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authorNantha Sorubakanthan <nantha@mielota.com>2025-11-17 18:20:08 +0100
committerNantha Sorubakanthan <nantha@mielota.com>2025-11-17 18:20:08 +0100
commit481b47e0ae99cb4ac4ab6d192e84da1878dd6625 (patch)
tree0c0f4bdac741e78fb1bda33b91517823da56db23 /content
parent573d3358b3fb0ddfba64c601becaaf83de6f1b31 (diff)
add slash at the end of links
Diffstat (limited to 'content')
-rw-r--r--content/blog/trying-out-helix.md4
-rw-r--r--content/guide/archinstall.md2
-rw-r--r--content/guide/artixinstall.md4
-rw-r--r--content/guide/clean-your-home.md2
-rw-r--r--content/guide/stuff-about-dns-and-ip.md6
5 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/content/blog/trying-out-helix.md b/content/blog/trying-out-helix.md
index 79fbc7b..01d1746 100644
--- a/content/blog/trying-out-helix.md
+++ b/content/blog/trying-out-helix.md
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ date: 2025-09-22T09:08:19+02:00
## Intro
-So I recently learned about the [helix editor](https://helix-editor.com). If you try to use it you will see that Helix is similar to Vim and has the same three main editing modes.
+So I recently learned about the [helix editor](https://helix-editor.com/). If you try to use it you will see that Helix is similar to Vim and has the same three main editing modes.
On a ton of distros it's easy to install it, on Arch you can just go:
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ alias hx="helix"
Helix comes pre installed with LSP support, color schemes, a fuzzy finder similar to telescope, native syntax tree with tree sitter, auto closing characters such as brackets, parenthesis and quotes and more.
-Helix are different [Neovim](https://neovim.io) as helix works out of the box, you have nothing to configure. Some people might say that compared to Neovim/Vim, Helix is bloated, but I really think that this 'bloat' feels awesome and will find it's own audience.
+Helix are different [Neovim](https://neovim.io/) as helix works out of the box, you have nothing to configure. Some people might say that compared to Neovim/Vim, Helix is bloated, but I really think that this 'bloat' feels awesome and will find it's own audience.
### Conf
diff --git a/content/guide/archinstall.md b/content/guide/archinstall.md
index 31339a5..424ff8d 100644
--- a/content/guide/archinstall.md
+++ b/content/guide/archinstall.md
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ icon: arch.svg.png
deprecated: true
---
-> I install Arch Linux for french people in this guide. Also, Arch Linux is really popular, but you should checkout alternatives like [Artix Linux](https://artixlinux.org). You should [avoid systemd](https://unixdigest.com/articles/the-real-motivation-behind-systemd.html)
+> I install Arch Linux for french people in this guide. Also, Arch Linux is really popular, but you should checkout alternatives like [Artix Linux](https://artixlinux.org/). You should [avoid systemd](https://unixdigest.com/articles/the-real-motivation-behind-systemd.html)
## Setup ~optional~ things
diff --git a/content/guide/artixinstall.md b/content/guide/artixinstall.md
index f7f8b58..67c5364 100644
--- a/content/guide/artixinstall.md
+++ b/content/guide/artixinstall.md
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ icon: artix.svg.png
## What is Artix Linux ?
-[Artix Linux](https://artixlinux.org) is a GNU/Linux distribution based on [Arch Linux](https://archlinux.org), the key difference between the two distros is the [init system](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Init) you want to use.
+[Artix Linux](https://artixlinux.org/) is a GNU/Linux distribution based on [Arch Linux](https://archlinux.org/), the key difference between the two distros is the [init system](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Init) you want to use.
Arch Linux only has official support for `systemd`. Artix officially supports `dinit`, `openrc`, `runit`, and `s6`. Of course, the [AUR](https://aur.archlinux.org/) is still accessible from Artix Linux.
@@ -310,7 +310,7 @@ Links :
- [Luke Smith installing Artix with encryption](https://youtu.be/dI3bGeT31Bo?si=yLPKfu7wPdrk-Z3V)
- [The Runit page in Artix Wiki (learn how to use it)](https://wiki.artixlinux.org/Main/Runit)
-- [Artix Linux really cool website again](https://artixlinux.org)
+- [Artix Linux really cool website again](https://artixlinux.org/)
- [Linux kernels](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Kernel)
You can easily have informations about your kernel like so :
diff --git a/content/guide/clean-your-home.md b/content/guide/clean-your-home.md
index 3ae8b51..e3eb189 100644
--- a/content/guide/clean-your-home.md
+++ b/content/guide/clean-your-home.md
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ But fortunately, there are some programs like zsh, or git that do support XDG BD
## xdg-ninja
-[xdg-ninja](https://github.com/b3nj5m1n/xdg-ninja) is a shell script that checks if the files in your home directory support XDG BDS.
+[xdg-ninja](https://github.com/b3nj5m1n/xdg-ninja/) is a shell script that checks if the files in your home directory support XDG BDS.
Running the script gives you a list of files that have XDG compliance, you have instructions about **how to** remove them from your HOME. And if a file doesn't support XDG compliance, `xdg-ninja` returns a link to the issue being discussed on the internet.
diff --git a/content/guide/stuff-about-dns-and-ip.md b/content/guide/stuff-about-dns-and-ip.md
index 1412c41..981ccb0 100644
--- a/content/guide/stuff-about-dns-and-ip.md
+++ b/content/guide/stuff-about-dns-and-ip.md
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ You can even ping yourself or other devices in your house that are connected to
ping -c 2 192.0.2.1 # or localhost, ping yourself
```
-You can get your public IPv4 by going to websites that tell you your IP like [whatismyipaddress.com](https://whatismyipaddress.com/) or [ifconfig.co](https://ifconfig.co)
+You can get your public IPv4 by going to websites that tell you your IP like [whatismyipaddress.com](https://whatismyipaddress.com/) or [ifconfig.co](https://ifconfig.co/)
You can also do it from the command line :
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ This is possible by setting DNS records. You set "A" record that bind the domain
Domain names are cool and convenient. It would be a pain to remember the IP addresses of my favourite websites.
-You also have subdomains. Like [ads.google.com](https://ads.google.com), `ads` is a subdomain of [google.com](/). With the help of a webserver like [NGINX](https://nginx.org) you can ask your server to serve different kind of content depending on the domain/subdomains.
+You also have subdomains. Like [ads.google.com](https://ads.google.com/), `ads` is a subdomain of [google.com](/). With the help of a webserver like [NGINX](https://nginx.org/) you can ask your server to serve different kind of content depending on the domain/subdomains.
You also have "CNAME" records, they act like _alias_. "MX" records are for _Mail Exchange_ and "TXT" store some data.
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ dig example.com @your_custom_dns
# you will get 0.0.0.0
```
-By doing so you can stop your computer/browser/phone from finding websites containing ads, malware, or [unwanted content](https://denshi.org/antiporn).
+By doing so you can stop your computer/browser/phone from finding websites containing ads, malware, or [unwanted content](https://denshi.org/antiporn.html).
Here are some useful links if you want to use blocky on your server/computer.