• @calcopiritus
    link
    3010 days ago

    I’m with windows on this one. Case insensitive is much more ergonomics with the only sacrifice represented by this meme. And a little bit of performance of course. But the ergonomics are worth it imo.

    • KillingTimeItself
      link
      fedilink
      English
      010 days ago

      so cool story, on linux theres this thing called you can just not make case sensitive files, i do it a lot.

      You can also just, use a case insensitive autocomplete setup as well. If you’re using a mouse idk why you’re even talking about this so that wouldn’t matter.

        • KillingTimeItself
          link
          fedilink
          English
          510 days ago

          hence the inclusion of the case insensitive auto completion, it’s not 1982, you can use that now.

          • exu
            link
            fedilink
            English
            210 days ago

            If I have two folders in my directory, Dir1 and dir2, what does d <TAB> autocomplete to and what should it do?

            • Illecors
              link
              fedilink
              English
              39 days ago

              At least on zsh it would pop both of those as suggestions you can cycle through.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              29 days ago

              In the case of zsh it will quite happily do either and ask you which you meant just like if they were called Dir1 and Dir2. Also works if you have a dir1 and Dir2 in the same directory as well

            • KillingTimeItself
              link
              fedilink
              English
              19 days ago

              it depends on your shell configs. In my case it sits at dir/Dir (case insensitive) waiting for me to specify 1 or 2, where as if you disable it, it’s dependent on whether or not you type d or D.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              09 days ago

              In fish it would immediately expand to dir2.

              If you have “Dir1” and “DIR2” and you type “cd d”, your prompt will look like in the next picture. Fish automatically transforms “d” into “D”, because there is no dir starting with the lowercase “d”.

              On a subsequent <TAB> you’ll get a list of dirs matching your prompt so far in which you choose an entry with the cursor key and enter it with the enter key.

      • @calcopiritus
        link
        510 days ago

        When you say "canse insensitive file*, do you mean lowercase files? Or is there an option?

        Idk why we talking about mouses. When I’m on Linux, most of the time it’s through ssh.

        • KillingTimeItself
          link
          fedilink
          English
          -19 days ago

          either or, whatever the fuck you want really.

          You can just not use capital letters if you feel like it. Works pretty well. Or just use a case insensitive shell handler for pretending it’s not actually cased at all.

          Hell im pretty sure you could just render all of the text in a certain case and call it a day lol.

          • @calcopiritus
            link
            59 days ago

            I can make MY files all lowercase, but 99.999% of files on my computer are not created by me. And some of them have capital letters.

              • @calcopiritus
                link
                39 days ago

                They are not created by people. They are created by programs.

                • KillingTimeItself
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  18 days ago

                  what kind of programs are you using that use case in filenames. Smells like a skill issue to me.

                  • @calcopiritus
                    link
                    18 days ago

                    Iirc Ubuntu names their home files “Downloads”, “Documents”, and so on. Same with windows (there are a lot of uppercase letters in windows files). I’ve had issues with Cargo.toml before. And not just cargo, many config files use case to signal priority (so if both Makefile and makefile exist, Makefile will be used (or other way around)). Downloaded files are a gamble. Files created by user input (so for example if I wanted my user to be “Calcopiritus”, my home would be “/home/Calcopiritus”.

                    Uppercase letters might not be common in filenames, but they are not nonexistent.