| ▲ | applfanboysbgon 4 hours ago | |
Not only is GUI better for discovery, it's not even always true that CLI is better for doing the thing you want. Depending on the complexity of the task, building a tower of CLI commands/arguments can be a pain, and if it's something you do ~once a month, good luck remembering the syntax. A GUI lets you not even have to think about it, not have to memorise syntax or go out of your way to write a script to save it. And while CLI is great for things you do routinely... Windows still offers great CLI support, so you simply get the best of both worlds. | ||
| ▲ | alright2565 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
We're in the age of LLMs and this is exactly what they shine at. Just the other day I got tired of Libre office having some crappy custom file picker. "Claude, change the libre office file picker to the system default" "Beep boop it is done" Linux has a big leg up over windows in this regard because all the GUIs are essentially wrappers around CLIs and text files that LLMs can deal with quite well. | ||
| ▲ | pdonis 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> A GUI lets you not even have to think about it, not have to memorise syntax or go out of your way to write a script to save it. Unless the GUI buries what you want to do in five or six levels of menus and options--and then changes where they're buried in the next release, so you have to re-learn everything all over again. That's happened to me with work computers more times than I care to remember. By contrast, my collection of shell scripts on my home Linux computers is still serving me well after more than twenty years. | ||