dotsies
emacs-package-dev-handbook
dotsies | emacs-package-dev-handbook | |
---|---|---|
14 | 13 | |
149 | 1,098 | |
- | - | |
8.4 | 5.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 20 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | JavaScript | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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dotsies
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My Emacs eye candy
OP here. The linked tweaks are straight from my config. I can try help work out why it doesn’t look the same for ya. Would need to see your elisp snippets. May be easier to discuss on GitHub. Maybe open an issue on https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies
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iOS Swift Env
You can also checkout https://xenodium.com and his profile: https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/tree/main/emacs
- xenodium's Emacs config and some Hammerspoon goodies
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Inserting SF symbols into SwiftUI snippets
UI customizations at https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/blob/main/emacs/features/fe-mac.el and https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/blob/main/emacs/features/fe-ui.el
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How to develop Xcode project in emacs?
For some of the details you are welcome to look at and pick from my Swift/Eglot config. I use it on a daily basis and it is generally functional. Although you notice I'm not distributing it as its own package: I don't really warrant it works anywhere but my machines. ;) I also have an assortment of helpers for Xcode documents. You should also look at u/xenodium's config and other repos; I know there are some interesting SwiftUI helpers in there.
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A lifehack for your shell (link in comments)
Yep. This works too. I had a similar function https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/commit/c939802f64e4d97800f350b5c88ce83e4da40bc1 but now delegating to atool instead.
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Emacs DWIM shell-command
The demo gif is one of the use cases. Being DWIM, there are a bunch more at https://xenodium.com/emacs-dwim-shell-command and code at https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/blob/main/emacs/ar/dwim-shell-command.el
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.emacs bankruptcy
Went through a similar exercise some years ago and landed on a use-package solution https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/tree/main/emacs (see init.el and early-init.el) broken down into related modules https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/tree/main/emacs/features It’s one of many ways of doing it. Held up so far.
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Starting first elisp
In short, it’s a frankenstenian hack of sorts I’ll likely regret at some point, but at the moment fairly maintenance-free. If I haven’t succeeded in dissuading a peek, the code is here
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I finally got full auto-competion in Swift with emacs, here is how:
I have swiftlint and swift-format https://github.com/xenodium/dotsies/blob/main/emacs/features/fe-swift.el
emacs-package-dev-handbook
- is there like a resource where I can learn how to create an elisp project
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New package: Lookup Wiktionary entries in Emacs
Some Elisp libraries already exist that implement CSS/XPath-style selectors. I catalogued some at https://github.com/alphapapa/emacs-package-dev-handbook
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[changed URL] Org-fleuron: extra fancy HTML documents with OrgMode
Yeah, that's Solarized Dark using https://github.com/alphapapa/org-html-theme-darksun. Looking at your site, I'm thinking that I ought to do a Solarized Light version too. The handbook is also viewable on GitHub, which may be more readable in some ways: https://github.com/alphapapa/emacs-package-dev-handbook
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Ability to search/pull elisp snippets from within emacs?
The emacs package developer handbook may have some tidbits of information for you: https://github.com/alphapapa/emacs-package-dev-handbook
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Tips To Learn Emacs Fast as in Very Fast
Write a few scripts in elisp to get used to the language. Learn various elisp concepts and write programs that use them. Some examples could be to write hooks, learn how to make minor and major modes, make an http request, write macros, make charts, learn how to implement your own version of doctor, tetris, dunnet, or whatever else sounds interesting to you. These could be interesting to look through to see what's out there: https://github.com/p3r7/awesome-elisp#org-mode-outlines https://github.com/alphapapa/emacs-package-dev-handbook
- Starting first elisp
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how to start writing elisp on top of org-mode?
Also found emacs-package-dev-handbook from /u/alphapapa. I haven't looked through it in detail yet, but given his quality of work I imagine it's worth looking into.
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The Emacs Lisp book is finished
I checked the book's TOC and was surprised to see that lexical scoping was introduced in the last chapter.
https://github.com/alphapapa/emacs-package-dev-handbook#lexi... says using lexical scoping is a best practice.
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Suggestions wanted, best place to learn emacs elisp these days?
I think you should learn what you want to learn, consult this reference to learn basic syntax and consult the emacs package dev handbook to learn how to use / do certain things.
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English Dictionaries - Merriam Webster Learners Dictionary and Collegiate
Sure, see https://github.com/alphapapa/emacs-package-dev-handbook
What are some alternatives?
eshell-info-banner.el - Display some system information when launching Eshell
mw-thesaurus.el - Merriam-Webster Thesaurus in Emacs
company-sourcekit - Completion for Swift projects via SourceKit with the help of SourceKitten
elisp-slime-nav - Slime-style navigation of Emacs Lisp source with M-. & M-,
indent-rainbow
xenodium - Config files for my GitHub profile.
dotemacs.d
ox-tagfilter-js - Dynamic content filtering in org-mode exported HTML documents based on tags.
SourceKittenDaemon - Swift Auto Completions for any Text Editor
font-lock-studio - Debugger for Font Lock keywords
org-modern - :unicorn: Modern Org Style
fanyi.el - Not only English-Chinese translator for Emacs.