this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2023
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I'm a new emacs user and I've been using doom emacs for a while now and i'm willing to learn Elisp, but found out that it might not be as easy as it might seem at first, because as i found out, lisp is quite different from other programming languages that i'm used to, especially knowing that i'm not a programmer by any means and my programming knowledge is very little, not mentioning that elisp is pretty old so the learning resources might not be as much as other more popular programming languages

so my question is, Is it worth it?

like what is the level of mastery do i need to achieve to start implementing custom elisp in my configs to enhance my emacs experience?

and how exactly can i improve my emacs experience if i learned elisp?

in other words, how rewarding it would be

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You can get a lot done with very basic knowledge. Much of the packages offer example configuration, and as emacs-lisp is self-documenting (through docstrings), being able to read and write basic hooks, functions and setting variables is enough for most configuration.

I personally think after that the challenge becomes emacs, not lisp. For example understanding startup, MIME-types, faces and window/frame rules is a lot to learn - and those are independent of the language