unpackaged.el
laundry
unpackaged.el | laundry | |
---|---|---|
9 | 8 | |
373 | 53 | |
- | - | |
1.6 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Racket | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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unpackaged.el
- Repository with code snippets and utility functions
- [ANN] unpackaged/imenu-eww-headings: Offer HTML headings in EWW buffers with Imenu
- unpackaged/custom-toggle-all-more-hide: Expand all options’ documentation
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The Emacs Lock-In Effect or the Emacs Sunk Cost Fallacy
The question is almost like asking a fish to describe water. It's the sudden lack of it that produces a really clear example. :)
Anyway, here's a random example that comes to mind: I have some sexps in a Lisp file and I want to sort them alphabetically. Each sexp (usually a top-level form, but not necessarily) usually spans multiple lines, so line-sorting won't do it. Since they may be top-level forms, there may be comments between them that would lose their context if their position relative to sexps were lost, so comments need to "stick to" sexps they're above.
How would you solve this in a random text editor?
In Emacs, I would develop a command that does what I need. At each stage of the development process, I evaluate the command's definition, and it's instantly available to be used and tested. I could even test the function on its own definition, if I wanted to be silly (undoing the sorting after testing, of course).
When I'm done, I save the command definition to my configuration, and it's now a permanent tool in my toolbox. I didn't have to recompile the editor and start a new process, nor did I have to submit a patch to an upstream and ask for it to be merged. Similarly to a carpenter (forgive me if it sounds silly), my editor is my workbench, and as wood is malleable, so is my editor.
So, here's the command I came up with (maybe not the prettiest implementation, but maybe not the worst): https://github.com/alphapapa/unpackaged.el#sort-sexps And using Emacs and Org mode, I publish it into this "unpackaged" package, which I then install into my configuration as a package, and other users can then easily install it into theirs, too.
I don't know of any other editor that can do all of this, certainly not so easily.
- An Introduction to the Ultimate Git UI, Magit!
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Automatically sorting an Org file upon save using multiple sorting criteria
Here's the code in my Emacs config. I'll probably add these functions to unpackaged.el (the Org sorting function there is more primitive than these).
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Navigation suggestion needed
Sorting. This is handled within Org, see org-sort. However, you may find this function helpful for sorting recursively and with multiple methods (e.g. first by priority, then alphabetically): https://github.com/alphapapa/unpackaged.el#sort-tree-by-multiple-methods-at-once
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Lets talk about Emacs UI
The customize buffers can be used with the keyboard. You can tab between fields, and C-c C-c to set values. See also https://github.com/alphapapa/unpackaged.el#set-value-of-customization-option-at-point
laundry
- Initial Thoughts On A New Productivity Tool
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Write a language with Racket this summer! Win prizes!
More details at https://github.com/tgbugs/laundry
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Tree-sitter grammar for org-mode
We're in the middle of updating the org syntax document. I've been preoccupied and haven't gotten a chance to take another pass, but there should be a new version out in the next month or so. See also [0].
0. https://github.com/tgbugs/laundry/tree/master/laundry/gramma...
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Formal Specification and Programmatic Parser for Org-mode
org-element-parse-buffer 'element granularity (7.688000744 0 0.0) 8sec tree-sitter via https://github.com/milisims/tree-sitter-org parsed down to 58% of the buffer in 5.3sec extrapolates to ~9sec Racket's brack via https://github.com/tgbugs/laundry failed to finish parsing in reasonable time. Cancelled at 10m11.436s Clojure parser via https://github.com/200ok-ch/org-parser failed to finish parsing with java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: GC overhead limit exceeded Running time 8m28.078s
- Emacs org-mode version 9.5, a major release, is out
- laundry: Org mode for Racket
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Org parser libraries | org-almanac
It looks like laundry is an attempt to do that, but I am not sure.
- The Emacs Lock-In Effect or the Emacs Sunk Cost Fallacy
What are some alternatives?
ement.el - A Matrix client for GNU Emacs
el-easydraw - Embedded drawing tool for Emacs
lispy - Short and sweet LISP editing
vertico - :dizzy: vertico.el - VERTical Interactive COmpletion
Emacs-VSCode-Default-High-Contras
company-org-block
org-make-toc - Automatic tables of contents for Org-mode files
beancount-mode - Emacs major-mode to work with Beancount ledger files
org-ql - A searching tool for Org-mode, including custom query languages, commands, saved searches and agenda-like views, etc.
org-special-block-extras - A number of new custom blocks and link types for Emacs' Org-mode ^_^