dotemacs | dotfiles | |
---|---|---|
16 | 4 | |
90 | 50 | |
- | - | |
6.1 | 8.4 | |
about 2 months ago | 16 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
MIT License | - |
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dotemacs
- Help with meow configuration
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Microsoft Exchange mailbox
Here's my mu4e setup
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emacs-groundup
7 - Meow: Meow is great. I switched from evil a few months ago and am pretty happy with it. I also dropped general.el for bind-key.el, which is included with use-package (which I see you are using anyway). You can look at my setup of meow here and a more generic setup of keybindings here. I haven't had any trouble with using this instead of general.
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org very slow load with org-cite and a large bibtex library
One thought is to limit which parts of the org-cite libraries to load. I had similar issues with speed. You can look at my current setup in my dotfiles here. I just use oc and oc-csl, along with citar (no org-ref) and everything works pretty well.
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What is expected Doom performance on macOS?
Here’s the link: https://github.com/mclear-tools/dotemacs
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tab-bar-mode: How to change tab bar appearence?
Another thing you might consider (this depends on how many tabs you usually keep open, etc.) is not displaying tabs in the tab-bar at all (setq tab-bar-show nil) and displaying them in the echo-area instead. I use a combination of https://github.com/fritzgrabo/tab-bar-echo-area and https://github.com/qaiviq/echo-bar.el to give a consistent but very unobtrusive presentation of the tabs in the echo bar on the bottom right. You can see that in this image -- and my config for it is here.
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Has anyone ever written a research paper by only using org-mode?
Yes. It’s not a problem (it’s also easy to write papers in markdown using markdown mode). If you want to see some of the packages involved look at my setup-writing.el file in my config.
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Finding the best style of literate emacs configuration
If you just want folding then you can use emacs' built-in outline mode. And there are very easy ways to jump around a "modular" or multi-file config as well. I use both of these tools in my own config. I also like that I can easily load just small parts of my config via command line args, and of course that I don't need to worry about bootstrapping org-mode to get things running.
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Writing papers/thesis in org with a barebone config
You can take a look atmy setup and see if any of it looks helpful. The relevant modules for you will be:
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How to C-x b but to related buffers only?
Yeah +1 for perspective.el. I use it with projectile to manage projects and have discrete buffers for different projects. You can look at my setup if it is helpful here.
dotfiles
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Bad Emacs Defaults
Heh, I recently did a "clean sweep" of my .emacs files (inspired by the new support for `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/config/emacs/init.el` in 27.1) and something like 90% of it was workarounds (some dating back to the late 1990s, for example a "vertical-motion-fix" for something that was fixed in emacs 19.29)
I definitely recommend doing some form of "dotfile bankruptcy" every 20 years or so :-)
(I also ended up doing a crude "load-file-literate" so that now most of my elisp is actually markdown, inspired by https://github.com/skx/dotfiles )
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Bikeshedding Friday: How do you organize your init file?
I keep meaning to explore using org-mode for this. At the moment I have a trivial init.el which loads a literate markdown file init.md.
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Noweb – A Simple, Extensible Tool for Literate Programming
I keep meaning to experiment with bable/tangle in Emacs.
I setup a simple literate configuration of my init file via markdown, which worked out really well, but doing it "properly" in org-mode would be a nice evolution.
With markdown I just search for code-blocks, write them all sequentially to a temporary buffer and evaluate once done. So it is very simplistic, but also being able to write and group things is useful:
https://github.com/skx/dotfiles/blob/master/.emacs.d/init.md
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What parts of your config do you like best?
~/.emacs.d/init.el the helper, which loads/executes it.
What are some alternatives?
scimax - An emacs starterkit for scientists and engineers
fw-utf8 - Modern fork of FunnelWeb (original written by Ross Williams)
persp-mode.el - named perspectives(set of buffers/window configs) for emacs
Literate - A literate programming tool for any language
binder - Emacs global minor mode facilitating multi-file writing projects
ob-restclient.el - An org-mode extension to restclient.el
perspective-el - Perspectives for Emacs.
straight.el - 🍀 Next-generation, purely functional package manager for the Emacs hacker.
citar - Emacs package to quickly find and act on bibliographic references, and edit org, markdown, and latex academic documents.
verso - A new approach to literate programming.
writeroom-mode - Minor mode for distraction-free writing
spiralweb - Literate programming system with a Pandoc-extended Markdown backend.