You know, typed clojure is pretty excellent. http://typedclojure.org
orly? Based purely on the number of searches made for Facebook? This is a terrible, baseless prediction that should not be published by the guardian or linked to Hacker News.
I second emacs occur.
Also the iPod minis.
You could just use magit, right?
Editing plain text is in fact very easy. Structured text requires a little more logic, however. Ultimately, you could use emacs in the exact way one would use notepad++ and be none the wiser to the rich customizations…
4 months ago... https://github.com/defunkt/gist.el
Checkout lighttable.el https://github.com/Fuco1/litable
You know Emacs has faithfully implemented Vim right? Check out emacs evil-mode.
This is one of the most beautiful theme I've come across, and the one I am currently using: https://github.com/jasonm23/emacs-purple-haze-theme
IDE's tend to be language specific while emacs tries to be agnostic. There are certainly options that could make your emacs a language specific IDE, for instance, look at emacs-live if you are doing clojure development.
Thats awful, one can only assume this affects MBP as well. I think I'll now only turn DB on whenever I'm on A/C.
The reason to move to emacs is exactly because it has far more customizations available than vim does. Emacs' nerd tree equivalent is called undo tree, and its fantastic. http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/UndoTree
You know, typed clojure is pretty excellent. http://typedclojure.org
orly? Based purely on the number of searches made for Facebook? This is a terrible, baseless prediction that should not be published by the guardian or linked to Hacker News.
I second emacs occur.
Also the iPod minis.
You could just use magit, right?
Editing plain text is in fact very easy. Structured text requires a little more logic, however. Ultimately, you could use emacs in the exact way one would use notepad++ and be none the wiser to the rich customizations…
4 months ago... https://github.com/defunkt/gist.el
Checkout lighttable.el https://github.com/Fuco1/litable
You know Emacs has faithfully implemented Vim right? Check out emacs evil-mode.
This is one of the most beautiful theme I've come across, and the one I am currently using: https://github.com/jasonm23/emacs-purple-haze-theme
IDE's tend to be language specific while emacs tries to be agnostic. There are certainly options that could make your emacs a language specific IDE, for instance, look at emacs-live if you are doing clojure development.
Thats awful, one can only assume this affects MBP as well. I think I'll now only turn DB on whenever I'm on A/C.
The reason to move to emacs is exactly because it has far more customizations available than vim does. Emacs' nerd tree equivalent is called undo tree, and its fantastic. http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/UndoTree