this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2024
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Yes, yes indeed. That's why my dotfiles are still in a git repo (don't get the point of stow), not in home-manager.
If you do in fact need home-manager's features for some of your dotfiles though, it can effectively act as a stow superset for the rest.
Declarative stateless configuration rather than imperative stateful configuration.
With a bash script, you'd have to meticulously craft together the i3config file using shell script syntax and remember to run that every time you change something. home-manager just does all of that for you with high-level data types and frameworks specifically made for that purpose.
Yeah, it's not great. https://search.nixos.org/options? is really useful for NixOS.
You have to either use your browser's dumb search on https://nix-community.github.io/home-manager/options.xhtml or your pager's dumb search in
man home-configuration.nix
.All the issues which declarative immutable stateless system configuration solves such as atomic updates, configuration rollback in case you messed something up and trivial recovery. I'm sure I'm forgetting some since I'm so used to having them.
Yeah, docs are a pain point. If you think that section is bad (I think so too), everyone will thank you for rewriting it. Feel free to shoot a PR to Nixpkgs and ping a few people from the docs team if you're motivated.
I don't get it either. NixOS is the best thing since sliced bread for a certain kind of person (experienced hacker who has felt the pain points which NixOS relieves) but I'd never recommend it to an inexperienced user in its current state.