this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2024
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I use Guix to make my Linux setup reproducible, really nice because I've basically automated the process of installation an entire OS on a new machine.
you don't have to use online tools to convert files, ImageMagick and Pandoc are two really good CLI tools.
Thank you.
Have heard about NixOs and Guix. Are they easy and popular? Asking about the popularity part since, I'm currently on OpenSuse Leap and sometimes I have to find specific repos to install applications and most online tutorials are for debian systems. It's not an big issue, as opensuse is better for me in the case of secure boot n nvidia support.
Cool. I use pdf arranger and ghostscript for pdf page arrangement and size adjustment. Are they more easier/advanced than these?
Been thinking about installing Calibre
Guix isn't as popular as NixOS, but that's probably because some of the packages are outdated. At least for Guix, I'd say that the packages are quite lacking, but as a contributor, I do what I can to help. NixOS has a variety of packages, which is probably the ideal distro to pick, but personally, I don't like the weird Haskell/YAML hybrid DSL with poor debugging. Scheme, on the other hand, is a full-fledged language, and not just that, certain apps can be debugged via Shepherd, using the Guile REPL. The learning curve is quite, I'd say, but you don't really have to worry about that as you can use them as a third-party package manager, just like Flatpak.
They're quite easy in the sense that they have good defaults, but you can use them for advanced stuff using flags.