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home.nix
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home.nix
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{pkgs, ...}: {
# Home Manager needs a bit of information about you and the paths it should
# manage.
home.username = "alex";
home.homeDirectory = "/home/alex";
# This value determines the Home Manager release that your configuration is
# compatible with. This helps avoid breakage when a new Home Manager release
# introduces backwards incompatible changes.
#
# You should not change this value, even if you update Home Manager. If you do
# want to update the value, then make sure to first check the Home Manager
# release notes.
home.stateVersion = "24.05"; # Please read the comment before changing.
# The home.packages option allows you to install Nix packages into your
# environment.
home.packages = with pkgs; [
# # Adds the 'hello' command to your environment. It prints a friendly
# # "Hello, world!" when run.
hello
audacity
blender
btop
dconf
discord
dunst
fd
feh
ffmpeg
firefox
fzf
gimp
i3lock
i3status-rust
iosevka
jq
kdePackages.kdenlive
kitty
libnotify
libreoffice-qt
lxappearance
mpv
mupdf
neofetch
networkmanager-openvpn
networkmanagerapplet
nitrogen
obs-studio
openssl
openvpn
pcmanfm
poetry
pw-volume
pwvucontrol
ripgrep
scrot
virt-manager
wesnoth
xclip
# # You can also create simple shell scripts directly inside your
# # configuration. For example, this adds a command 'my-hello' to your
# # environment:
# (pkgs.writeShellScriptBin "my-hello" ''
# echo "Hello, ${config.home.username}!"
# '')
];
fonts.fontconfig.enable = true;
# Home Manager is pretty good at managing dotfiles. The primary way to manage
# plain files is through 'home.file'.
home.file = {
# # Building this configuration will create a copy of 'dotfiles/screenrc' in
# # the Nix store. Activating the configuration will then make '~/.screenrc' a
# # symlink to the Nix store copy.
# ".screenrc".source = dotfiles/screenrc;
# # You can also set the file content immediately.
# ".gradle/gradle.properties".text = ''
# org.gradle.console=verbose
# org.gradle.daemon.idletimeout=3600000
# '';
};
# Home Manager can also manage your environment variables through
# 'home.sessionVariables'. These will be explicitly sourced when using a
# shell provided by Home Manager. If you don't want to manage your shell
# through Home Manager then you have to manually source 'hm-session-vars.sh'
# located at either
#
# ~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
#
# or
#
# ~/.local/state/nix/profiles/profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
#
# or
#
# /etc/profiles/per-user/alex/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
#
home.sessionVariables = {
EDITOR = "nvim";
VISUAL = "nvim";
};
xsession.enable = true;
# Let Home Manager install and manage itself.
programs.home-manager.enable = true;
programs.git = {
enable = true;
userName = "Alex Jercan";
userEmail = "[email protected]";
};
gtk = {
enable = true;
iconTheme = {
name = "Tela circle dark";
package = pkgs.tela-circle-icon-theme;
};
theme = {
name = "Graphite-Dark";
package = pkgs.graphite-gtk-theme;
};
gtk3.extraConfig = {
Settings = ''
gtk-application-prefer-dark-theme=1
'';
};
gtk4.extraConfig = {
Settings = ''
gtk-application-prefer-dark-theme=1
'';
};
};
imports = [
./neovim
./tmux
./rofi
./kitty
./i3
./dunst
];
}