This is what I did, from NixOS to Debian. I managed to end up with a dependency conflict in less than a day, precisely the problem that NixOS attempts to solve. I came back to NixOS and accepted my fate: asking for help from the NixOS community.
“Fun” story: Upgrading Debian once hosed my system so hard I needed to install a separate OS on another drive so I could copy over my data. An IT pro probably could have figured it out, but for whatever reason the upgrade decided that it really needed to take my hard drive and move it from /dev/sd1 to, I shit you not, /etc/home. No, I do not know why. No, I could not just move it back to /dev/sd1 because it tried to copy the entirety of itself into itself rather than just change a file location. I got to the Debian forum for help and just get the standard abusive incel fuckery in response.
I think that’s when I moved to SUSE for the first time. Way less shitty community.
Just switch to NixOS, you can replace problems like this with a completely different set of problems.
How to fix an issue in linux? Simple! Just distro-hop.
Or just use a stable one like Debian!
This is what I did, from NixOS to Debian. I managed to end up with a dependency conflict in less than a day, precisely the problem that NixOS attempts to solve. I came back to NixOS and accepted my fate: asking for help from the NixOS community.
“Fun” story: Upgrading Debian once hosed my system so hard I needed to install a separate OS on another drive so I could copy over my data. An IT pro probably could have figured it out, but for whatever reason the upgrade decided that it really needed to take my hard drive and move it from /dev/sd1 to, I shit you not, /etc/home. No, I do not know why. No, I could not just move it back to /dev/sd1 because it tried to copy the entirety of itself into itself rather than just change a file location. I got to the Debian forum for help and just get the standard abusive incel fuckery in response.
I think that’s when I moved to SUSE for the first time. Way less shitty community.
> 2023
> python3: no such file or directory
Same problem on windows lol
Pyenv to the rescue (although there are simpler ways to link
python
topython3
, you should just use pyenvSpeak for yourself!
TempleOS is peak stability.
As God intended.
@Anid_Vid @Outsider9042
I mean, I have never had to distrohop to solve a problem. Granted, I have had to boot off a flash drive to fix issues on more than one occasion.
As the other guy said, #NixOS is great. It requires some learning however.
As a NixOS user I can confirm. It’s quite nice in some ways, infuriating in others.