acme-mouse
orderless
acme-mouse | orderless | |
---|---|---|
3 | 32 | |
28 | 679 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
over 6 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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acme-mouse
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A mouse-driven Emacs?
If you're familiar with acme(1) or Plan 9, you're bound to know about mouse chords (for the uninitiated, see http://acme.cat-v.org/mouse). There's a github repo in the wild that implements mouse chording for Emacs: https://github.com/akrito/acme-mouse but I never tried it so I can't tell how good it is.
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What’s New in Emacs 28.1?
Yeah, I never really looked at mouse binding, but does look quite simple.
This implements acme chording for copy/paste and the approach looks straightforward: https://github.com/akrito/acme-mouse/blob/master/acme-mouse....
And this package looks like a cool way to recreate the context sensitive text actions: https://github.com/cmpitg/wand
Combining the approach from the first and the wand package could potentially surpass the acme experience by making it easier to customize and extend.
My friend joked about how I'm religious about the keyboard, but really it's about the right tool for the job, and if I had an acme-like mouse experience with emacs I'd def be mousing around more often. Funny that compared to normal people I'm a keyboard fanatic but compared to majority of emacs users I'm on the mouse way more often :)
- acme-mouse: Acme mouse-chording for Emacs
orderless
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Emacs Advent Calendar 7: ordeless, embark 1.0 and some bric-a-brac
orderless. A highly configurable completion style that matches multiple patterns in any order against minibuffer completion candidates.
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Returning emacs user - what packages are common now?
An example relevant to your list would be some changes many people are taking with their completion framework - using package that leverage core emacs functionality rather than replacing it with a complete package that 'overrides' it. Consult, vertico, orderless and associate packages come to mind here. If you do a bit of a search you'll find plenty of info. Here is a video from Prot on the subject, but there are many others as well. I think Prot actually went on to write his own completion system to overlay native emacs functionality as well.
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How to configure corfu for arbitrary orderless matching?
You didn't mention, so I'll ask, are you using the orderless (https://github.com/oantolin/orderless) completion style?
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Help wanted: Zsh completion like Vertico+Orderless
Fuzzy completion ala Orderless would be awesome: hitting space during completion acts as a pattern separator.
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Selectrum now deprecated in favor of Vertico
I dunno—I like how Vertico+Counsel feel. I'm not sure how good the support for Orderless and Embark are in Ivy, but I really like how those packages compose so nicely with the Vertico+Consult ecosystem.
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How to get helm like narrowing behavior with selectrum?
In general, you want either orderless or prescient, with my personal preference being the former.
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How to get corfu completions that include substring matches?
You probably want to investigate completion styles. There are many builtin styles, from basic, which just does prefix completion, on up. But there are also 3rd party styles. One of the most powerful is called orderless. Considering all these styles, there really is a ton of flexibility in how you can get to a completion candidate like some-named-something (some, s-n-s, sns, soso, [a-z]{4}-na, e\b \bs, ...). You can even configure more than one style at a time (and usually do).
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What are the kinds of things you've written Emacs Lisp for?
Well, I've written some general purpose Emacs packages (orderless and embark) that I use a lot, but I also write Emacs Lisp for one-off tasks.
- Fuzzy Finding with Emacs Instead of Fzf
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Show HN: Tere – A Faster Alternative to CD+ls
I like it. Would be nice to see orderless-style (https://github.com/oantolin/orderless) completion, and a config not to enter the directory by narrowing the completion to one, requiring enter to be pressed.