esup
zee
esup | zee | |
---|---|---|
9 | 12 | |
394 | 744 | |
- | - | |
1.8 | 6.4 | |
over 2 years ago | about 2 years ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Rust | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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esup
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Why does elpaca make emacs startup so much faster?
Probably the best way to figure out what's going on at startup time is ESUP (Emacs Start Up Profiler): https://github.com/jschaf/esup You could run it on the old config and the new. Although I suppose the processes may be different enough that there's nothing meaningful to compare.
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[Emacs] A full fledge configuration
I agree with you. For startup profiling, use-package-report and https://github.com/jschaf/esup can help too.
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An easy trick I found to improve Emacs start-up time
A very useful tool for achieving faster startup is esup (https://github.com/jschaf/esup) which times each code block that runs in the emacs startup.
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Slow emacs startup only on work laptop
Have you tried running M-x esup with https://github.com/jschaf/esup to see what is taking up the start-up time?
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Zee: A modern text editor for the terminal written in Rust
Are you on Emacs 28? Native-comp is enabled by default and it's Just Worked™ for me. Or are you on at least Emacs 27? Emacs 27 added native JSON parsing; stuff like lsp-mode works a lot better now.
(Personally running Emacs 29 built from source on an M1 Pro; everything is instant! Even on my old dumpy i5 machine, everything except startup was pretty snappy, with the exception of startup which took ~4 seconds.)
If it's startup you're concerned about, try the esup[1] package to figure out what's taking so long.
[1]: https://github.com/jschaf/esup
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Emacs taking a lot of time to load
If you're really interested what happens on startup, you can play around with the startup profiler( https://github.com/jschaf/esup ) or similar packages that time the execution of your .emacs.
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Do any of you have some tips on speeding up emacs:
I used the Emacs Startup Profiler (ESUP) https://github.com/jschaf/esup which identified several culprits in my init files. Removing or deferring the loading of those packages took my startup time from ~15 seconds to about 2.5 seconds. (Still room for improvement!)
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What is your startup time
GitHub - jschaf/esup: ESUP - Emacs Start Up Profiler
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How to diagnose slow emacs at run-time.
Try out esup
zee
- GitHub - mcobzarenco/zee: A modern text editor for the terminal written in Rust
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Zee: A modern text editor for the terminal written in Rust
you probably forgot to init the git submodules: https://github.com/mcobzarenco/zee#building-from-source
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An Code Editor written in Rust by the Atom Devs
That’s a different editor
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Thoughts on some of the actively developed text editors written in Rust?
One more for the list - I started https://github.com/mcobzarenco/zee last year after trying to contribute to xi-editor, but it was discontinued and I have been disheartened by the architecture and how it makes simple things unnecessarily hard (search issues for soft inserts for example)
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Amp: Vi-like batteries-included terminal editor written in Rust
Relatedly, there's an Emacs-like editor written in Rust called Zee: https://github.com/mcobzarenco/zee
I've become used to using Micro (written in Go) for everything: https://micro-editor.github.io/
So I haven't really used Amp or Zee much, but I do have both installed on my system just in case I get bored of Micro ;-)
What are some alternatives?
emacs-from-scratch - An example of a fully custom Emacs configuration developed live on YouTube!
kakoune - mawww's experiment for a better code editor
.emacs.d - My current Emacs setup.
lapce - Lightning-fast and Powerful Code Editor written in Rust
jinx - 🪄 Enchanted Spell Checker
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.
digga - A flake utility library to craft shell-, home-, and hosts- environments.
micro-editor - A modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor
config
amp - A complete text editor for your terminal.
SpaceVim - A community-driven modular vim/neovim distribution - The ultimate vimrc