evil-guide
chemacs2
evil-guide | chemacs2 | |
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15 | 31 | |
1,227 | 745 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
Emacs Lisp | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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evil-guide
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Emacs Bedrock–A minimal Emacs starter kit
2. the leader key https://github.com/noctuid/evil-guide#leader-key
these are random search results that may or may not be authoritative, but they should be a good start.
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How do I change the Vim settings inside of Doom Emacs?
Doom uses Evil-mode for vim emulation. https://github.com/noctuid/evil-guide is a good guide for translating between vim concepts and Emacs.
- Emacs <==> vi/vim "Rosetta Stone"?
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Intro to Evil for non-Vim users? Beyond evil-tutor
I'm not aware of a guide specifically for non-vim users, but pretty much any vim guide will be helpful - it's just best to avoid parts on vimscript, as evil isn't configured using that. Even though it introduces itself as a guide for Vim users, I still think https://github.com/noctuid/evil-guide is worth a read. As for packages which complement evil, most are named with evil as a prefix, so you can browse melpa with that in mind. One exception that comes to mind is lispyville, which provides an evil approach for editing s-expressions. evil-cleverparens is also worth a look. Feel free to ask any questions on the evil issues page too!
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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.
Evil is a complex machinery build by vim nostalgic refugees, so familiarity with Vim's modal editing model is still recommended. I like this, even if it's not a tutorial: https://github.com/noctuid/evil-guide
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How to actually define key binds in Emacs?
I'd recommend reading noctuid's evil guide, particularly the link to the spacemacs keymap guide and the mention of the commentary on evil-core.el
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Is it worth renouncing evil and becoming a good person?
It’s probably worth understanding what evil is doing so you can make your own key bindings for packages you find. I personally don’t think evil is obscuring things for me because I’ve gotten pretty good at using the introspection features of emacs to look at what everything is doing. The guide from noctuid was a good reference when I read it https://github.com/noctuid/evil-guide.
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Consistent Emacs Keybindings
Set aside a little bit of time to learn properly how Emacs and evil-mode work together. Not sure if you've seen it, but here's an excellent guide for transitioning from Vim to Emacs with evil-mode. It's by the author/maintainer of general.el.
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Is there a way to present a warning message when a key combination is redefined? So I have some kind of heads up that a conflict occured?
A bit unrelated to your question, but if you are having trouble with keybindings I really recommend this read. Also, if you use evil-mode, reading evil-guide is really worth it as well, to understand how to configure things correctly.
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Is there a package to use Vimscript in evil-mode?
This should make the porting process easier https://github.com/noctuid/evil-guide
chemacs2
- Easiest Way To Switch Emacs Configs On The Fly?
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A Late Night Rant About Emacs
You could manage such a system with tools like Chemacs, https://github.com/plexus/chemacs2
- need package(plugin) and resources suggestions for Note taking setup - New to emacs
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Easiest way to install vanilla emacs along with Doom Emacs, keeping everything separate
Edit: Actually this may be what you want: https://github.com/plexus/chemacs2
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How to Make Emacs Look Cooler with Simple Customization
https://www.spacemacs.org/ is a layer on top of emacs that solves a number of shortcomings including a more modern UI. If you use https://github.com/plexus/chemacs2, you can always run emacs and spacemacs independently, both for learning, troubleshooting etc.
- Init file anywhere?
- How do you manage several similar emacs configs?
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Using init.el as a wrapper to a primary config
have a look at how https://github.com/plexus/chemacs2 does this sort of things.
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Is it worth renouncing evil and becoming a good person?
I asked this same question a year and half ago and since that post I started reading Mastering Emacs by Mickey Petersen which was really helpful, I used Chemacs to keep my evil config around in case I give up. But I ended up dropping that config and I realized I wasn't really into modal editing. It took me one month to get used to my new config but that was worth it, everything in Emacs became consistent.
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Starting fresh?
Perhaps the biggest game changer in my new init file is chemacs2. This allows one to choose one among many possible ".emacs.d" directories to use for the emacs that is being invoked.
What are some alternatives?
nano-emacs - GNU Emacs / N Λ N O - Emacs made simple
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
expand-region.el - Emacs extension to increase selected region by semantic units.
emacs-overlay - Bleeding edge emacs overlay [maintainer=@adisbladis]
avy - Jump to things in Emacs tree-style
crafted-emacs - A sensible base Emacs configuration.
olivetti - Emacs minor mode to automatically balance window margins
spacemacs - A community-driven Emacs distribution - The best editor is neither Emacs nor Vim, it's Emacs *and* Vim!
elegant-emacs - A very minimal but elegant emacs (I think)
cheovim - Neovim configuration switcher written in Lua. Inspired by chemacs.
use-package - A use-package declaration for simplifying your .emacs
nixconfig - My NixOS config