multiple-cursors.el
projectile
multiple-cursors.el | projectile | |
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18 | 31 | |
2,221 | 3,925 | |
- | - | |
4.4 | 7.6 | |
2 months ago | 27 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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multiple-cursors.el
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Multi-cursor code editing: An animated introduction
You'll need to install an extension for it, but yes it does. Here is one example: https://github.com/magnars/multiple-cursors.el
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IRS will officially launch free online tax filing service for 2024 tax season
For me, the beauty of Beancount[0] is that it's just text files in Git. There's a web UI I use for generating reports, and a Python API with which I hacked together some import/export scripts, but 99% of my interactions with it are via Emacs[1] and Magit.
A ton of repetitive bookkeeping tasks become so much easier when you can copy and paste, or use keyboard macros or something like multiple-cursors[2], rather than have to click tens or hundreds of times in a GUI. Many years ago I used QuickBooks, and basic tasks like importing a bank statement took at least an order of magnitude longer than they do now.
Having my company's books in Git is also huge when it comes to auditing, concurrency, backups, and figuring out where things went wrong when accounts don't balance. As mentioned in another comment: `git diff` is a really powerful tool and it's awesome to be able to check out the books as they existed at a particular point in time. `git blame` is great for when things don't balance. Writing meaningful commit messages and comments keeps me sane when I try to remember a year later why something is recorded the way it is.
The biggest downside—or advantage, depending on how you look at it—is that there's no default or built-in chart of accounts, so you need a certain level of accounting acumen (or professional advice) to set things up at first. I'm pretty sure GnuCash aims to be more plug-and-play, whereas Beancount is more akin to a programming library that you use to build an accounting system that works for you. I agree with the grandparent commenter, who said that text-based accounting is "the best and most flexible accounting experience I've ever had." But the cost of that flexibility is that a certain level of base knowledge is a prerequisite.
[0]: https://beancount.io/
[1]: https://github.com/beancount/beancount-mode
[2]: https://github.com/magnars/multiple-cursors.el
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packages/features/settings that slow Emacs down
The original multiple cursors package is amazing for what it is, but it scales very badly. Emacs is efficient when editing at one place at a time (as you'd do normally), and when mc replicates all the edits character-by-character for all the cursors, it does the very opposite of this: many edits all in very different places. It works quite well when using just a few cursors, but going above a dozen of them causes them to be visibly sluggish.
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Multiple-cursors error on Emacs 29.0.60
Recently multiple-cursors has been unusable for me on Emacs 29.0.60 (not a release yet). Movements (and possibly other operations) don't work with the following error:
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Best way to "process" a large-ish text file?
If you intend to use Emacs for this (as opposed to some external script), you're probably better off using the keyboard macros or a regular search&replace instead of multiple cursors (I assume the Magnars flavor of them). As flexible as they are, they don't scale well and they get exponentially slower the more cursors you have. Having 2500 cursors sounds insane.
- Let's share your top 3 packages that you can't live without.
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How to do this Vim Trick in Emacs?
You can do something similar with multiple cursors.
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If you have never used wgrep with rg.el to rename a function in several files, try it | that will blow your mind
Then, in *rg* buffer, we transform org-link-expand-abbrev into org-link-RENAMED the way we prefer (we have all the Emacs power, some of us might use query-replace, other might use multiple-cursors.el, other iedit, etc.). And so *rg* buffer looks like this:
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[Question] multiple cursor and end of line
There is also multiple-cursors.el, which looks the closest to what you want, but it's also the buggiest.
projectile
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Fuzzy Finding with Emacs Instead of Fzf
Could you explain more about this setup? I'm not familiar with "projectile". Is this https://github.com/bbatsov/projectile the same thing you're referring to?
Sounds interesting. What I've done recently is open my vim in the folder that contains all the organization's repos (the ones I've cloned) and just run ripgrep inside vim to find examples or references to whatever I've seeking. Seems performant enough even without doing anything except letting ripgrep ignore git-ignored stuff (default behavior of ripgrep).
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Emacs: Projectile - Multiple Projects
Sure. It sounds like it's working well enough. Here's a Github issue that may be of interest to you. Apparently you can get this behavior if there's a project marker file at a higher level.
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Project-global building/running/etc
With projectile you can define custom "run", "compile", "test" commands per project. Also there are pre-defined commands for many known project types.
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Two projects side by side?
Thanks for your detailed explanation, but no that is no that is not the question. This is projectile: https://github.com/bbatsov/projectile
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Multi project management - perspective, persp-mode, tab-bar-mode, or...?
I am currently trying with perspective rather than persp-mode, as it segregates the buffer list as I like (#1 above). I've got projectile with persp-projectile, and that seems to give me what I need for project navigation (#2 probably, still not 100%). I get some help in my mode line for project focus (#3, partially).
- Projectile 2.7 has been released
- Projectile 2.7 is out!
- Release Projectile 2.6
- Projectile 2.6
- Projectile 2.6 released!
What are some alternatives?
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
neovim-session-manager - A simple wrapper around :mksession.
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.
treemacs
LunarVim - 🌙 LunarVim is an IDE layer for Neovim. Completely free and community driven.
telescope-project.nvim
kakoune - mawww's experiment for a better code editor
emacs-inspector - Inspection tool for Emacs Lisp objects.
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
hydra - make Emacs bindings that stick around
project.nvim - The superior project management solution for neovim.