
That being said, I did not want to go into much detail, You made the point yourself, you didn't mention it when you were talking about it. There are some, aptitude is somewhat better (or rather, it handles it differently) at handling dependencies.Īpt-get is somewhat deprecated, and apt is what is meant to be used going forward.ĭoes exactly what you want though, for all of them - apt is however shorter to type -)

I'm not sure what the difference is between aptitude, apt-get and apt, but they all work. I'm planning to do more videos of what I do and learn, with vscode use and splitting my config (like Frenck did) being on the list, so it will be covered there, and then I can reference it. That being said, I did not want to go into much detail, just get this thing working. I'll try that in future videos.įor vscode, I'm new to this myself, so thanks for the suggestions, will try those out. However, you are right I could have mentioned it more in detail. This will happen every time you restart ha.

Downside is seen after setting up the sensor and restarting ha: the sensor has no value until my Bluetooth changes. I mention it will only send a mqtt message when the detection does change, so less noise on your network and mqtt broker. I was trying to stick to his write-up, and he used apt-get for git, so I used that one when aptitude didn't work.įor the -c, I kind of mention it, but not in detail. But I might make a blog with easy copy paste instructions. While the intend is good, the owner stopped maintaining it, and since I'm not a coder, I don't want to give people false hope it is maintained in a fork. Right in there, not in any folders, create a file called wpa_ don't think I will clone the repo. When the flashing finishes, remove it and plug it back in. If you need a flash tool, try balenaEtcher

We strongly recommend you do not follow this article. If you follow it you will be installing a very outdated version of Hassbian, on a hardware platform only suitable for testing.
