From fdac403c053e22f0fbd89f3e42f711820c3c270e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Joshua Strobl Date: Sat, 22 Jul 2017 15:18:43 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] I'm allergic to unnecessary line breaks, okay? --- installation/disks/en.md | 11 +++-------- package-management/history-and-rollback/en.md | 3 +-- package-management/repo-management/en.md | 3 +-- software/virtualbox/en.md | 2 +- 4 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/installation/disks/en.md b/installation/disks/en.md index 64eccfd..7c7c593 100644 --- a/installation/disks/en.md +++ b/installation/disks/en.md @@ -8,21 +8,16 @@ Solus provides multiple ways you can install onto your system. 1. Solus can take up the entire drive. 2. You can install Solus next to your existing operating system, such as Windows. *If you have multiple operating systems installed, we will choose the largest option.* -3. You can manually configure your system. This is only recommend for advanced users which may desire to have a -dedicated `/home` partition. Note that if you manually configure your system, you will need to restart the Installer for those -changes to apply appropriately. +3. You can manually configure your system. This is only recommend for advanced users which may desire to have a dedicated `/home` partition. Note that if you manually configure your system, you will need to restart the Installer for those changes to apply appropriately. Alongside these options, we also provide the ability to use full-disk encryption. For the obvious reason of it being full-disk, this assumes you are installing Solus onto the entire drive. - ## UEFI -If you are using a system with UEFI, you may need to create a EFI System Partition, also referred to as an ESP. This is not necessary if -you are enabling Solus to install onto the entire disk. +If you are using a system with UEFI, you may need to create a EFI System Partition, also referred to as an ESP. This is not necessary if you are enabling Solus to install onto the entire disk. -To create an EFI System Partition, open up GParted and create a FAT32 partition that is 512MB in size. Next, right-click on the partition and click -Manage Flags. On the Manage Flags section, enable the `boot` and `esp` flags. +To create an EFI System Partition, open up GParted and create a FAT32 partition that is 512MB in size. Next, right-click on the partition and click Manage Flags. On the Manage Flags section, enable the `boot` and `esp` flags. **Notes:** diff --git a/package-management/history-and-rollback/en.md b/package-management/history-and-rollback/en.md index 234fcc0..476588e 100755 --- a/package-management/history-and-rollback/en.md +++ b/package-management/history-and-rollback/en.md @@ -3,8 +3,7 @@ title = "History and Software Rollback" +++ # History and Software Rollback -Solus provides a history and rollback feature via its package manager, eopkg. This feature allows you to see when your repository was last -updated, actions such as installation, removal, and upgrading of software. +Solus provides a history and rollback feature via its package manager, eopkg. This feature allows you to see when your repository was last updated, actions such as installation, removal, and upgrading of software. Our rollback feature allows you to essentially rewind your system's software back to a previous state, assuming you or our repository has the versions in question. diff --git a/package-management/repo-management/en.md b/package-management/repo-management/en.md index b5db8a3..9cba030 100755 --- a/package-management/repo-management/en.md +++ b/package-management/repo-management/en.md @@ -3,8 +3,7 @@ title = "Repository Management" +++ # Repository Management -While Solus currently only provides two repositories, stable (shannon) and unstable, our package manager does support actively using multiple repositories on your system. This -is useful if you are using a vendor-provided repository. +While Solus currently only provides two repositories, stable (shannon) and unstable, our package manager does support actively using multiple repositories on your system. This is useful if you are using a vendor-provided repository. ## Adding a Repository diff --git a/software/virtualbox/en.md b/software/virtualbox/en.md index b88e69d..a39b09d 100644 --- a/software/virtualbox/en.md +++ b/software/virtualbox/en.md @@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ Now, download the [Guest Additions](http://download.virtualbox.org/virtualbox/) **Note:** For each kernel update you will need to rebuild the VirtualBox Modules. So simply remount the ISO and run the instructions again. -### Clipboard Sharing, Copy&Paste, Drag&Drop +### Clipboard Sharing, Copy & Paste, Drag & Drop By default, the VirtualBox modules for those VirtualBox features are not loaded/enabled, therefore the features simply do not work if selected in the Guest. If you want that these features do work properly automatically, without starting the corresponding VBoxClient yourself, you can use xdg to autostart VBoxClient thus enabling the features.