dogears.el
leo-editor
dogears.el | leo-editor | |
---|---|---|
6 | 16 | |
175 | 1,452 | |
- | 0.4% | |
6.2 | 10.0 | |
24 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
dogears.el
- [Package of the day] Dogears, remembers where you was earlier
-
Trying to get "better-jumper" work.
As others have mentioned, better-jumper doesn’t automatically record points to jump back to. For that’s there’s both dogears and gumshoe.
-
Gumshoe 2.0, my first package in Melpa
Shout-out to alpha-papa, author of the like-minded [dogears.el](https://github.com/alphapapa/dogears.el) where I got the unified log idea, as well as minad for both really motivating a lot of these changes.
-
If you could change one thing about Emacs what would it be?
I saw this https://github.com/alphapapa/dogears.el recently and then there is also https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/auto-mark.el which I have marked as "useful jumping off point for a new package" in one of my org-files.
-
How to navigate in large Files: Getting Overview
Otherwise, try to navigate with things like helm-occur, C-u C-space and maybe try the latest add-on in the world of Emacs helpers. It might be a faster way to navigate in file(s) than scrolling and clicking with mouse.
- [ANN] dogears.el: Never lose your place in Emacs again
leo-editor
- something with collapsible sections in the text part?
-
Ask HN: What do you think about literate programming for handover/legacy code?
What are your experiences with literate programming for handover of code?
I am thinking of tools like noweb (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noweb), LEO (http://leoeditor.com/) org-mode (http://cachestocaches.com/2018/6/org-literate-programming/), scribble/lp2 (https://docs.racket-lang.org/scribble/lp.html#%28part._scribble_lp2_.Language%29),
My experience so far is that it can be a fantastic tool for documenting and handing over complex algorithms to successor developers. I use extensively use ersonal wikis (sometimes MoinMoin, sometimes Zim Wiki, in the last time often a combination of github with reStructuredText) for work. That might also be sufficient when handing over boring code.
-
How to hoist the current method/function?
I know what folding is, that's just not what I want. I want to completely hide everything that is not related to the current function. For a while, I used http://leoeditor.com/ where I could have every function/method as a node in a tree, with the node body containing just that. Looking for a way to achieve the same in vim if possible.
-
Organice: An implementation of Org mode without the dependency of Emacs
The lack of good node/graph based APIs for Org Mode is my beef as well. When you compare it with the APIs of the Leo Editor[1], Org pales in comparison. Manipulation that is trivial in the Leo Editor can be quite a pain in Org mode.
[1] https://leoeditor.com/
-
Obsidian Dataview: Turn Obsidian Vault into a database which you can query from
> What outliners do you know which allow end-users to feed their data into formulas for processing it without using general-purpose programming languages?
Bit of a pointless constraint, the talk is about outliners, not no-code-datamangment. Which tool today does this even offer on a useful level?
But you can look at leo editor (https://leoeditor.com), which is active for 20+ years, fully scriptable and extendable. Though, it's a hot piece of garbage for laymen. It's offers a bunch of features and plugins even for non-coders, but I'm not sure it would satisfy you for this area, if you can't code.
But I'm not sure if there ever is a tool which will satisfy everyone with just a no-code-approach.
- LeoVue
- Leo – cross-platform PIM, IDE, and outliner
-
Why LSP?
Hmm maybe you mean:
- Programming based on fragments, not documents (e.g. LEO https://leoeditor.com/)
- Live programming (e.g. smalltalk environments)
- ... where certain actions are not available, e.g. a PL geared towards speech recognition may not support "hover"
-
Is it bad practice to start with Jupyter Notebooks?
There's also https://leoeditor.com/ where you can have a tree of nodes and execute any of them.
-
The project with a single 11,000-line code file
I had this problem until I found an editor that had outlining as it's core design paradigm. Now, with the outline always visible, it's _really_ easy to navigate any length file.
Unfortunately, at one point I got so used to navigating with the outline that I ended up making a 1500 line function in C (I was an even worse C programmer then than I am now). Because of the outline, I could read and follow it easily, but anyone with a different editor was royally screwed :-(
If you're interested, the editor is LEO (http://leoeditor.com/) it's been mentioned on HN a few times
What are some alternatives?
navi - superfast navigation and remote control for Emacs source code buffers (based on Emacs occur-mode)
treesheets - TreeSheets : Free Form Data Organizer (see strlen.com/treesheets)
treemacs
obsidian-alfred - Alfred workflow for Obsidian note-taking app. Open vaults and files in Obsidian.
spacemacs - A community-driven Emacs distribution - The best editor is neither Emacs nor Vim, it's Emacs *and* Vim!
clerk - ⚡️ Moldable Live Programming for Clojure
emacs-minimap - A minimap sidebar for emacs
leointeg - Leo Editor Integration with VS Code
.emacs.d - My personal Emacs config with any quirks, oddities, bugs, and man-eating errors I live with on a daily basis.
obsidian-minimal - A distraction-free and highly customizable theme for Obsidian.
pdf-continuous-scroll-mode.el - A pdf-tools extension that provides continuous scrolling functionality
brick - A declarative Unix terminal UI library written in Haskell