![]() ![]() So I do not see what is worse about this. Linux can also throw errors when you move something that is in use, it just has to actually be in use of course (and most shells release their lock as soon as they are done scanning, oh, files when using ls or so). That is because your shell did not lock the directory you were in (which I prefer it not locking it). There are aspects of the UNIX filesystem that are objectively worse than the way Windows does it. Windows throws an error if you try to move a directory while it’s in use. It involved a slow-running script, so I was context switching to do something else while it was running and losing track of what all was going on. I ended up with two terminals that said they were in the same directory that were actually operating on completely different ones, and I got terribly confused when changes made in one didn’t show up in another. Using a Linux VM, I just tied myself in terrible knots by moving a directory in one terminal while another one is in it. These are just my experiences, not the single truth so if you know windows better than me generally, you might not reach the same conclusions I already spend too much time on things like this to learn it better… Docker was fine when it just used VirtualBox which I’ve been using for a long time on Win, Mac and Linux and I personally have multiple Dev env-setups using it ![]() I’ve had issues regarding specifically docker usage and then the fact about not being able to use other virtualization software when it’s activated. Hate is of course harsh words, sorry… I just don’t like Hyper-V and it’s primarily because of my lack of knowledge about it. I guess the elixir/erlang-core developers could work around these issues though, seems to be a lot smoother when facing similar things in nodejs on Win. Terminals in windows is just not up to par, and do you know that powershell aliases popular programs with it’s own functionality? curl is my only example, does not behave the same and to my knowledge you cannot override it… how could I trust it? I’m not that windows proficient and what I did before was solutions I found after many hours of googling… But bash is nice and it both feel better to use than whichever terminal native to windows I tried and elixir seems simpler, just better off in it.
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