I personally havent really used emacs for organizing, but I really like it for bash coding and writing software documenation in orgmode. I am even starting to get a little bit comfortable at writing my .emacs file but at some point I will have to do a lot of reorganizing and updating and I kind of dont want to do it (I still use .emacs and not emacs.d/init.el and all keybindings still use the legacy global-set-key command).

Apart from the work I am putting into it it is really great, because when I actually get to do stuff I can do so with great efficency. I am even starting to miss my emacs keybinds when not using emacs (especially ctrl-k for killing from your cursor position to the end of the line ctrl-a for jumping to the beginning of a line and ctrl-e for jumping to the end of a line). At this point when I am writing stuff in emacs (as example working on a bash script) I at maximum use my mouse for scrolling.

Fuck, I really did turn into the meme (and I am not even using it for longer than 4-5 months at maximum)___

  • da_cow (she/her)@feddit.orgOP
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    16 hours ago

    Will definitely look into it. Currently Emacs and Firefox are about my main applications I use (except spyder, which is a python IDE)

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      15 hours ago

      Well, cool. Hope it was helpful, then.

      I’ll also mention one other point, if you’re a big emacs and Firefox user. Won’t solve the issue for URL bars or other non-webpage text, but if you do a fair bit of writing in HTML textareas in webpages, like on Lemmy instances or something, you can hand that off to (actual) emacs.

      • Install the edit-server package for emacs (M-x list-packages, wait for the emacs package manager to load the list, go to edit-server, hit “i” to flag for install and “x” to execute, or M-x package-install and just type out “edit-server”).

      • In an emacs instance run M-x edit-server-start (or set it up to always run automatically at emacs startup but I run multiple emacs instances).

      • Grab the Edit with Emacs Firefox addon. Install.

      Now, by default all textareas will have a little blue button at the bottom reading “edit”. Click it, and your textarea will open up in emacs. C-c C-c to commit changes back to the textarea (Or C-x C-c, if you’re exiting that instance of emacs). You can also right-click on the textarea and choose “Edit with Emacs”.

      • da_cow (she/her)@feddit.orgOP
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        15 hours ago
        • Install the edit-server package for emacs (M-x list-packages, wait for the emacs package manager to load the list, go to edit-server, hit “i” to flag for install and “x” to execute, or M-x package-install and just type out “edit-server”).

        Jokes on you, I already mapped M-x package-install to S-p i.

        But that also sounds interesting. Will definitely try it out (and if its just for writing Lemmy comments)