- As a heads up, your readme has “machine” misspelled as “maschine” in two spots: - 
On your current maschine 
- 
On another maschine 
 - Looks like thats the german spelling? - Oh right… thx for the hint. It’s indeed German, and I usually write it as machine or mashine, when writing in English. This time I was just unfocused 😅 
 
- 
- I liked stow, and used it for quite some time. That being said, it has issues. Issues community members have attempted to solve. Issues the sole maintainer wasn’t addressing for quite a few years. - I use chezmoi now. I’ve still got mixed feelings, but the templating system is neat. Stow seems to have gotten out of it’s slump while I was gone. That’s good news! Anyone know if they addressed the tree specific folding/unfolding config feature? Not seeing anything in the docs… - I tried chezmoi, and wanted to love it… but I just can’t. IMHO, it’s complicated, which is why I built this one. - Yeah, there are a lot of bells and whistles and a fundamental difference between the way they intend to manage dotfiles and the way stow does. Makes it difficult to get started. - One thing that helped me when I was first getting into it: Chezmoi doesn’t like compartmentalization like stow. It supports it, but it want’s you to lean into the config langue a bit before you start doing that. - If you do that you can get away with only touching the - add,- cd, and- updatecommands.- Exactly… but it still adds some overhead, which I’m honestly not a huge fan of. - At the end of the day, I want a single directory, where I can symlink the files and folders into their appropriate places, and share them across multiple machines, all that, without digging too deep into the tool, especially when I frequently update things, like a neovim config, etc… - And stow, paired with git, does exactly what I need. I only made some “aliases” to simplify the workflow. 
 
 
 
- I’m all in favor of tools that automate dotfiles and make system configuration simpler for folks just getting started, but what benefit is there over using bash scripts - (appologies for no rtfm. Conversation is more fun anyway 🙂) - Ironically, stowman is a bash script whose only purpose is to wrap git and stow so that you only need a couple of very simple commands in order to manage dotfiles, the automation (i.e. the synchronization task) doesn’t seem to be a part of stowman. - Exactly. For now, it’s main focus is to only move configs to the dotsdir (since stow throws a conflict when there’s already something in place), let stow create the symlink and push it to git. - on a remote mashine, however, you still need to handle conflicts yourself. but it’s also mostly intended for fresh installations, or where you don’t mind just - rm -rfthe existing config
 
 


