Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
Combobulate's long had the ability to bulk edit matches using the multiple cursors package, but building seamless and useful bulk editing tooling is not as straightforward as it seems. And what if you don't use multiple cursors? Combobulate now has its own field editor to help you bulk edit.
A description of generic alias types, a planned feature for Go 1.24
Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
>I am excited and relieved to finally announce the release of Magit version 4.0, consisting of 1077 commits, since the last release three years ago. The release notes can be found here.
Custom Emacs Lisp to copy a single file to many directories.
Information about the latest version of my Denote package for GNU Emacs.
The reason that Doom is so portable goes beyond Linux and is an artefact of its
development. id developed Doom on NeXTSTEP (i.e. Unix) machines and obviously
targeted DOS. This is pretty unique among DOS games at the time and required id
to write as much code as possible in a platform agnostic way. This means that the main engine
does not care about where it is running and the usual DOS hacks are contained to
DOS-specific files. In order to port Doom to a new platform, ideally one only
needs to rewrite the system-specific implementation files for video, sound,
filesystem access, etc., and this mostly holds true today. (These files are prefixed with i_
in the Doom source).
The Linux port is just one of many versions developed at the time. I don't believe that it was commercially released; it was more of a portability test. The reason that the Linux version was chosen for the source release over the DOS version was because it didn't rely on the proprietary DMX sound library that the DOS port used.
Window management in Emacs gets a bad rap. Some of this is deserved, but mostly this is a consequence of combining a very flexible and granular layout system with rather coarse controls. This leaves the door open to creating and using tools for handling windows that employ and provide better metapho...
Information about the latest version of my Denote package for GNU Emacs.
> This release brings a host of user-facing refinements to an already stable base, as well as some impressive new features. There is a lot to cover, so take your time reading these notes. > > Special thanks to Jean-Philippe Gagné Guay for the numerous refinements to parts of the code base. Some of these are not directly visible to users, but are critical regardless. In the interest of brevity, I will not be covering the most technical parts here. I mention Jean-Philippe’s contributions at the outset for this reason. Though the Git commit log is there for interested parties to study things further.
cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/27699104
> From the NEWS file: > Emacs 29.3 is an emergency bugfix release intended to fix several > security vulnerabilities described below. > > - Arbitrary Lisp code is no longer evaluated as part of turning on Org mode. > This is for security reasons, to avoid evaluating malicious Lisp code. > > - New buffer-local variable 'untrusted-content'. > When this is non-nil, Lisp programs should treat buffer contents with > extra caution. > > - Gnus now treats inline MIME contents as untrusted. > To get back previous insecure behavior, 'untrusted-content' should be > reset to nil in the buffer. > > - LaTeX preview is now by default disabled for email attachments. > To get back previous insecure behavior, set the variable > 'org--latex-preview-when-risky' to a non-nil value. > > - Org mode now considers contents of remote files to be untrusted. > Remote files are recognized by calling 'file-remote-p'.
Information about the latest version of my highly accessible themes for GNU Emacs.
Tree-sitter's promise of simplifying code navigation can seem like a dream, but in reality, it introduces its own set of challenges that complicate the process. In this article, I delve into the intricate nature of crafting intuitive navigation within a tree-sitter environment, shedding light on the...
Improvements are made to graphics, the Lua API, and the user interface. We present the winners of the 2023 Game Jam along with other cool mods. A new core developer joins the team, and we look forward to FOSDEM 2024!
> Improvements are made to graphics, the Lua API, and the user interface. We present the winners of the 2023 Game Jam along with other cool mods. A new core developer joins the team, and we look forward to FOSDEM 2024!
I don't think that's a good idea. Pretty much all interaction with Emacs is
mediated through keybinds. There is no distinction between shortcuts and
fundamental behavior. Even ordinary typing is done by having each character on
your keyboard bound to self-insert-command
. Perhaps there is some way to nuke
the global keymap, but then you're left with literally nothing. Besides, this
would not prevent various modes from adding their own keys anyway.
You should consider whether Emacs keybinds are actually in the way enough to be
bothersome. You can also keymap-global-unset
(or keymap-unset
) individual
bindings that you find problematic. I'd also consider delving into the Spacemacs
code to see how they implement their "vi only mode."
The main menu gets more love in preparation for the 5.8.0 release, developers come and go, and new shaders are in the works. CTF celebrates its 10th anniversary, and new API mods make their way to ContentDB.
A menu rework and God rays are among the improvements on the road to the 5.8.0 release.
This is the first pretest for what will become the 29.2 release of Emacs, which is primarily a bugfix release.
Emacs's regular clipboard is the "kill ring" which also allows you to retrieve any previously cut/copied text. It also has "registers" where you can store and retrieve snippets of text, which can be considered clipboards when used for this purpose. Registers can be referenced by any character you can type on your keyboard, including control characters like ^D.
This totals... a lot of clipboards.
My heart sank upon reading the word "electron" and rose again on the very next paragraph. I'm looking forward to seeing it in action.
I think that this is above all else the reason that I use Arch. Arch Linux makes creating packages trivial, basically just wrapping build instructions into a shell script template. Arch handles the rest. The build systems for deb or rpm packages don't come close, and good luck rolling your own flatpak.
This allows me to use pacman for everything outside of my home directory. Pacman is practically the central feature of my computer, and it's wonderful. I'm sure those Nix people can relate, though I guess my method is a bit less robust.
Creating a standard programming major mode presents significant challenges, with the intricate tasks of establishing proper indentation and font highlighting being among the two hardest things to get right. It's painstaking work, and it'll quickly descend into a brawl between the font lock engine an...
Xremap, despite the name, supports both X and Wayland, and can be used to move modifier keys around. Configuration is done with YAML but is otherwise pretty easy. I personally use it for full Emacs keybind emulation.
This might be the first time I've ever seen something productive happen in the Phoronix forums. I love that place. Go to any topic with more than about a dozen posts and it's almost guaranteed to be a flame war. Genuinely one of the funniest places on the Internet.
Check out this one. It took like three posts!
I have done almost the opposite: moving as much configuration as I can into
use-package statements, even for built-in features like dired. You can
(use-package feature-name)
or even (use-package emacs)
in order to customize
the basics. use-package just provides much better organization than any schema
that I have ever been able to come up with on my own.
What's new in Emacs 29.1? I go through every change and annotate the ones I feel are interesting or worth knowing more about.
Work on the 5.8 release continues with some exciting new engine improvements, a classic game makes its way to ContentDB, and the use of Minetest in education was explored.
Available at your local GNU mirror and, depending on your OS, perhaps soon your favorite package manager repository. A full list of features and changes can be found in the NEWS file.
r/cth was originally a subreddit for the podcast Chapo Trap House, but it eventually bloomed into a general-purpose leftist space. IIRC, the sub was around 160k members at its peak and had a distinct posting culture.
It was quarantined by Reddit for violent speech after calling for the death of slave owners and later banned for no particular reason at the same time as r/the_donald, presumably as a "both sides" sort of thing.
Hexbear is an instance formed mostly by former r/chapotraphouse users after that sub was banned from Reddit a few years ago. Hexbear used to run on a custom fork of Lemmy so that the community could add extra features that they wanted (like custom emoji) but it was recently ported back to mainline Lemmy after merging or reimplementing as many changes as possible.
Currently, Hexbear does not have federation enabled, and there is discussion about who to federate with or even whether to federate at all. The community is very active and self-sufficient and some members prefer the isolation.
Content-wise, it's a leftist-focused instance. Some shitposts, some serious posts, and a lot of inside jokes.
I've been using Devil for a little while now. The right control key is pretty far from the home row on my keyboard, so the usual touch typing motions are inconvenient. I feel like Devil, which I have mapped to semicolon, lets me reclaim some of that.
I have caps lock as control as well, so that gives me control access on both sides of the home row. The two sides behave a bit differently since caps lock is an actual modifier, but that hasn't been an issue for me.
This is the main reason that one should learn to read PKGBUILDs. Any AUR helper like Yay or Paru should give the option. Just make sure that the package downloads from an official source and contains only the necessary build and install instructions.
But I agree. Some people treat the AUR as just another repository, when it most definitely is not.