From d36c2e459a74ec67e523539eb98b78b95b01432a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: EuAndreh <eu@euandre.org>
Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2025 11:20:43 -0300
Subject: src/content/: Normalize [source,$lang] code blocks

---
 src/content/blog/2021/01/26/remembering-ann.adoc | 18 +++++++++---------
 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)

(limited to 'src/content/blog/2021/01/26/remembering-ann.adoc')

diff --git a/src/content/blog/2021/01/26/remembering-ann.adoc b/src/content/blog/2021/01/26/remembering-ann.adoc
index 889683d..6786b3c 100644
--- a/src/content/blog/2021/01/26/remembering-ann.adoc
+++ b/src/content/blog/2021/01/26/remembering-ann.adoc
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ previous choices appear at the beginning.
 
 Where you would do:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ seq 5 | fzf
 
@@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ $ seq 5 | fzf
 
 And every time get the same order of numbers, now you can write:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ seq 5 | remembering -p seq-fzf -c fzf
 
@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ $ seq 5 | remembering -p seq-fzf -c fzf
 On the first run, everything is the same.  If you picked 4 on the previous
 example, the following run would be different:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ seq 5 | remembering -p seq-fzf -c fzf
 
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ Here are some functions I wrote myself that you may find useful:
 
 === Run a command with fzf on `$PWD`
 
-[source,shellcheck]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 f() {
   profile="$f-shell-function(pwd | sed -e 's_/_-_g')"
@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ profile allows it to not mix data for different repositories.
 
 :pass: https://www.passwordstore.org/
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 choice="$(find "$HOME/.password-store" -type f                  | \
             grep -Ev '(.git|.gpg-id)'                           | \
@@ -169,14 +169,14 @@ the contents of my {pass}[password store], with the entries ordered by usage.
 
 Where I previously had:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 exe=$(yeganesh -x) && exec $exe
 ----
 
 Now I have:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 exe=$(dmenu_path | remembering -p dmenu-exec -c dmenu) && exec $exe
 ----
@@ -187,7 +187,7 @@ If you don't have `dmenu_path`, you can get just the underlying `stest` tool
 that looks at the executables available in your `$PATH`.  Here's a juicy
 one-liner to do it:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ wget -O- https://dl.suckless.org/tools/dmenu-5.0.tar.gz | \
     tar Ozxf - dmenu-5.0/arg.h dmenu-5.0/stest.c          | \
@@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ $ wget -O- https://dl.suckless.org/tools/dmenu-5.0.tar.gz | \
 With the `stest` utility you'll be able to list executables in your `$PATH` and
 pipe them to dmenu or something else yourself:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ (IFS=:; ./stest -flx $PATH;) | sort -u | remembering -p another-dmenu-exec -c dmenu | sh
 ----
-- 
cgit v1.2.3