Distro agnostic packages like flatpaks and appimages have become extremely popular over the past few years, yet they seem to get a lot of dirt thrown on them because they are super bloated (since they bring all their dependencies with them).
NixPkgs are also distro agnostic, but they are about as light as regular system packages (.deb/.rpm/.PKG) all the while having an impressive 80 000 packages in their repos.
I don’t get why more people aren’t using them, sure they do need some tweaking but so do flatpaks, my main theory is that there are no graphical installer for them and the CLI installer is lacking (no progress bar, no ETA, strange syntax) I’m also scared that there is a downside to them I dont know about.
But you don’t get hardware graphics acceleration unless you use nixgl, and if you want to integrate it into home manager that breaks XDG entries, which I never figured out.
Also, you are illustrating the point of the commenter you replied to: nowhere on the official docs does it recommend home manager for non nixos systems, at least not when i was scrolling through them. I learned about home manager, nixgl, and the like via forum posts, either by finding them via a web search, or by asking myself.
For example, I only found code to integrate home manager with nixgl on the nixos discourse.
Thanks, I didn’t know that.
Oh yeah, this is a part of my reply to the OP:
Could you please share some examples? I tried searching the forum for it, but no luck.
Did some searching, also can’t find the original forum post lol.
https://github.com/nix-community/nixGL/issues/114#issuecomment-1585323281
and this: https://pmiddend.github.io/posts/nixgl-on-ubuntu/
The latter looks like what I originally used, but what I originally used broke the generated application menu entries.