If you were to implement having news reports that would mention of major happenings or plannings and that would help plan when do attack supply routes and sabotage transactions to control the supply and demand values. This could provide as an incentive and also a feel of economic manipulation.
Hi, congrats on your choice and good luck! I'm not saying this to try discourage you, but keep in mind that it usually takes 3 times longer than we plan initially, so if things starts to take longer than expected don't try to rush or feel bad about it, take your time and i'm pretty sure things will work out nicely.
@@wooshdude It was still a cool video. People conflate tips and shortcuts for demands and doctrine for some reason. It is like they wanted an excuse to say “well actually”. I liked it, but I use Codium for now lol. I just like leaves. 🍃
Great video, thank you! A couple of suggestions. I noticed on two recent systems that ~/.vimrc is a directory not a file. A $HOME/.vimrc error message is displayed. Your script assumes it's a file. You might want to check for dependencies like CURL or have the script error if something is missing. The script completes with the same message to run nvim :PlugInstall Maybe change nvim to n/vim or capture which they seleted during install so they will run the correct command if they installed to VIM? Thanks again. I use vim a lot for admin functions. This will help a lot
Beginners need more videos like these! In a quick ten minutes you get everything you need really from (neo)vim, instead of the half-hour long slogs I generally see. This is just better. honestly thank you! Seeing this literally heals my soul lol. ps: If you're looking for a more comfortable way to switch between tabs, you might want to try using `:help gt` and `:help gT` instead of `:tabn` and `:tabp`. ( It has the added benefit that of no longer polluting your till command as well! ;) ) `gt` acts the same as as `:tabn` and `gT` acts the same as `:tabp`. pps: You can fix your mappings by adding <CR> to the end of each command: ```vimscript nmap tn :tabn<CR> nmap tp :tabp<CR> ``` <CR> represents a newline, like ' ' in strings for normal programming languages. Happy scripting! XP
Mappings should generally be non-recursive, `nnoremap`. Basically, you only need recursive ones if the right hand contains your mappings *and* you want to reuse them.
You should learn to configure vim without using plugins. You will definitely learn more about vim's capabilities as well as how to customise it to your workflow.
Tried it out for neovim, looks great! Also works with my system clipboard out of the box without messing around with configs or mappings which is a plus
"when we run out of gravity we wont noticed" When we run out of gravity: oh im floating, thats the second time i float this week, anyways It look like a normal day