cross post from reddit, OP: @[email protected]

Personally mine was just getting around buffers; creating new ones, splitting windows, deleting the ones I don’t need and so on. In the beginning I used to have just a single file open at a time like nano

  • @[email protected]
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    511 days ago

    Where the hell is the “meta” key and why does every command tutorial online talk about it.

    • @[email protected]
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      511 days ago

      Remnant of the type of keyboard that Emacs was developed on. Also the same place that the Super, Hyper, and Compose keys originate from

      You can map it through your X server/Wayland compositor, but if not Emacs recognizes Alt and Esc as valid meta keys

  • @[email protected]
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    38 days ago

    Definitely display-buffer-alist for me. I was using purpose-mode for the longest time but I think I finally managed to get display-buffer-alist working mostly how I want.

    • DrewOP
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      112 days ago

      keyboard macros are so good, and using consult to go through old ones is great UX.

      I can never remember the kmacro ring commands so I used to just redo everything.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 days ago

        Oh, I agree. I just never remember to use them until I’m done and realize I could have used a macro.

  • @callcc
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    212 days ago

    You don’t usually split buffers, maybe windows?

    • @frankenswine
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      111 days ago

      isn’t it Frames in Emacs context?

      not that i use or need it often, but terminology is (obviously) not that easy

      • @kyoji
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        311 days ago

        Frames are the outer-most container for windows. I may be wrong on this, but there is 1 frame per instance of emacs, or emacs-client

        • @[email protected]
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          311 days ago

          Now I’m curious whether the emacs concept of frames is older than the desktop environment concept of a window… And what exactly a new frame means in a tui environment. I make new frames all the time, but I’m usually in a GUI environment.

          • @kyoji
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            211 days ago

            Emacs is from 1975 I think? So it’s very possible 🙂

      • @callcc
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        311 days ago

        Frame (what the window manager calls Window)>Window>Buffer. These are probably concepts that come from a text based terminal age.