00-11

joined 1 year ago
[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/SiteMap#LearningEmacs

That is, just go to Emacs Wiki. The very first heading after How to use this site is Learning About Emacs.

There you'll find lots of suggestions from Emacs users, new and veteran (including probably all or most suggestions you'll find here). Anyone can add their suggestions there (like here, but all in a single place).

[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Cycling shows everything in your session using each theme, in turn.


doremi-custom-themes+ is an interactive Lisp function in doremi-cmd.el.

It is bound to C-x t s.

(doremi-custom-themes+ &optional FLIP)

Successively cycle among custom themes.

The themes used for cycling are those in option doremi-custom-themes.

You can use C-g to quit and cancel changes made so far. Note, however, that some things might not be restored. C-g can only disable any themes that you applied. It cannot restore other customizations that enabling a theme might have overruled. Note: Having a lot of frames present can slow down this command considerably.

Option doremi-custom-themes-accumulate-flag determines whether cycling accumulates themes or disables all themes other than the current one. Note: A non-nil value (accumulating) can considerably slow down cycling.

Option doremi-themes-update-flag determines whether the updated value of doremi-custom-themes is saved. A prefix arg to this command flips the option value for the current invocation of the command.

[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

any IDE is just as extensible by using Plug Ins

Lisp. Up, down, around, inside, across, between, under, at, through, into.

[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Good to see strokes being uninterred.


Wrt customizable context menus and other mouse-3 actions, see also Mouse3 (mouse3.el).

[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago
[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Also very basic, IMO:

  • g X - go to buffer X's point
  • j - jump to diff number (prefix arg)
  • ! - update (re-diff)
  • C-l - recenter
  • * - refine current region
  • ## - ignore whitespace diffs
[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

As /u/mickeyp said, Imenu should do what you want. That presumes that LaTeX mode in Emacs has set up Imenu in a useful way for what you want. If it doesn't, you can do that yourself - define Imenu's menus for the mode you're using (e.g. LaTeX), to recognize the section headers you want, etc.

[–] 00-11@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

FWIW, setting something to #f in Emacs Lisp means you're setting it to TRUE, not FALSE. Elisp is not Scheme.

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