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i apologize for my heresy on doing this!

i'm actually swinging into two different approaches for my tmux panes and none of them conform to what tmux expects (again, i'm sorry for that!)

i miss kitty's way of doing stuff so i had to make some sense out of tmux and ghostty to make the change less brutal! i also suck at remembering keybinds

my other approach is, on doing `cmd+enter` running the following script https://gist.github.com/ItzaMi/d8da1e779d05ce40a66ed75ddeae2...

this allows me to create panes just the way i want while only having to remember one keybind (which was already the one i used for kitty!)

i guess this means i find my layouts very precious!


Makes absolute sense, clearly forgot a CTA there! Thank you!


1. What are your plans now? 2. Your style seems unique, and even your mood board that you shared with the designer has a particular style; did you always gravitate towards that type of art? If not, how did you come upon it?


> Historically, we avoided this to maintain a separation of concerns, but it's puzzling why some prefer reintroducing similar methods. Is it just to save a few keystrokes?

In bigger projects, if we start looking at the amount of files one has to deal with, Tailwind becomes very appealing. We've went through the regular `.css` route but then you have weird names, and, potentially, duplications or even conflicts. `css modules` is an option but you've now essentially duplicating the number of files that you have for each component / page. `sass` or `less` essentially bring the problems from `css modules` and regular `.css` into one.

I don't inherently like or dislike Tailwind (although I very much started by absolutely disliking it) but you feel its value in a project with 200+ files composed of components and pages


The project is outstanding but the fact that you've documented everything AND did a video about it speaks volumes about what you'll achieve if you keep at it


All points make a lot of sense, thank you for your reply!


I did but I've been feeling that the LLMs end up giving an average solution / something that I don't fully understand / the same solution that just looks slightly different and I think I'll end up getting influenced by its responses instead of thinking by myself or learning from others


Are you open to do it with Node? I wrote a blog post[0] with a fairly easy setup. If you're using markdown and any markdown processor you should be good to go.

[0] https://www.itzami.com/blog/how-to-build-a-blog-with-nodejs


Thank you! I really appreciate it!


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