Re: [dwm] musca wm

From: Jake Todd <jaketodd422_AT_gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 15 May 2009 15:40:30 -0400

On Fri, 15 May 2009 20:29:11 +0200
Mate Nagy <mnagy_AT_port70.net> wrote:

> > I cannot understand GNU software. ls or cat source in GNU is scary,
> > glibc is even worse. The old UNIX utilities or Plan9 ones have a
> > simplicity which GNU lacks. I don't have anything against the GPL
> > license, but I prefer less restrictive licenses. And, of course, I
> > don't like rms.
> i don't know what's up with this newfangled popular hate for GNU
> software. The GNU userland is a thousand times more comfortable and
> usable than old unix, not least because some utils even have >features<
> (imagine that), while the old unix tools were simplistic hackjobs.
>
> Minimalism is a good thing to consider while developing software, but
> obsessing about it is no better than with anything else. I'm as annoyed
> with huge monstrous software like OpenOffice or Gnome or even Firefox as
> anyone, but wanting to take away the features of the CLI userland that
> make it comfortable is mad. Would you use dash instead of zsh as an
> everyday shell?
>
> At a risk of being boring, I'll say that the same argument can be made
> about text editors: VIM is quite bloated and big, but it's better than
> any small text editor; because text editing is one of those typical
> tasks that cannot be comfortable without a million features that are in
> no way related to each other. Even if someone writes a really small,
> elegant, suckless editor core, it will be unusable until:
> - it gets encoding handling right (internal, file, terminal)
> - word wrapping (disabled, enabled, soft, hard...)
> - syntax highlighting and autoindent, for C, Python, Lisp...
> - all possible tab behaviors (soft, hard, half,...)
> - autocompletion, ctags integration
> These are just the absolutely necessary basics, and if you implement
> these, you already have a multi-ten-thousand line application.
> Sucklessness goes through the window.
> (Yes, there are people who make do with mcedit, but.. come on.)
>
> I say dwm (for example) is good because it's good, not because it's
> suckless. The sucklessness is certainly part of its goodness, but not
> all. If it was uncomfortable, would anyone use it? and it's still only
> marginably usable with a multi-monitor configuration - proper handling of
> this would require adding of this "bloat" everyone hates so much.
>
> Best regards,
> Mate
> PS. am not trolling :)
>

That't what I wanted to say. :D
Received on Fri May 15 2009 - 19:40:30 UTC

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