3.4 KiB
Emacs
General Emacs Tips
Tips might be the wrong word here, but the way I use Emacs has resulted into looking at some things that others might not think of or see.
Emacs Init File
Your Emacs init file can be any of the following:
$HOME/.emacs
$HOME/.emacs.el
$HOME/.emacs.d/init.el
I personally use $HOME/.emacs.d/init.el
because that way I can
keep everything Emacs related in a single directory
($HOME/.emacs.d
).
Displaying time
I've seriously minimized the use of my window manager's task bar. It only shows which tags there are, some important daemons' status (running or not) and whether or not I have mail. This makes it difficult to tell time when I need it. That why it's useful to see what time it is in Emacs, since that is on 99.99% of the time I'm behind my computer, and it's very easy:
(display-time-mode t)
That is all. When you have that in your /ryuslash/orgweb/src/commit/e1a3e94621e6474602007efd61f512c78efd5e79/site/articles/Emacs%20Init%20File, you will always have the time in your modeline.
Automatically compile startup files
I know that for 99% of the things you might have in your having a compiled init files won't make much of a difference, but still I like having my init files compiled. This gets messy when you share your init files across multiple PCs and the source files become newer than the compiled ones.
To fix this I've put only a very little bit of code in my actual /ryuslash/orgweb/src/commit/e1a3e94621e6474602007efd61f512c78efd5e79/site/articles/Emacs%20Init%20File:
(require 'bytecomp)
(defvar startup-files
(directory-files "~/.emacs.d/startup/" t "^[^.].*\\.el$")
"A list of the files that should be loaded during startup.")
(while startup-files
(let ((filename (car startup-files))
(byte-compile-warnings nil))
(if (not (eq (byte-recompile-file filename nil 0) nil))
(load (substring filename 0 -3))))
(setq startup-files (cdr startup-files)))
It gets all the files in the $HOME/.emacs.d/startup/
directory
that end with .el
. It loops through all these files and compiles
them, and then loads them. I use byte-recompile-file
instead of
byte-recompile-directory
because the directory one didn't work
quite right. It doesn't recompile anything if the source file is
still up to date, so it only slows down when you have a lot of new
files in the startup
directory. It also disables warnings so
that you're not bothered by them during startup.
Emacs as…
There are many things Emacs1 is useful for, not just coding and writing, but certainly very much for these uses as well.
… An IDE…
Emacs features many modes for a lot of different languages.