I have been using Windows my entire life, but since I got my Steam Deck I’ve been considering trying to get into Linux.

I obviously don’t have much of an idea where to begin, other than that I’m currently also trying to learn Javascript. I’d like a basic workstation I can code on and mess with, that doesn’t run more than a couple hundred. Could use some recommendations for hardware plus where to begin.

  • @[email protected]
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    010 months ago

    Yes. If you are new, no reason why you should use “sudo apt install xyz”.

    NixOS has a GUI setup, a GUI package manager etc.

    Never recommend any random “supposedly working” Distro. It will break some day, get cluttered with useless files, have broken dependencies or whatever. I broke every Distro before.

    I am on Fedora Kinoite now, which I consider a good Distro for most people especially beginners (the ublue variants). I guess layering all the development stuff could work. Using Containers for everything does not work well with IDEs, you need to run these in the container too…

    So in the end for someone that wants to code I would not use any random traditional Distro as in my experience all break. But a real immutable distro might also not fit if you need to layer so much.

    So why not NixOS? Its very easy to setup and you need to learn everything new anyways.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      As a NixOS user, I will definitely not recommend beginners to use this distro. It’s just a poorly documented, not user-friendly Linux.

      I use it because I really hate .config and dotfiles, like why do I need to edit several files for just one thing?

      Standalone nix installation and Home-manager would be fine though, I still not recommend them because at least I cannot tell if the binary I’m executing right now is installed from Nix or apt or whatever until I execute which

    • @[email protected]
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      010 months ago

      Overwhelming someone who’s learning something new will increase their chance of giving up. Not only they have to learn how to use Linux in general, now they’ll have to learn about nixos declarative configuration model on top of that. When they eventually get stuck with some issue (which is normal when learning something new), there are less resource to help them on the internet because they’re using a niche distro.

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        This happens on Ubuntu too. Just that there the best tip will be “try reinstalling the system”, because traditional distros are so unmanaged, that they pile up unused files and packages over time, and simply random things happen.

        Believe me, I broke Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Manjaro, Fedora. MXLinux was so old that I my Nextcloud was not compatible. I was a beginner and every Distro sucked.

        If i would have just learned any of the managed Distro models (rpm-ostree, A/B root, transactional-update, NixOS, …) I wouldnt have needed to switch

        Distrohopping makes no sense, you should try Desktops but the Distro should just work.