kakoune.el
rpn-c
kakoune.el | rpn-c | |
---|---|---|
10 | 3 | |
147 | 6 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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kakoune.el
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Helix: Release 24.03 Highlights
Thanks for the tip, meow looks interesting. I never got comfortable in evil-mode, but perhaps meow could be a gateway to trying emacs in anger.
Still waiting for kakoune/helix mode for gnu readline...
https://github.com/meow-edit/meow
https://github.com/jmorag/kakoune.el
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Ask HN: Best way to experiment with text text editing?
To build on what others are saying about Emacs, if you start exploring the package ecosystem, you're going to see quite a lot of really interesting packages that are related to improving/experimenting with the UX of editing text. While I'm not endorsing anyone in particular, I think what this list does show is just how easy it is to do pretty much whatever you want in Emacs;
https://karthinks.com/software/avy-can-do-anything/
https://github.com/jyp/boon
https://github.com/clemera/objed
https://github.com/jmorag/kakoune.el
https://github.com/meow-edit/meow/
https://github.com/xahlee/xah-fly-keys
https://github.com/Kungsgeten/ryo-modal
https://github.com/emacsorphanage/god-mode
Emacs 29 also now has treesitter and LSP mode integration built-in, a compilation mode, a comint mode for REPLs, excellent file browsing packages (I use dired/dirvish), and a few other killer features.
Now, if what you truly dislike are "quirky editors", prepare yourself for a world of hurt because vanilla Emacs departs quite a bit from "modern" text editors. I struggled with this for a while, but eventually by buying into the paradigm, I now feel that when emacs try emulating "modern" IDE features like autocompletion, LSP, and DAP UI, I feel like it's a regression, not a progression. The point here is that you might have an "idea" of what good initial UX and lack of quirks would look like, but Emacs might change the way you think.
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How do the neovim plugins for OrgMode and Magit compare with the real thing?
If emacs had a layer for kakoune as comprehensive as evil, I think it would be a no-brainer, but such as it is, kakoune.el is the closest we have which isn't quite was I was hoping for.
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Best emulator for Kakoune editing?
Problem is, unlike the evil package linked above, which was last updated 6 days ago, the only package I've found for Kakoune is this one, which was last updated like a year ago.
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First thing you configured when started using Emacs
I set up https://github.com/jmorag/kakoune.el and made some aesthetic changes, i think that EXWM came soon thereafter
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What other editors have been built with emacs?
kakoune.el: https://github.com/jmorag/kakoune.el
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Eglot vs lsp-mode
Shameless plug kakoune.el
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Helix - A kakoune/neovim inspired text editor written in Rust
Out of curiosity, what is it that makes you want to change from Kakoune? Perhaps something like terminal emacs with kakoune.el could be of interest to you.
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Any ideas that would help in incremental reading?
I don't fully understand what you want - but about creating cards while you read https://kakoune.org could be interesting (there's a simple elisp clone: https://github.com/jmorag/kakoune.el). That way you can move along words while reading and if you want to turn a phrase into a card you can simply hold shift to continue marking the desired words and then yank them to somewhere.
- Just a random question . Is there any emacs distribution like kakoune ?
rpn-c
- I wrote a bad interpreter for a bad esoteric language I came up with while studying languages at uni. What do you think? The structure can surely be improved, and I still have some future developments in the readme. It doesn't aim at being superfast, but it should do some quick calculation easily.
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Helix - A kakoune/neovim inspired text editor written in Rust
If you find this interesting I suggest you look into generative grammars. Also you you want to try lexers and parsers hands-on, I suggest you try alex (for lexers) and happy (for parsers). They are programs used to write lexer and parsers in Haskell. They are the haskel version of the much older lex and yacc for C, but Haskell is easier. You can also try some of the many derive-based lexer and parser for rust. I recently worked on a little project involving lexers, if you'd like to give it a watch, but it's paused for now.
- I started a little few-days-projec, I hope you like it. It's not finished though, it doesn't even have a decent interface.
What are some alternatives?
meow - Yet another modal editing on Emacs / 猫态编辑
kakoune - mawww's experiment for a better code editor
xi-editor - A modern editor with a backend written in Rust.
breeze - An experimental, kakoune-inspired CLI-centric text/code editor with |-shaped cursor (in Rust)
ryo-modal - Roll your own modal mode
calc - A command line calculator written in Rust.
kakoune-dpc - mawww's experiment for a better code editor
joule-heat-calculator - Joule Heating Calculation and Cooling via Heat Transfer in Wire.