Most storage space viewers get confused by Flatpak’s heavily deduplicated and compressed files, leading to them reporting way larger space than what’s actually occupied on the hard drive.
First of all, stop using legacy SI units for the size of information, they only bring confusion, instead use IEC/binary units like GiB. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix
Second of all, I know that with Flatpak’s ease of installation/runtime comes great size hit. It’s great that some layers are reusable, so it’s not a huge hit. Besides, with big disk size it’s not really a concern now is it?
Normally sed just passes along the edited text to STDout (printing in the terminal usually).
With the -i option it actually changes the input files. If you add an extension immediately after the -i it apparently makes a backup of the original with that extension.
I used this every time (with
sudo
):Let’s see how good the Flatpak version will be.
just fyi I moved Discord, GIMP, Obsidian, and OBS over to flatpak and my root partition jumped from 19GB to 23GB. I’m kinda sad about it tbh
Most storage space viewers get confused by Flatpak’s heavily deduplicated and compressed files, leading to them reporting way larger space than what’s actually occupied on the hard drive.
First of all, stop using legacy SI units for the size of information, they only bring confusion, instead use IEC/binary units like GiB. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_prefix
Second of all, I know that with Flatpak’s ease of installation/runtime comes great size hit. It’s great that some layers are reusable, so it’s not a huge hit. Besides, with big disk size it’s not really a concern now is it?
Can you break the sed command down for us sed newbies? The ‘-i.bak’ thing is throwing me off
Normally sed just passes along the edited text to STDout (printing in the terminal usually).
With the -i option it actually changes the input files. If you add an extension immediately after the -i it apparently makes a backup of the original with that extension.