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Which Linux distribution to choose for rolling into the console and programming?
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I usually give this answer - take the one for which there is a guru nearby :)
If purely for yourself - bubunta / mint (well, or if you don't want to be "like everyone else" - debian)
If then in production - centos
If you want to understand how it works linux itself - arch / gento / slack (there, without understanding, it simply won’t work nichrome)
If you want to kill yourself against the wall - LFS :)
Are you programming directly in Linux, or in some kind of IDE?
In this case, it doesn’t matter at all which Linux, as long as it starts what you directly work in. From this point of view, different distributions differ little. Googling as much as possible on how to install the environment in your distribution and that's it - the console is in every popular Linux, IDE too.
And because of the update, a lot of things can fall.
For server options - almost every distribution has an LTS (long-term-support) version.
For desktop, for example, you take a coin and throw it among Fedora, Ubuntu, CentOs, Manjaro - this choice is more than enough.
Debian. The most stable distribution. Now it costs 10, it was consistently updated 6 -> 7 -> 8 -> 9 -> 10. Nothing "fell".
I started with UBUNTU, then I found out about arch and was inspired by it) But at that time I could not install it) As a result, now on manjaro. As it is written in the comment above, it will help to enter Linux, but more painlessly)
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