Our great sponsors
-
SurveyJS
Open-Source JSON Form Builder to Create Dynamic Forms Right in Your App. With SurveyJS form UI libraries, you can build and style forms in a fully-integrated drag & drop form builder, render them in your JS app, and store form submission data in any backend, inc. PHP, ASP.NET Core, and Node.js.
Right. They develop services, see which ones attract a large audience, and close those that don't. https://killedbygoogle.com.
I like it, personally speaking. Google has a lot of power, and it's an approach that minimise the use of that power to push people around.
That's exactly what this is doing, but only on the bing.com domain
https://github.com/anaclumos/bing-chat-for-all-browsers/blob...
> I usually use Mosh
Mosh as in "mobile shell"? https://mosh.org/
> Would you suggest I try slime-tramp?
I don't know yet, I've just started trying it out.
What made me want to try it was that I could use GUI Emacs to connect to emacs running on a different machine and still have full access to all the emacs keybindings.
So far, the downsides that I have encountered are that M-. and C-c C-k (slime-compile-and-load-file) don't quite work. The work-around would be to visit each file using the remote path and re-compile them so that the running Lisp image can map what's in the image to a path tramp recognizes. Then M-. and C-c C-k should work.
To recompile, select all then compile (X-c X-p C-c C-c) works, or I think C-c M-k also works. Not a great solution if there are a lot of files, though.
IIUC the problem boils down to M-. eventually calling (xref-find-definitions) which is an emacs built-in, and I think that's why the tramp paths aren't translating until a re-compile is done.