ctrlf
onetomacs
ctrlf | onetomacs | |
---|---|---|
11 | 4 | |
342 | 5 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 3.6 | |
over 1 year ago | over 2 years ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
MIT License | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ctrlf
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Emacs Advent Calendar 9: devdocs, code-cells, dREPL, etc.
isearch-mb: A subtle modification to isearch (C-s and friends) giving it a more “normal” feel by today's standards. Basically, allows you to edit the search string while searching. Similar to ctrlf, but less invasive of a change, and arguably more robust.
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C-s and C-r with counters
See if ctrlf is to your liking. It seems to have this feature, among others.
- Straight.el: next-gen, purely functional package manager for the Emacs hacker
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Disable ivy (swiper) from binding C-n C-p?
Consider using raxod502/ctrlf instead if you won't use anything else ivy/swiper offer.
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Buffer made up from grep results ("gather/scatter") ?
Have a look at CTRLF. When you hit "C-s" for ctrlf-forward-default (i-search). Now type what you're searching for. Then you can do "M-s o". That will open a Occur buffer with the existing search input. Not sure that you can edit in that buffer tho.
- How to cancel the I-search so that my cursor will stay on my current position
- Keybinding autocompletion / helper. Like in doom emacs.
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emacs.git: New user options to move between isearch matches
CtrlF and Isearch MB also have this behavior.
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Noob to Emacs
CTRLF replacing packages such as Isearch
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How much time you need to spent with Emacs to become more productive?
I viewed Prot's video back in January on Embark, Consult, and Orderless; I found them interesting, but not really fitting into my workflow and of course, not a reason to replace Swiper. But I was not thinking about how the packages were working--something you've looked into. Reading the Selectrum page about comparisons, I think I might like CtrlF a bit better than Swiper, though I've yet to try it.
onetomacs
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Straight.el: next-gen, purely functional package manager for the Emacs hacker
https://github.com/onetom/onetomacs
I had literally zero hiccups with packages, though I haven't even froze them, while kept upgrading every few weeks with straight-pull-all.
I think the other big contributor to my pleasant experience was that I've vetted and studied every package, before I've added it to my config and tried to figure out what would it offer compared to built-in functionality.
I'm programming for 40 years by now and primarily in Clojure for the past ~7 years (using IntelliJ/Cursive), so I guess that helped a lot too...
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Using init.el as a wrapper to a primary config
btw, I'm using the https://github.com/emacscollective/no-littering package to determine the location of the custom.el: https://github.com/onetom/onetomacs/blob/main/lib/use-no-littering.el
- onetomacs: onetom's Emacs configuration
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The primary use case of emacs
You gave me the motivation to finally share my config: https://github.com/onetom/onetomacs
What are some alternatives?
selectrum - 🔔 Better solution for incremental narrowing in Emacs.
no-littering - Help keeping ~/.config/emacs clean
emacs-libvterm - Emacs libvterm integration
marginalia - :scroll: marginalia.el - Marginalia in the minibuffer
exwm - Emacs X Window Manager
anzu - Emacs Port of anzu.vim
isearch-mb
ace-window - Quickly switch windows in Emacs
code-cells.el - Emacs utilities for code split into cells, including Jupyter notebooks
jit-spell - Just-in-time spell checking for Emacs
plz-see.el - Interactive HTTP client for Emacs