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Best OS for DEVs

Ayan-web on December 03, 2021

Choosing an operating system is the first thing that new devs has to think of, as there are lots of Opensource free Operating System with great com...
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ayanweb profile image
Ayan-web • Edited

Yes I have never used mac or bsd .
whats your favourite ?

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smac89 profile image
smac89

I've tried all except Fedora. Now I run Kubuntu at work, and Arch at home.

Nothing beats Arch tbh. The availability of packages is unmatched, and the ability to add new ones to the AUR makes it the best option for any developer

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ayanweb profile image
Ayan-web

Once you start using arch there's no going back ....

 
ayanweb profile image
Ayan-web

I guess I am a bit biased with Linux ...
Btw you really are dedicated towards your work ..wishing you a great future.

 
smac89 profile image
smac89

Pretty cool. Would like to see it leave preview builds and also support partitions, not just disks.

Most Linux users who dualboot are more likely to partition a single disk rather than having a dedicated disk just for Linux. I myself have Linux on a separate disk, but the entire disk is not a single partition nor do all the partitions have the same filesystem.

However, I am still excited for the future of Windows and their efforts to become more interoperable with Linux. I have a sneaking suspicion that Microsoft may decide one day to base the Windows kernel on Linux 😍.

 
ayanweb profile image
Ayan-web

Yeah ....there are thinks that can be done easily with windows but not with Linux

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smac89 profile image
smac89 • Edited

WSL is pretty good. I like the fact that you can install multiple distros in WSL, and just use them any time and even at the same time!

However, at the end of the day, it is still emulated so not everything will work the same way as on Linux. I will wait until you can access ext4 file systems directly from WSL, then I will give it another try. Linux just recently (with kernel 5.15) added native support for NTFS file systems, so I think it is only proper that Microsoft follows in parallel and add native EXT4 file system support to WSL (and maybe even Windows itself!)

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pabouk profile image
Václav Brožík

Have you heard about WSL2? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Subs...

It was released in 2000, it uses a real Linux kernel and by default ext4 file system. The current official kernel for WSL2 (it has some optimizations for WSL2) is 5.10.

 
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Ayan-web

No it's fine ....I would suggest you try linux even once ...

 
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Ayan-web

Tmux, neovim, fzf, autojump,diff,cut,tr,bash script, pipes and redirection...

 
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Ayan-web

There are lot of tools missing in windows even with wsl.

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abdelkhalekselim profile image
Abdelkhalek selim

Linux mint is the one you can relay on

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Ayan-web

Linux mint is a great option..