dot-emacs
org-html-themes
dot-emacs | org-html-themes | |
---|---|---|
29 | 15 | |
182 | 2,164 | |
- | - | |
8.1 | 5.3 | |
about 2 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Emacs Lisp | CSS | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
dot-emacs
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Packages that you would like to be in emacs core ?
For example, I don't know what "vertico, consult, embark, marginalia, and orderless" is exactly, they're not part of my setup and I guess I don't want them to interfere with it.
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A less verbose OR more organized modeline
You can find further optimizations on https://github.com/novoid/dot-emacs/blob/master/config.org when searching for "mode-line".
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org-agenda - can you log item creation events?
You're looking for org-expiry and its (org-expiry-insinuate) as you can see in my config: https://github.com/novoid/dot-emacs/blob/master/config.org
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My emacs config, with README.org index generated from init.el
You don't have to repeat yourself; it is more about how you write. Literate programming lets you mix different languages as well as text and the code. Check for example Karl Voits. The only remark I can make is that some defvars don't need the comments, since they are written as self-documenting code. For example, 'large-file-warning-threshold' certainly does not need a comment which basically repeats what the name says, but that is not so unusual to see even amongst programmers sometimes.
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Too many keybindings
For the very same reason, I started to use hydras: https://github.com/abo-abo/hydra - see my config at https://github.com/novoid/dot-emacs/blob/master/config.org
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"Non-ASCII string must be encoded in advance" when tying to mark a region with non ASCII character(s)
The same configuration using Emacs 27.1 also does not have this weird behavior.
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Does anybody have issues with AutoKey (GNU/Linux) with GNU/Emacs?
Maybe somebody has an idea what I might change in my large setup in order to get rid of this issue ...
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Manage mentions of people with org-mode
For linking to contacts, I started to use a custom link contact: which I don't use any more since I've found org-super-links which enables me to link to any heading quite fine including contacts.
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orgmode and everything else
My personal notes on any task or project are way more verbose than the information curated in shared business environments. I therefore invest work and keep a local Orgdown structure and sync a subset of information manually. I define custom links to Jira, emails, and all other external sources to keep links from my Orgdown files to everything else. This way, my only truth is within my personal knowledge management which simplifies search.
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Does Org-mode discourage subfolders in org-directory?
My personal approach is a static list of Orgdown files within a single directory (with very few exceptions) and a manually curated list of agenda files.
org-html-themes
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Org-html-theme like https://docs.doomemacs.org/latest/
Closets I came to that is with https://github.com/fniessen/org-html-themes
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Blogging: org-publish vs ox-hugo? What's your opinion/experience on these 2?
Theming HTML can be very easy if you're not super picky. I find both the ReadTheOrg and Bigblow themes from Fabrice Niessen great. They both require just a simple "#+SETUPFILE" directive to use.
- Simplest HTML export with "drill-down" on 26.1
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Packages for taking notes in a computing class
Second spot to check would be Emacs' org-mode which may be understood as a mark-up language with a syntax of similar ease to remember, or/and as an operating environment/task management within Emacs (and to some degree, ported to vim). It can offer you much more than a format converter (e.g., demo video by John Kitchin), including the compilation/execution of snippets of code. Like Pandoc, export/publication to other formats may be adjusted to your preferences (e.g., readtheorg), but (in comparison to markdown) this is more suitable if you use your device/are allowed to adjust the computer to your preferences. (In Pandoc's case, you may name a portable style file to adjust the output.) Your mileage of needs may vary, but the interaction with tables (demo Mike Zamansky to move rows/columns/cells around, to quickly evaluate (compute) e.g., sums/standard deviations of a few entries is something the Emacs ecosystem may offer, and Pandoc intended as a format converter can not. (However, Pandoc accepts both .md and .org as either input/output format.)
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[org] What is the best way to have a public wiki that I can write from Org?
I'm using a customized version of org-html-themes, really easy to setup and host on github pages for my projects
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orgmode and everything else
I have an org file with lots of bookmarks clustered e.g. by project, process („how to book traveling“, „how to sick leave“,..) and other documentation (architecture diagrams, …). I export it using the readthedoc theme and serve via local Webserver to n localhost
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License terms for ReadTheOrg
I recently discovered exporting your org files to html. Someone developed a very helpful theme package [here](https://github.com/fniessen/org-html-themes] which renders just like ReadTheDocs.
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Publish a book as HTML/website with org-mode.
org-html-themes
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Taking notes in org mode has made me popular with my classmates
So I have been taking notes in org mode for about a year, and after several people asking me for my notes, I learned how to export them to HTML with ReadTheOrg. I then hosted them on my github pages site, now I can share with my class before finals. Org never ceases to amaze me!
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Any static site generators for org-mode suitable for manuals/documentation?
Yes, you can use org built-in html export C-c C-e in combination with an org html theme. In fact, this ReadTheOrg is a fork of the official Sphinx Read The Docs theme.
What are some alternatives?
ox-tailwind - Org-Mode HTML export back-end with Tailwind.css classes. Check the theme:
github-markdown-css - The minimal amount of CSS to replicate the GitHub Markdown style
bufler.el - A butler for your buffers. Group buffers into workspaces with programmable rules, and easily switch to and manipulate them.
readtheorg - Org Mode theme like Read The Docs
SingleFileZ - Web Extension to save a faithful copy of an entire web page in a self-extracting ZIP file
org-superstar-mode - Make org-mode stars a little more super
burly.el - Save and restore frames and windows with their buffers in Emacs
org-themes
hydra - make Emacs bindings that stick around
org-html-theme-darksun - A Solarized Dark version of the Bigblow Org HTML export theme
org-web-tools - View, capture, and archive Web pages in Org-mode
sphinx - The Sphinx documentation generator