ranger.el
emacs-async
ranger.el | emacs-async | |
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7 | 24 | |
688 | 819 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 6.2 | |
8 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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ranger.el
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What file manager do you use?
ranger.el
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Double Commander
I still appreciate having a tool like ranger for emacs: https://github.com/ralesi/ranger.el
It's not quite the two-column file manager; but it's inspired by a file manager + preview, with simple keybindings for navigating.
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[NEW] BFS (Browse File System) -> dynamic tree view of the file system à la ranger
See also: Ranger mode
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How to preview file contents like with ranger?
Well, you have ranger in emacs if you'd like to use it... https://github.com/ralesi/ranger.el
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A little visual file browser
If you like ranger, there is a ranger.el for Emacs, no need to run vterm + bash + python just to manager your files :-).
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I used Emacs' Dired as my only file manager for 15 Days.
After like 20 years on using dired, i decided (After reading this thread) to try ranger.el and i never thought I would rebind my usually dired-jump binding c-x c-j to it. It's fantastic and I encourage every "direder" to try it
emacs-async
- emacs-async: Simple library for asynchronous processing in Emacs
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Is there any way to run an emacs function as a separate process?
That is probably the simplest option possible; but if you need non-blocking evaluation, async package is definitely a better option.
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Is it possible for Emacs Lisp to get something like multiprocessing from Python?
You already can. Using https://github.com/jwiegley/emacs-async or https://github.com/chuntaro/emacs-promise.
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How to turn sequential computation into parallel computation in Elisp?
IMO the best option currently is async by Wiegley. It will manage Emacs instances for you and do all the low-level synchronization and messaging for you, so you can work in higher level abstractions as if you are working with threads.
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Asynchronous alternative to xref?
Have you checked the async package?
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Lsp-Bridge, Not Even Wrong
That is quite normal thing to do. Have you not seen Emacs Async? Take, a look, it is a useful thing. Or Emacs Request. Since Emacs does not have proper thread scheduler, that is the best next thing you can do.
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[ANN] Blamer 0.6.0 released. Added pretty avatar preview
There are ways to avoid this, have you tried e.g. https://github.com/jwiegley/emacs-async ?
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Video Series: Denote as a Zettelkasten
As a note about the third video, and searching for backlinks; the volume, when you get there, might be a slow-down when you work with many small files, like searching for backlinks. Each note means a separate file access, search process, etc. It is much more efficient for computers to read one big file, then many small files, and then just use Emacs to search in that file. If you are a developer of Denote, you might wish to look at asynchronous processes or perhaps use Wigleys Async package to search for backlinks asynchronously.
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Setting up a fundraiser for multi-threaded Emacs, any thoughts on this?
Async process can do that. Have you checked async library by Wiegley? You can use another emacs process as a sort of clean interpreter thread similar to javascript workers.
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My IDE is too heavy so I moved to Emacs
That "99% of standard usage" is the kicker, isn't it? Those greybeards who always opposed multithreading since long ago tend to say that the remaining 1% of use cases is best done in an external process, ideally not even written in Emacs Lisp, so that the rest of the open source community can benefit, like the GNU Global you mention. I suppose if you still want that program to be written with Emacs Lisp, you could use async.el (https://github.com/jwiegley/emacs-async/) and there's finally an use-case for the threads: it'll be relatively safe to run those 16 threads only in the external Emacs-process.
What are some alternatives?
.emacs.d - My current Emacs setup.
Taskflow - A General-purpose Parallel and Heterogeneous Task Programming System
dired-hacks - Collection of useful dired additions
esxml - An elisp library for working with xml, esxml and sxml.
peep-dired - A convienent way to look up file contents in other window while browsing directory in dired
Thrust - [ARCHIVED] The C++ parallel algorithms library. See https://github.com/NVIDIA/cccl
bfs - BFS (Browse File System) implements for emacs a dynamic tree view of the file system à la ranger.
org-yaap
filetree - filetree is an emacs package for displaying and operating on a file list as a file tree, and for maintaining individual notes for files.
oneTBB - oneAPI Threading Building Blocks (oneTBB)
dired-hacks - Collection of useful dired additions
elfeed-tube - Youtube integration for Elfeed, the feed reader for Emacs