From 6a7930a8fc084563d35fad16c1858fbc6a3109c1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: 0xhenrique Date: Sun, 2 Mar 2025 11:03:20 +0000 Subject: Update blog style and add some instruction in the README --- posts/why-i-chose-guix-over-nix.org | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) (limited to 'posts/why-i-chose-guix-over-nix.org') diff --git a/posts/why-i-chose-guix-over-nix.org b/posts/why-i-chose-guix-over-nix.org index 6a0a5f6..4a56f3b 100644 --- a/posts/why-i-chose-guix-over-nix.org +++ b/posts/why-i-chose-guix-over-nix.org @@ -7,6 +7,7 @@ I've been using NixOS for quite some time, but somehow I ended up with Guix. In ** The Emacs > Elisp > SICP > Scheme pipeline https://i.imgur.com/ouSS2fe.png + I honestly don't remember the first time I heard about Emacs, but I remember the first time I tried to use it I got gatekept by the Elisp magecraft. After that, I spent some days trying to learn some basic concepts of this ancient text editor. Thanks to https://learnxinyminutes.com/docs/elisp/ I was able to write some simple functions to make my Emacs experience smoother. To be honest, I didn't really liked to write Lisp back then, it sucked a lot for me. Even reading simple functions was a hassle since I wasn't used to see through all the parenthesis. At that time, I already knew about the 'Structure and Interpretaion of Computer Programs' book, but didn't read until then. It was only after seeing the MIT class linked below that I got hooked into computer magecraft: -- cgit v1.3