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  • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If you’re taking a manual approach I would use a symlink:

    $ ln -s /path/to/stuff/Bitwarden.1.0.7.appimage /path/to/stuff/Bitwarden.appimage

    Then you can hang on to a previous version just in case, plus you can see from the original filename what version you’re on.

    • everett@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      Happy to hear if there are glaring problems with this approach, but if you can assume files named with version numbers, you can use a script to always launch the newest…

      #!/bin/bash
      cd ~/Downloads
      chmod +x $(ls | grep Appname.*AppImage$ | sort -rV | head -n 1)
      ./$(ls | grep Appname.*AppImage$ | sort -rV | head -n 1)
      

      Or you could change the script to sort by file modified date and launch the newest.

      edit: Discovered an issue with version numbering like .10 and learned about the sort -V switch that fixes it!