dirvish
crafted-emacs
dirvish | crafted-emacs | |
---|---|---|
19 | 31 | |
758 | 701 | |
- | 0.3% | |
3.3 | 8.8 | |
2 months ago | 12 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
dirvish
-
Returning emacs user - what packages are common now?
Finally, there is an awesome (in my opinion) add-on for dired called dirvish - makes dired more 'ranger' like if you're familiar with that. I absolutely love this package and its made dired's awesomeness even more awesome.
-
Ugly windows separators in emacsclient
why are the separations of my windows so ugly? I get a wide grey divider, when using dirvish, it is even worse (2 separators!!!)
-
How can I make it so I can toggle dired (or any buffer) on the left side of the screen? Similarly to hoe vscode has a file browser on the left
Also dirvish-side
-
Are There Any Methods To Get Dired Mode To Look Like Midnight Commander?
I'm not sure if it's exactly what you want, but to me Dirvish is the best these days. It builds upon dired in a beautiful way
-
dired navigation without infinite buffers
In addition to other cool things dirvish does this.
-
Which packages do you want people to work on more or add features to?
That said https://github.com/alexluigit/dirvish is amazing on one of my computers and broken on the other so if you could fix that and let me know please do.
-
Completion command for common file moving/copying commands
Thanks for the reply, I hadn't seen those last two posts which are nice. Lately I've been using Dirvish for those type of operations. But this isn't exactly what I was looking for. I may not have been totally clear.
- Idea/Question: Using "feature-full" packages (e.g. dired) for completion?
-
About to declare Emacs bankruptcy. Any advice for cool or new packages, defaults, or ideas I should use before I start building my init.el? Also interested in guides to using evil.
The file manager Dirvish. You know how the veterans say that Dired is the best file manager? Well, with dirvish even mere mortals can agree. It has panes, a pretty UI, and even pdf preview through pdf-tools.
- Let's share your top 3 packages that you can't live without.
crafted-emacs
-
Is doom emacs still actively maintained?
Keep an eye on Crafted Emacs which has a v2Beta release branch. It's been evolving. The v2Beta is a rewrite. It aims to provide a minimalist leg up on vanilla Emacs for new Emacs users. It's goal is to take you from first steps to a point where you have learned a great deal and built your configuration. Then you may be comfortable ditching the Crafted Emacs boilerplate configuration entirely. Think of it as a starter kit. Follow SystemCrafters on YouTube (live stream mostly) & Matrix (they are leaving Discord). Despite the live stream being lengthy, there is much to be learned as you bear witness to David figuring things out. Over time, you pickup on those techniques such as looking up a variable state, reviewing functions, evaluating snippets of Elisp in real time, etc. Also recommend, Mastering Emacs as a fantastic ebook with free updates. Once 29.1 ships, no doubt, there will be a free update to the ebook.
-
Returning emacs user - what packages are common now?
I'd recommend you have a look at crafted-emacs. It's an example of how far Emacs can actually go without third-party packages. Then you can add minimal packages (completion and specific tool integrations) to further enhance the experience.
-
Emacs bankruptcy
For me it's quite stable except some issues I had with vertico. Anyways, I first started to rewrite my doom config into plain vanilla emacs (with org mode literate configs), and then I discovered crafted which allowed me to remove some code with commonly set sane defaults, e.g. stuff from https://github.com/SystemCrafters/crafted-emacs/blob/master/modules/crafted-defaults.el.
- doom emacs
-
Kudos to Emacs developers
I have been surprised at how many people have so ardently defended only using built-ins and raw package.el and their own janky ensure methods when use-package was available and did it all better. And, it even lets you configure Emacs itself (not just packages), as well as seamlessly letting you try different package management tools like straight.el. Getting it into Emacs itself hopefully makes this a more prevalent way of showing users how to craft their own config.
-
Switched to VSCode... I miss Atom :(
If you need a staring point for configuring there's some nice light ones like emacs-bedrock and crafted-emacs, and also some fully pre-configured Emacs distributions that you can choose from (though those look harder to configure to one's personal needs to me, but I haven't tried them so wouldn't know).
-
Boilerplate config
I'll second https://github.com/SystemCrafters/crafted-emacs
- What is the "best" GNU Emacs set up one could have just using built-in features?
- Chosing an Emacs Distro on M1 OS X
-
Emacs 29 is nigh What can we expect?
And if you find yourself between the two extremes, perhaps https://github.com/SystemCrafters/crafted-emacs
What are some alternatives?
solarized-emacs - The Solarized colour theme, ported to Emacs.
chemacs2 - Emacs version switcher, improved
.emacs.d - My current Emacs setup.
.emacs.d - My emacs configuration
dired-hacks - Collection of useful dired additions
no-littering - Help keeping ~/.config/emacs clean
dired-copy-paste - dired-copy-paste.el enables you to cut/copy/paste files and directries in emacs dired-mode.
doomemacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker
dired-sidebar - Sidebar for Emacs leveraging Dired
dotemacs
evil-org-mode - Supplemental evil-mode keybindings to emacs org-mode
emacs.onboard - Single-file Emacs starter kit without 3rd-party packages. Almost vanilla Emacs, with just the right amount of sweetness to flatten the learning curve.