Neovim vs Emacs | Roundtable w/ TJ DeVries, DistroTube, Greg Anders & Joshua Blais
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A Personal Software Runtime inspired by Emacs, Plan 9, Erlang, Hypermedia, and Unix
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Guy Buys GNU Emacs Book From Amazon… Gets “Hitler’s Table Talk” in Disguise
The cover was for “The Org Mode Reference Manual” for Emacs. ⌘ Read more
exwm: Emacs X Windows Manager
EXWM (Emacs X Window Manager) is a full-featured tiling X window manager for Emacs built on top of XELB. ↫ exwm GitHub page It supports both tiling and stacking windows, dynamic workspaces, RandR, a system tray, and a lot more. XELB stands for X protocol Emacs Lisp Binding, and it’s a “pure Elisp implementation of X11 protocol based on the XML description files from XCB project”. ⌘ Read more
@andros@twtxt.andros.dev lol nice! emacs is wild. text and graphics all inline.
#fzf is the new emacs: a tool with a simple purpose that has evolved to include an #email client. https://sr.ht/~rakoo/omail/
I’m being a little silly, of course. fzf doesn’t actually check your email, but it appears to be basically the whole user interface for that mail program, with #mblaze wrangling the emails.
I’ve been thinking about how I handle my email, and am tempted to make something similar. (When I originally saw this linked the author was presenting it as an example tweaked to their own needs, encouraging people to make their own.)
This approach could surely also be combined with #jenny, taking the place of (neo)mutt. For example mblaze’s mthread tool presents a threaded discussion with indentation.
The USENET Cookbook: One of the earliest digital publications
Long before HTML or PDF… we had Emacs, plain text, and USENET. And it was glorious. ⌘ Read more
Wordle ported to Windows 3.1, PalmOS, DOS, Linux Terminal… and much more.
Tandy Color Computer 3, Atari 2600, Game Boy, Emacs, and… Microsoft Word? Yup. Wordle is there too. ⌘ Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Ah, I see. I mean, it is not biggie, as normally I just reply to people, so that part works beautifully. A vi/vim script would work, but it is not universal. What if I use joe, or Emacs, or nano? Meh, jenny is awesome as is, thank you for it! ☺️
Learning elisp on ~one (https://tilde.one). Some funny things from elisp manual: ‘Having GNU Emacs is like having a dragon’s cave of treasures’
feels good to be using tmux again more regularly. ansi-term in emacs is well, special.
don’t get me wrong, I love the power of emacs. but it’s a very complex piece of software, which is inherrently brittle. not a problem in the short term, but for some of my more long term tools it’s a consideration.
if I don’t need org-agenda, that’s one less dependency on emacs, which I have a love/hate relationship.
Seems like twtxt-el does not retrieve a timeline. #emacs
Bash emacs command history via ^R ^P ^N ^S, who knew? https://blog.pythian.com/emacs-keybindings-in-bash/
@prologic@twtxt.net (#https://twtxt.net/search?tag=tsvhqdq OK. Im upgrading my tools. twtxt works pretty well inside an Emacs shell window…
yes. I read that. Nice post. Brave browser at least has trouble with formatting. The regexp got lost when renederd. Eww (emacs text browser) doees just fine with it :-)
weewiki uses a custom org markup parser written in ANSI C to render the HTML. No emacs needed! my hope is to introduce a user-defined callback that can process these to allow for custom meta-commands.
@hjertnes@hjertnes.social are you using emacs as twtxt client or something? does it render the org markup for you into links?
Weird, nobody has written a twtxt.el for #emacs yet?!