>nooo package dependencies are too complicated>just ship the dependencies together with the executable>meanwhile on windows
>>100129278>koko>18,4 Mtimagine an 18 megaton koko
>>100129331>>100129278when all of these are installed, any piece of software should work no problem
>>100129373So does Linux
>>100129331I want yield in my list as well. How do you get it?
>>100129278>never have to care about these>can easily sort them with a click>can easily just start typing what you want over and over to find it instead of inputting commands>right click uninstall>click click to install the version you need
>>100129787Is it physically impossible for a Linux user to NOT be disingenuous?
Desu all Linux lacks its multiple versions for dynamic libraries, there are cases when I need a specific version for just one package and it would be lovely if I could just have that along the lastest version without having to make a new package on the package manager
>>100130976> all Linux lacks its multiple versions for dynamic librariesLD_LIBRARY_PATH, chroot, flatpack, appimage, etc> I need a specific version for just one package packages in your package manager should all be compatible with eachothers deps, otherwise you chose a shitty distro
>>100130976>Desu all Linux lacks its multiple versions for dynamic libraries, there are cases when I need a specific version for just one package and it would be lovely if I could just have that along the lastest version without having to make a new package on the package manageryou can link the compiled binary against a specific lib... or nix-build <nixpkgs> .
>>100130960kys fag
>>100133882>using mpv to open imagesbased
>>100129278Windows ran into "DLLhell", where your app would be linked against one version of a library, then another piece of software would overwrite the shared DLL with a different version.Pretty soon, everyone started just shipping every DLL with every software installation.It doesn't really matter in the modern era, where multi-megabyte (at a minimum!) downloads are expected. Hell, Google says the average Android app is around 12MB now. A half a megabyte in extra libraries is nothing these days.
>>100129278it just works thougheveri think it's a good deal to pay a couple hundred megabytes in storage space to have my system just work
ok