to my question,
This belief of yours is incorrect.
> as
> It am asking specifically for a command associated with the Links browser.
We understand that. The Link
s
I asked in my opening question.
Further assistance or more specific guidance might be possible if you
provide the information requested.
I remain hopeful that you will reply to my previous message.
I do not understand why you do not simply use the button on your
computer keyboard; if
Screen can be used more effectively than a photo I think. If the hardcopy
is successful search for a file called hardcopy.n where n is a number and
it should be a larger size than 0. wc -c hardcopy.1 if hardcopy.1 exists
would give the number of characters in that file and if that number is
On 2022-09-17 07:20, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Yes, links is the browser to which I am referring.
As stated, I am attempting to help a site owner troubleshoot an issue,
that I experience using links, the browser.
If it's a one off thing take a photo and send that.
mick
gt;
> > If using #3, I would try running 'links' inside 'screen', which according
> > to its manpage offers a keystroke to "write a hardcopy of the current
> > window to a file", although I have not tested it.
> >
> > 'screen' is packaged for Debian.
> >
>
manpage offers a keystroke to "write a hardcopy of the current
window to a file", although I have not tested it.
'screen' is packaged for Debian.
Are you using Debian?
Similar comments might apply if you mean something different by 'links', as
I asked in my opening question.
Further
While I respect those questions, they are not relevant to my question, as
It am asking specifically for a command associated with the Links browser.
I am using a shell service, I cannot use Debian directly.
On Sat, 17 Sep 2022, David wrote:
On Sat, 17 Sept 2022 at 12:51, Karen Lewellen
On Fri, 16 Sep 2022, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Hi folks,
Does the browser have the ability to create a screenshot after a fashion?
Need to document something for a site owner that will show for them, even if
my screen reader presents it differently.
Thanks,
Karen
I've never used links,
On 2022-09-16 23:15, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> I suppose you are suggesting that links, the browser I am actually
> using, works like Firefox, the browser to which I have no access
> whatsoever?
>
>
>
> On Fri, 16 Sep 2022, Dan Ritter wrote:
>
>> Karen Lewellen wrote:
>>> Does the browser
On Fri, 16 Sep 2022 Karen Lewellen wrote:
Hi folks,
Does the browser have the ability to create a screenshot after a fashion?
Full disclosure: I have never used the "links" text browser.
I very quickly searched the following page for any indication that the
links browser has a function
ight apply if you mean something different by 'links', as
I asked in my opening question.
Further assistance or more specific guidance might be possible if you
provide the information requested.
I remain hopeful that you will reply to my previous message.
On Sat, 17 Sept 2022 at 12:51, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Does the browser have the ability to create a screenshot after a fashion?
> Need to document something for a site owner that will show for them, even
> if my screen reader presents it differently.
Hi Karen,
So that we can help you
Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Does the browser have the ability to create a screenshot after a fashion?
> Need to document something for a site owner that will show for them, even if
> my screen reader presents it differently.
Firefox has ctrl-shift-S to take a screenshot.
It pops up a menu asking
I suppose you are suggesting that links, the browser I am actually using,
works like Firefox, the browser to which I have no access whatsoever?
On Fri, 16 Sep 2022, Dan Ritter wrote:
Karen Lewellen wrote:
Does the browser have the ability to create a screenshot after a fashion?
Need to
Hi folks,
Does the browser have the ability to create a screenshot after a fashion?
Need to document something for a site owner that will show for them, even
if my screen reader presents it differently.
Thanks,
Karen
On Thu, Sep 15, 2022 at 01:30:11AM -0400, Chuck Zmudzinski wrote:
bug report to try to fix it, except for the suggestion that a Debian kernel
developer made to increase the uevent buffer size in the kernel over a year
ago and another suggestion from another Debian maintainer or developer who
udev startup script
on the installer image (I think it was in the initrd) to keep it from causing
the
catastrophic crash when the "coldplug all devices" command is executed, which
is actually done, IIUC, by the udevadm executable file.
So my question is about udevadm which I think is the comman
On 8/27/22 12:21, Stefan Monnier wrote:
What sort of hoops would I have to take a running swan dive thru to
have cura, on this machine, directly drive /sshnet/rock64/dev/ttyACM0,
my Prusa MK3S+ printer? I'm already logged into it over my local net
twice and it would sure save me a lot of
Greetings all;
My local home network is all behind a router running dd-wrt. sitting in
this chair,
3 rooms away from a rock64 running armbian, I can see the rock64's
/dev/ttyACM0, owned
by root:dialout. I am a member of that group and logged into it from
here. My home net
is 100% host file
On Sat 20 Aug 2022 at 07:46:24 (+0200), to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 19, 2022 at 11:55:33PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > On Fri 19 Aug 2022 at 08:46:29 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 11:13:11PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > > > The attraction of a one-liner
On Fri, Aug 19, 2022 at 11:55:33PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Fri 19 Aug 2022 at 08:46:29 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 11:13:11PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > > The attraction of a one-liner is partly because of screens
> > > being around four times wider than
On Fri 19 Aug 2022 at 08:46:29 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 11:13:11PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > The attraction of a one-liner is partly because of screens
> > being around four times wider than high (characterwise).
> > Wouldn't it be nice if bash had Perl's die ….
On Fri, 19 Aug 2022 at 14:13, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 18 Aug 2022 at 06:58:20 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:58:17PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > > $ type soxy
> > > soxy is a function
> > > soxy ()
> > > {
> > > [ -z "$1" ] && printf '%s\n' "Usage:
On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 11:13:11PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> The attraction of a one-liner is partly because of screens
> being around four times wider than high (characterwise).
> Wouldn't it be nice if bash had Perl's die ….
Some people put a die() function in their scripts, and then use it.
appear am complaining.
No sweat. I put a smiley on there, I was half-in-jest...
> Mention of teenage Guru was attempted humour.
...as you were, it seems :-D
> There were 2 question marks but really one question.
> "Is there a numpty's explanation what are these PulseAudio, Alsa, Jack?&quo
y old times.
TBH you packed two questions into your original mail. Complaining that
most people concentrate on one is kinda... well ;-)
I don't mean to appear am complaining.
Mention of teenage Guru was attempted humour.
There were 2 question marks but really one question.
"Is there
On Thu 18 Aug 2022 at 06:58:20 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:58:17PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > $ type soxy
> > soxy is a function
> > soxy ()
> > {
> > [ -z "$1" ] && printf '%s\n' "Usage:${FUNCNAME[0]}
> > path-to/sound-file-of-any-type [trim 20 2]
> >
On Thu, Aug 18 2022 at 09:39:23 AM, wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:47:40PM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
>> On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
>> > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> > Hash: SHA256
>> >
>> > Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>>
>> In the 70s friends
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:58:17PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> $ type soxy
> soxy is a function
> soxy ()
> {
> [ -z "$1" ] && printf '%s\n' "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]}
> path-to/sound-file-of-any-type [trim 20 2]
> runs sox to play the file with any arguments given.
> The
On Wed, 17 Aug 2022 20:00 +, ghe2001 wrote:
> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their
> infinite wisdom, the Debian designers seem to have removed Audacity from
> the upcoming release, Boo
On 2022-08-17, mick.crane wrote:
> On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA256
>>
>> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> In the 70s friends went to this house where there was a 14 year old
> Indian mystic.
> You were all
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:47:40PM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
> On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
> > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> > Hash: SHA256
> >
> > Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> In the 70s friends went to this house where there was a 14 year old Indian
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 08:00:17PM +, ghe2001 wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA256
>
> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their infinite
> wisdom, the Debian d
On Wed 17 Aug 2022 at 20:00:17 (+), ghe2001 wrote:
> Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
>
> I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their infinite
> wisdom, the Debian designers seem to have removed Audacity from the upcoming
> re
On 2022-08-17 21:00, ghe2001 wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
In the 70s friends went to this house where there was a 14 year old
Indian mystic.
You were all supposed to wait downstairs until you were called to
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 1:37 PM Bob McGowan wrote:
> The command to add a user to a group is: useradd -G
> groupname[,groupname...] username
>
> For example: useradd -G audio,pulsaudio bob
>
> Useradd creates a new user account. Usermod modifies an existing account.
sudo usermod -a -G audio
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Anybody have anything to say about editing sound files?
I started to answer the poster's question and found that, in their infinite
wisdom, the Debian designers seem to have removed Audacity from the upcoming
release, Bookworm.
Bad idea, IMHO
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 08:10:37PM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
> I'm just requesting some comprehensible, simple to understand, overview of
> how the sound softwares are working.
Too many layers and possibilities to give a comprehensive listing.
Let's pick ONE. Plain ALSA, without Pulseaudio or
On 2022-08-17 18:50, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:27:25AM -0700, Bob McGowan wrote:
The command to add a user to a group is: useradd -G
groupname[,groupname...] username
For example: useradd -G audio,pulsaudio bob
Debian also allows "adduser username groupname".
I sort
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:27:25AM -0700, Bob McGowan wrote:
> The command to add a user to a group is: useradd -G
> groupname[,groupname...] username
>
> For example: useradd -G audio,pulsaudio bob
Debian also allows "adduser username groupname".
Thanks, I almost always get useradd and groupadd mixed up when I need to
use them.
Jude "There are four boxes to be used in
defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940)
.
On Wed, 17 Aug 2022, Bob McGowan wrote:
> The command to
The command to add a user to a group is: useradd -G
groupname[,groupname...] username
For example: useradd -G audio,pulsaudio bob
On 8/17/22 10:21, Jude DaShiell wrote:
the user that's doing this would need to be added to the audio group and
maybe the pulseaudio group if that group exists.
the user that's doing this would need to be added to the audio group and
maybe the pulseaudio group if that group exists. The groupadd command can
do that for the user but groupadd has to be used by root to get that done.
Before doing any of that, a user can find what groups they're already in
by
hello,
Please take into account I don't know what I'm doing generally and know
nothing about audio.
Several years ago somebody asked me to edit a radio broadcast to
separate out a few seconds.
It took a couple of minutes to install Audacity, figure out the GUI
thing and save the bits of audio.
On Fri, Jul 22, 2022 at 8:51 PM John Conover wrote:
> The command:
>
> sox ... sine create 1000 vol -60 dB
>
> generates a 1 kHz. sine wave at 1 / 1000 full scale.
>
> Does the low level sine wave still consist of +/- 2^15 steps?
>
> (i.e., does the volume reduction occur during sine wave
The command:
sox ... sine create 1000 vol -60 dB
generates a 1 kHz. sine wave at 1 / 1000 full scale.
Does the low level sine wave still consist of +/- 2^15 steps?
(i.e., does the volume reduction occur during sine wave generation, or
post generation?)
Thanks,
John
--
John
Hi,
Nicolas George wrote:
> > 1. Have you read the question in full?
Very good point. The same is true for other people's anwers before
commenting on them. (Cough. I still feel embarrassed about the "make"
blooper.)
john doe wrote:
> Language barrier.
Or a neighbor ri
On 7/22/2022 6:50 PM, Nicolas George wrote:
Edwin Zimmerman (12022-07-22):
You are right. I stopped reading when I saw the tkinter import.
I was considering sending to this list a general advice about answering
the question as it is asked, with three checks. You just made me insert
a fourth
Edwin Zimmerman (12022-07-22):
> You are right. I stopped reading when I saw the tkinter import.
I was considering sending to this list a general advice about answering
the question as it is asked, with three checks. You just made me insert
a fourth one at the beginning and convinced me to s
On 7/15/22 00:31, Ram Ramesh wrote:
On 7/14/22 09:15, Ram Ramesh wrote:
Hi Ramesh,
There are numerous reports (mostly old, afaics) of the issue you
describe, but with various suggested reasons.
I suspect the avahi related part is a consequence rather than a
cause - I didn't think avahi was
On 7/14/22 09:15, Ram Ramesh wrote:
Hi Ramesh,
There are numerous reports (mostly old, afaics) of the issue you
describe, but with various suggested reasons.
I suspect the avahi related part is a consequence rather than a cause
- I didn't think avahi was capable of disabling interfaces, the
Hi Ramesh,
There are numerous reports (mostly old, afaics) of the issue you describe, but
with various suggested reasons.
I suspect the avahi related part is a consequence rather than a cause - I didn't think
avahi was capable of disabling interfaces, the message looks like it's updating a
On Thu 14 Jul 2022, at 01:03, Ram Ramesh wrote:
[...]
> I take back some of what I said. It is both - I mean usb
> autosupend+avahi_daemon. I need to keep the adaptor from autosuspending
> and tell avahi-daemon not to disable the interface in the OS.
>
> I also found the power/control entry in
Hi Ramesh,
Please could you post some example daemon.log entries and any surrounding
entries that seem related?
Also is there anything in
/var/log/syslog
that seems to relate?
Perhaps
$ sudo cat /var/log/syslog | grep x
where x = the interface name concerned.
Thanks,
Gareth
Hi Gareth,
On 7/12/22 19:21, Ram Ramesh wrote:
On 7/11/22 11:30, Ram Ramesh wrote:
Experts,
I have a firewall machine built recently and it runs debian
bullseye (v11). It has two ethernet interfaces - one internal ($intf)
and one external ($extf). My external port runs dhclient to get its
IP address
On Wed 13 Jul 2022, at 01:21, Ram Ramesh wrote:
> Do you know a simple way to disable autopowerdown of
> just this usb NIC? May be there is something that I can do with ethtool?
I wonder if powertop may be of use here.
It has a "tunables" section where (I think) power-saving features can be
On 7/11/22 11:30, Ram Ramesh wrote:
Experts,
I have a firewall machine built recently and it runs debian bullseye
(v11). It has two ethernet interfaces - one internal ($intf) and one
external ($extf). My external port runs dhclient to get its IP address
and internal port runs dnsmasq to
> On 11 Jul 2022, at 17:48, Ram Ramesh wrote:
[...]
> . However, my new machine has this daemon running which notices that $extif
> does not have much activity and disables it after some timeout idle time.
> Today I noticed that my $extif is vanishing and /var/log/daemon.log shows
> some
Experts,
I have a firewall machine built recently and it runs debian bullseye
(v11). It has two ethernet interfaces - one internal ($intf) and one
external ($extf). My external port runs dhclient to get its IP address
and internal port runs dnsmasq to provide DNS service to
is what's causing my CPU to go
to 100% usage when I read local mail then I need to know how to correct
that?
Thanks for taking the time to read this and help answer the question.
Tim
--
Hello,
On Sun, Jun 12, 2022 at 11:56:26PM +0100, Štěpán Košan wrote:
> really sorry to bother with a stupid question, however I was wondering, I
> got a warning that CRON is about to be removed in the upgrade, but it seems
> it's still on. Is there a plan to remove it eventually?
I have
Hello everyone,
really sorry to bother with a stupid question, however I was wondering, I
got a warning that CRON is about to be removed in the upgrade, but it seems
it's still on. Is there a plan to remove it eventually?
Thank you and I apologize If this list is only for Debian stable.
Best
Hellow Ash,
Ash Joubert writes:
> On 07/06/2022 20:01, 황병희 wrote:
>> ===> Correction: git pull origin karma
>
> This means fetch commits from the "karma" branch/tag on repository
> "origin" and incorporate them into the current local branch with a
> merge or rebase. See the man page for
On Wed, Jun 08, 2022 at 04:38:22PM +1200, Ash Joubert wrote:
> On 08/06/2022 16:25, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > Just... what does "Pro Git" mean?
>
> Pro Git is the name of a well-known book on git that is also available free
> in HTML and PDF formats [...]
Oh, I see -- thanks :)
Cheers
--
t
On 08/06/2022 16:25, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Just... what does "Pro Git" mean?
Pro Git is the name of a well-known book on git that is also available
free in HTML and PDF formats. In addition to the basics that can be
found in the git man pages, it contains best-practices and big-picture
On Wed, Jun 08, 2022 at 10:31:03AM +1200, Ash Joubert wrote:
> On 07/06/2022 20:01, 황병희 wrote:
> > ===> Correction: git pull origin karma
>
> This means fetch commits from the "karma" branch/tag on repository "origin"
> and incorporate them into the current local branch with a merge or rebase.
>
On 07/06/2022 20:01, 황병희 wrote:
===> Correction: git pull origin karma
This means fetch commits from the "karma" branch/tag on repository
"origin" and incorporate them into the current local branch with a merge
or rebase. See the man page for git-pull for a detailed explanation and
ascii
황병희 writes:
> ...
> - git pull -b karma
Ack! my mistake!!! I am very sorry!!!
===> Correction: git pull origin karma
Sorry again john and IL!
Sincerely, Linux fan Byung-Hee
--
^고맙습니다 _地平天成_ 감사합니다_^))//
>
> According to (1), that would be the ''-b, -w, --ignore-space-at-eol, and
> --ignore-cr-at-eol' option and the 'repository'.
>
>
This is a "git diff" option, not "git pull" option AFAIK
On 6/7/2022 6:26 AM, 황병희 wrote:
Hellow Debian,
For days, i have been working with git.
And today i have very simple question.
Because it is very confused...
I need somebody's clearing.
What is different both commands:
- git pull
- git pull -b karma
According to (1), that would be the ''-b
Hi
> - git pull
>
Fetch data from remote repository and merge local branch or rebase it on
top of new commits.
> - git pull -b karma
>
I do know what "-b" is.
Documentation also doesn't: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-pull
$ git pull -b asd
error: unknown switch `b'
There is "git checkout
Hellow Debian,
For days, i have been working with git.
And today i have very simple question.
Because it is very confused...
I need somebody's clearing.
What is different both commands:
- git pull
- git pull -b karma
Thanks in advance!
Sincerely, Linux fan Byung-Hee
--
^고맙습니다 _地平天成_ 감사합니다_^))//
David Wright composed on 2022-04-21 12:28 (UTC-0500):
> On Thu 21 Apr 2022 at 05:30:31 (-0500), Richard Owlett wrote:
>> When creating a partition with Gparted the is a box titled "Label:".
>> I was referring to the content placed there.
> There are lots of partitioners, but only one set of
On Thu 21 Apr 2022 at 05:30:31 (-0500), Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 04/20/2022 05:44 PM, David Wright wrote:
> > On Wed 20 Apr 2022 at 20:09:54 (+), Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > > On Wed, Apr 20, 2022 at 02:31:30PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> > > > I have a machine set aside to test several
On Thu 21 Apr 2022 at 05:30:31 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 04/20/2022 05:44 PM, David Wright wrote:
> > On Wed 20 Apr 2022 at 20:09:54 (+), Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > > On Wed, Apr 20, 2022 at 02:31:30PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> > > > I have a machine set aside to test several
On Thu, 2022-04-21 at 05:30 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 04/20/2022 05:44 PM, David Wright wrote:
> > On Wed 20 Apr 2022 at 20:09:54 (+), Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > > On Wed, Apr 20, 2022 at 02:31:30PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> > > > I have a machine set aside to test several
On 04/20/2022 05:44 PM, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 20 Apr 2022 at 20:09:54 (+), Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
On Wed, Apr 20, 2022 at 02:31:30PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
I have a machine set aside to test several configurations of Debian 11.
Is there away to have the Grub Menu
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