.doom.d
Hotel California of creative writing. My Doom-Emacs configuration tailored to suit the needs of the demanding writer. (by jacmoe)
dot-doom
My Doom Emacs config files. Mirrored from https://gitlab.com/zzamboni/dot-doom (by zzamboni)
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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.
.doom.d
Posts with mentions or reviews of .doom.d.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-10-06.
- jacmoe's Doom-Emacs configuration: A Hotel California of creative writing.
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Wang-Krogdahl Anki decks - 1022 Reverse release
I've built my own writing environment around Emacs, Doom-Emacs to be exact: https://github.com/jacmoe/.doom.d
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Public service announcement: Vim
Vim never, ever appealed to me. The keys are not exactly ergonomic, like the WordStar diamond, or intuitive, like the Emacs keys. But I can understand how modal editing - like in WordStar - can improve the writing experience tremendously. So, for my custom Emacs configuration for creative writing, I am using Boon, which allows me to use the left hand home row to navigate characters/words/sentences/lines, and the right hand home row to delete/insert/etc. Pressing v switches to Insert Mode, and C-; switches back to Command Mode. Highly addictively efficient!
dot-doom
Posts with mentions or reviews of dot-doom.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-02-24.
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Starter Kit Recommendation: Spacemacs, Doom, or Centaur
I switched from a hand-maintained config to Doom last year, and I can highly recommend it. It's very well organized, the community is very friendly and it works great. If you are interested, my config is at https://github.com/zzamboni/dot-doom/blob/master/doom.org.
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Trouble with the init.el file using org
This sets the default for all the emacs-lisp blocks in the file, but you can still selectively write other blocks to different files, or not at all by specifying :tangle no. This way you can easily tangle multiple destination files from a single Org file. For an example, you can see my doom.org file, from which Doom's init.el, config.el and packages.el are all tangled.
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Is there a way to create a beautiful presentation from Emacs?
In my config I have a hook I can call after saving the .org file to automatically export it and update the open browser to the current slide. This makes the process of updating/viewing the presentation a lot smoother. You can find my config here: https://github.com/zzamboni/dot-doom/blob/master/doom.org#revealjs-presentations
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Long-Time Emacs User Looking to Level-Up (note-taking for classes)
Note that I said my "old config". A few months ago. I decided to try Doom Emacs. Over a couple of days, I ported most of the important bits of my decades-old, hand-maintained config, and in the process realized I could get rid of a lot of scaffolding (like the whole package-management bits in your config) by virtue of Doom's existing mechanisms, and also I could omit a lot of the configuration because Doom includes decent defaults for many things. I have not regretted moving to Doom. You can find my new config at https://github.com/zzamboni/dot-doom/blob/master/doom.org.
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Problem requiring ox- packages in org-export-backends
If you use use-package, it works well to define the package to be loaded :after org. I have lots of examples in my old emacs config, for example: (use-package ox-hugo :defer 3 :after org :custom (org-hugo-use-code-for-kbd t)) I now use Doom Emacs, but the same technique can be used with use-package!. For example, from my Doom Config: (use-package! ox-leanpub :after org :config (require 'ox-leanpub-markdown) (org-leanpub-book-setup-menu-markdown)) HTH
What are some alternatives?
When comparing .doom.d and dot-doom you can also consider the following projects:
quickqwerty - Touch typing tutor that runs in your web browser
pdf-tools - Emacs support library for PDF files.
sniem - Hands-eased united editing method for emacs.
writeroom-mode - Writeroom-mode: distraction-free writing for Emacs.
nvim - My Neovim configuration for creative writing
org-pomodoro - pomodoro technique for org-mode
org-tree-slide - A presentation tool for org-mode based on the visibility of outline trees
git-auto-commit-mode - Automatically commit to git after each save
org-reveal - Exports Org-mode contents to Reveal.js HTML presentation.
org-sidebar - A helpful sidebar for Org mode
helm-bibtex - Search and manage bibliographies in Emacs
configuration - My configs: OS setups, dotfiles, scripts and more.