Not if you have a weird app that only installs with a self-executing tarball. But for initial setup, sure.
Not if you have a weird app that only installs with a self-executing tarball. But for initial setup, sure.
I’m not sure I fully understood what you said, but I have messed around with changing layouts, as I use Colemak. It’s really annoying to have GDM or SDDM default to QWERTY.
The “correct” way to do it is to use localectl [--no-convert] set-x11-keymap us,us "" colemak, grp:win_space_toggle
, and that changes the relevant config files. So, Wayland is pulling from X11 configs (I think).
“Arch” for people who think Arch is too easy.
I love these videos! I feel like this is what !linuxsucks@lemmy.world wishes it was.
Sam: Do I need to open a terminal for this?
ChatGPT: Yes, you’ll need to open a terminal for this. First—
Sam: —aaand now we hang up on that technical service…!
“And then they said it would effectively kill anime and other piracy!”
I sincerely hope it works for you! That
--no-config
flag tellslocalectl
not to change the layout for the TTY consoles, and it might be important to include for systems with encryption (I don’t understand why, just something I saw when reading on the Arch wiki).