Verify Permissions
diskutil verifyPermissions /
Repair Permissions
diskutil repairPermissions /
# On slow systems, checking the cached .zcompdump file to see if it must be | |
# regenerated adds a noticable delay to zsh startup. This little hack restricts | |
# it to once a day. It should be pasted into your own completion file. | |
# | |
# The globbing is a little complicated here: | |
# - '#q' is an explicit glob qualifier that makes globbing work within zsh's [[ ]] construct. | |
# - 'N' makes the glob pattern evaluate to nothing when it doesn't match (rather than throw a globbing error) | |
# - '.' matches "regular files" | |
# - 'mh+24' matches files (or directories or whatever) that are older than 24 hours. | |
autoload -Uz compinit |
Install convmv if you don't have it
sudo apt-get install convmv
Convert all files in a directory from NFD to NFC:
convmv -r -f utf8 -t utf8 --nfc --notest .
sudo defaults write /Library/Preferences/com.apple.windowserver DisplayResolutionEnabled -bool YES; | |
sudo defaults delete /Library/Preferences/com.apple.windowserver DisplayResolutionDisabled; | |
// by the way, you need to logout and log back in for this to take effect. Or at least that's what | |
// Quartz Debug says. Who knows, maybe it's lying? | |
// P.S. Go to [Apple menu --> System Preferences --> Displays --> Display --> Scaled] after logging | |
// back in, and you'll see a bunch of "HiDPI" resolutions in the list to choose from. |
Many users of Git are curious about the lack of delta compression at the object (blob) level when commits are first written. This efficiency is saved until the pack file is written. Loose objects are written in compressed, but non-delta format at the time of each commit.
A simple run though of a commit sequence with only the smallest change to the image (in uncompressed TIFF format to amplify the observable behavior) aids the understanding of this deferred and different approach efficiency.
Create the repo: