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-11 points

Whatever happened to Linux being all about choice? Do you want that or not?

https://xkcd.com/927

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22 points

You can choose any home directory you want, as long as it’s XDG_CONFIG_HOME.

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14 points

Are there other relevant standards? The XDG base directory specification has been around for a long time, and is well established.

Maybe your comment wooshed over my head; if so I apologize.

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-16 points

having choices are the opposite of conforming to standards

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10 points

Well, when software supports this standard, you as a user have a way to not confirm to it by setting the env variables to whatever you want, even per app. So you have two choises, either use it as is or change it.

But if software doesn’t supportthe spec, there is no choise of using it. So ons choise less.

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8 points
*

This standard makes your software’s paths user-configurable, giving users a choice.

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0 points

To conform to a standard or do something else are each a choice. If you can justify your choice then perhaps it’s a good one.

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5 points

Choice, huh? I can’t choose where the config files are stored unless I am willing to either dig into an obscure setting, modify the source code and recompile (repeat every time there’s an update), or contact the developer’s smug beard using smoke signals.

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-12 points

idk that all sounds like choices to me

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