devil
homebrew-emacsmacport
devil | homebrew-emacsmacport | |
---|---|---|
10 | 59 | |
148 | 1,647 | |
- | - | |
8.2 | 6.7 | |
3 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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devil
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M-X Reloaded: The Second Golden Age of Emacs – (Think)
They all use evil-mode for Vim emulation. So it's just their choice of defaults and configuration style that sets them apart. Doom might have a slight edge with a focus on performance.
Evil-mode is not the only way. There are other approaches like devil you might want to check out.
https://susam.github.io/devil/
- Devil v0.6.0 released: Now easier to type M- than C-M- (example: , m x becomes M-x)
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Famous Programers with Repetitive Strain Injury (2022)
> in particular, due to use of emacs
I use Emacs too full-time (at work as well as at home). I use the ctrl key on both sides of the keyboard. Say, if I'm typing C-a (i.e., ctrl+a), I hold down 'ctrl' with the right little finger and 'a' with the left little finger. Similarly, if I'm typing C-k, I hold down 'ctrl' with the left little finger and 'k' with the right little finger. I touch type and any touch typing lesson teaches us how we always both hands to type shift+something. The same lessons can be applied to the ctrl key as well. Never had any problem using Emacs like this.
However there are some laptop keyboards which do not have the right ctrl key and that makes good typing habits really difficult when the 'ctrl' key is involved. That led me to write a minor mode to make Emacs a better experience for me on such keyboards without having to resort to a modal editing mode like God mode or Evil mode. My non-modal editing mode is called the Devil mode: <https://susam.github.io/devil/>.
Since I've never suffered from RSI due to Emacs usage, it makes me very curious about what the actual contributing factors are that causes some Emacs users to get RSI. Is it the large number of hours spent with Emacs? Is it poor typing habits? Poor keyboards?
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Evil mode's kinda hacky
These days there is also devil-mode: https://susam.github.io/devil/
- Devil key translator v0.5.0 released: improved special key execution, devil-describe-key, etc.
- devil: Emacs minor mode that intercepts and translates keystrokes to provide a modifier-free editing experience
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Keybindings/button advices needed for native Android Emacs!
Hmm...maybe this Devil Mode would be useful. I would probably choose something other than a comma - - there might be something on the software keyboard that I rarely use.
- Show HN: Devil Mode: A twisted Emacs key translator for modifier-free editing
- Devil Mode: A twisted key sequence translator for modifier-free Emacs experience
- Devil Mode: A twisted key sequence translator for modifier-free editing experience
homebrew-emacsmacport
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M-X Reloaded: The Second Golden Age of Emacs – (Think)
Run emacs -q (no add-ons loaded) and it should be a lot faster than VS Code. Which means that a library you loaded is the culprit. Things like Doom Emacs are notorious for unexpected slowness since they're not very well put together and load questionable libraries.
In the unlikely case where emacs -q is still slow, use Emacs Mac Port (https://github.com/railwaycat/homebrew-emacsmacport/releases...).
This is at least 2x perceivably faster than VS Code on Mac.
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indent-bars: fast, configurable indentation guide bars using font-lock and stipple patterns
Important note: I learned that apparently not all Emacsen properly support :stipple (despite happily accepting it as a face attribute). Linux/UNIX is safe, emacs-mac supports it on MacOS, but Windows may not at all (untested). Also, terminal emacs does not (to my knowledge) implement :stipple. Let me know how you fare. Update: Pure GTK emacs apparently does display stipples, but incorrectly (as an inverse mask).
- Thinking about buying a macbook, does Emacs work well?
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Way to make Emacs feel smoother?
I don't use macOS anymore, but the best port I found for speed was https://github.com/railwaycat/homebrew-emacsmacport
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Change the emacs theme to light/dark according to the system theme
There is the code to do just that. Works with emacs-mac and emacs-plus.
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C-<f4> not working out of emacs on mac
There's the "Mac" version, from Mitsuharu Yamamoto or railwaycat. The Mac port works more like Mac than the NextStep port. And it looks like the Mac port does work with C-f4.
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Introducing Captee alpha, looking for testers
Homebrew
- Newbie here! Need Help!
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any users of the Japanese input method? question about input-method.
You can install emacs-mac by homebrew (see https://github.com/railwaycat/homebrew-emacsmacport). $ brew tap railwaycat/emacsmacport $ brew install emacs-mac This emacs contains mac-win.el. Mac Auto ASCII mode in the mac-win.el automatically selects the most-recently-used ASCII-capable keyboard input source on some occasions: after prefix key (bound in the global keymap) press such as C-x and M-g, and at the start of minibuffer input. This function is very useful. I guess you can read Japanese, please visit Japanese setup page of my website (https://taipapamotohus.com/post/japanese\_setup/).
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[auto-dark-emacs] - An automatic theme changer for Emacs on macOS - UPDATED!
For what it's worth, the emacs-mac port provides a mac-effective-appearance-change-hook hook to do the same thing as the System appearance change plugin. I use it like this:
What are some alternatives?
god-mode - Minor mode for God-like command entering
homebrew-emacs-plus - Emacs Plus formulae for the Homebrew package manager
rebinder.el - Allow rebinding of Emacs prefix keys
build-emacs-for-macos - Somewhat hacky script to automate building of Emac.app on macOS.
at-home-modifier-evdev - It enables for example "shift/space dual role key." When SPC key is pressed alone, it's a space; but when pressed with another key, it's SHIFT. See wiki for more: https://gitlab.com/at-home-modifier/at-home-modifier-evdev/wikis/home
nix - Nix, the purely functional package manager
general.el - More convenient key definitions in emacs
emacs-builds - Self-contained Emacs.app builds for macOS, with native-compilation support.
deianira - Give every Emacs key sequence prefix the power to be "sticky"
eglot - A client for Language Server Protocol servers
PowerToys - Windows system utilities to maximize productivity
emacs-osx - Emacs on Mac OSX. Install with Nix