solarized-emacs
xah-fly-keys
solarized-emacs | xah-fly-keys | |
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9 | 18 | |
757 | 463 | |
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3.5 | 8.3 | |
about 1 month ago | 2 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
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solarized-emacs
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What is the name of the nice light theme
I can confirm that the name of theme is solarized-selenized-white which included in solarized-theme.
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Your favorite Emacs theme in 2023?
Solarized Light (with Noto Sans Mono)
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Share Your 'other-window' Commands
There is no reason to watch videos, it will be self-explanatory when you use it; you can't miss it. Once you have three or more windows in Emacs it will show you a number, just press the number, and it will switch to the window. If you install a nice theme that has theming for ace-window, such Batsov's Solarized (or any of other derivatives), you will get nice theming for those numbers, so they stick out too.
- Could you please suggest theme for Emacs + Org mode?
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Color themes in Alphapapa's Org-ql gifs
The first one looks like a version of solarized. I think I have seen some other screenshots of him using something similar to Solarized dark, but I don't know for sure. At least I see Batsov's solarized forked on his account.. I don't know if he has done any changes, I think he did, since his color scheme does not look same as mine, and I use same theme unchanged from Batsov. Those other themes can be just different color schemes that comes together with Batsov's port of Solarized (zenburn, etc).
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Dirvish: a minimalistic file manager based on dired. Such as ranger, vifm, lf.
Everything feels quite well integrated to me. I also use Solarized by Batsov which minimizes the rainbow of colours that some packages introduce, notably. Most of the time I use two windows side by side in Emacs, so *-dwim commands can auto guess when I copy/move some file.
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About to declare emacs bankruptcy before I lose my job
For the looks, if you don't like built-in themes, I suggest you some of Batsov's themes. I am using his Solarized port, and I recommend it because he has gone to great lengths to customize external packages, which can give you a more uniform look with third party packages out of the box. You don't need to use the solarized color scheme, there are other color schemes included there. It might help you with looks of tabs. I don't use tabs myself, but I wouldn't be surprised if he has taken care of tabs look too.
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Emacs theme in 3 files
That's how a lot of themes work. Bozhidar Batsov's version of Solarized has a slightly different approach to file organization:
xah-fly-keys
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Software development is not carpentry. Almost everything a developer writes is unique, they have never built that particular thing before. We are not cabinet makers repeating a variation of something we've built hundreds of times before.
lol no xah-fly-keys
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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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Is the dygma raise right for me?
Another consideration is that some editors make heavy use of key chords, which aren't so ergo friendly. Emacs in particular is notorious with how it uses the Ctrl key. I highly recommend switching to an editor with modal keybindings like NeoVim, or alternatively, your existing editor may have a Vim keybindings mode or extension. For instance Emacs has Evil mode and xah-fly-keys. Another route to circumventing chords is you can use one-shot modifiers (aka sticky modifiers) or define macros.
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Home row mods for sequences and Emacs
More radically, you might find a modal interface easier and more comfortable to use with HRMs, like Vim's, or staying within Emacs, using Evil mode or Xah fly keys.
- xah-fly-keys: the most efficient keybinding for emacs
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Share Your 'other-window' Commands
I use xah-fly-keys. In command mode, on a QWERTY keyboard, the comma key moves the cursor to the next window.
- Anyone tried a heavily customized key-map for evil mode?
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∑ Xah Code
> Long love ergomacs!
I recently stumbled over, and started using (and modifying) Xah's "xah-fly-keys" emacs bindings, which are a somewhat more radical implementation of the ideas behind ergoemacs (e.g. use Emacs without any "chording", i.e. without ever having to press two keys at once apart from shift+letter).
[1] https://github.com/xahlee/xah-fly-keys
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Replace (almost) all your programs with emacs!
*xah-fly-keys
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Optimal layout for vim
I made it myself, but it was largely inspired by "xah fly keys": https://github.com/xahlee/xah-fly-keys
What are some alternatives?
dirvish - A polished Dired with batteries included.
meow - Yet another modal editing on Emacs / 猫态编辑
dired-hacks - Collection of useful dired additions
evil-collection - A set of keybindings for evil-mode
use-package - A use-package declaration for simplifying your .emacs
spacemacs - A community-driven Emacs distribution - The best editor is neither Emacs nor Vim, it's Emacs *and* Vim!
elegant-emacs - A very minimal but elegant emacs (I think)
kmonad - An advanced keyboard manager
popper - Emacs minor-mode to summon and dismiss buffers easily.
modalka - Modal editing your way
helm - Emacs incremental completion and selection narrowing framework
ryo-modal - Roll your own modal mode