Thanks a bunch. On 16 Jan 2013 16:34, "Amirouche Boubekki" <amirouche.boube...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Great! emacs is my favorite editor, I used it for many years now except > for Java dev because I'm too lazy to configure intelli-sens... In the > following there is all I *use* in emacs and which make you ready to use > emacs - as I am - daily. > > I use emacs 24 and the following only needs a vanilla emacs install and > there is nothing specific to Clojure. > > C is Ctrl > M is Meta (Alt) > > C-x means Ctrl+X... > C-x b means Ctrl+X then b > > >> My current major stumbling block though is navigating my project. Whilst >> (I expect) the density and sane namespacing capabilities of Clojure to >> significantly reduce the number of files, that isn't true of everything. >> In particular, ExtJS encourages you to follow the "one file per class". >> You don't have to but eventually you will have more than a handful of >> files regardless. >> >> So my questions: >> - is there a decent project explorer. I really miss the "tree on the >> left, editor on the right" layout >> > > speedbar: «C-X speedbar» > > It's in vanilla emacs 24, it does also file/class explorer, but I don't > use it. I only use «buffer navigation»: > > - «C-x C-f» to browser file system > - «C-x b» to switch to the previous buffer, but the mini-buffer is active > you can type the name of a buffer. If you have a lot of similarly named > buffers use the «Use directory names in buffer names», it use a clever > algorithm based on the path to the file to name the buffer - when needed... > autocompletion work with tab and their might be smart extension to improve > it, but for me it's enough > > There is also the the following bindings «C-x right/left arrow» but I > seldom use them. > > - is there a decent JS and clojure autocompletion aware plugin >> > > I don't use any intelli-autocompletion but the basic autocompletion, it's > a vanilla feature: «M-/» it does autocompletion based on the names that are > already in the current buffer. You can use several times «M-/» to change > the cnd directory, I use the followings, use arrows to navigate > the ompletion. > > Also to search for something in a file I use «C-s» then mini-buffer, if > you don't capitalize it do a case insensitive search. There is also «C-r» > for backward but instead I do the following when I want to search the whole > file «M-g 0 enter» which brings you at the top of the file then «C-s» the > things. «M-g» is go to line by the way. > > I don't use bookmarks, I use my memory and the above commands, speebar can > help in big files, if any. > > Also I use «C-g» to get away «quit» the mini-buffer. > > In a buffer, I use «C-a» and «C-e» to respectively go at the end of the > beginning of the line and end of the line. > > «C-k» to «kill» a line or several > «C-y» to yield what you killed > «C-_» to undo > > To select use «C-space» then navigate, then «C-w» to cut and «C-y» to > yield. > > Also you will probably want if you have a big screen to cut the window to > be able to look at two files at the same time: > > - «C-x 3» cut vertically > - «C-x 2» cut horizontally > > Then, you might sometime want to use: > > - «C-1» maximize current frame > - «C-0» close current frame > > Most of the time I use only two frames with vertical separation. > > - other than paredit, nrepl and clojure-mode (and the excellent >> coffee-mode for coffeescript), what other plugins should I install >> > > dired-x<http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/dired-x/index.html#Top>, > here is the configuration that use for it, it allows not to show useless > files in the buffer and mini-buffer: > > (require 'dired-x) > (setq dired-omit-files > (rx (or (seq bol (? ".") "#") ;; emacs autosave files > (seq "~" eol) ;; backup-files > (seq bol "svn" eol) ;; svn dirs > (seq ".pyc" eol)))) > > (setq dired-omit-extensions > (append dired-latex-unclean-extensions > dired-bibtex-unclean-extensions > dired-texinfo-unclean-extensions)) > (add-hook 'dired-mode-hook (lambda () (dired-omit-mode 1))) > (put 'dired-find-alternate-file 'disabled nil) > > This works in without the extension: When you browser your file systems > with «C-x C-f» you can do some operations on the files and directory, I use > the followings, use arrows to navigate the buffer, then on a file or > directory: > > - «C-r» to rename then put the new name in mini-buffer (it's a mv) > - «C-c» to copy then put the new name in mini-buffer > - «C-d» to delete > - «g» to update the content of dired (if you created a file with «C-x f» > it won't appear in dired before you hit «g») > > To look a particular directory go to this directory with «C-x C-f» hit > enter then «M-x grep-find the-thing-you-are-looking-for» > > Also if you use git or mercurial (I have an extension for mercurial...): > - you can commit a file with «C-x v v» (yes two times «v») then a buffer > will show up write the commit message, submit the message with «C-c C-c»: > Done. > - you can show global colored diff with «C-x v d» > > If you want to send mail you can hit «C-x m» then «C-c C-c» to send. > > I also use flymake with flymake-cursor for code linting/feedback. > > I use the zenburn theme <https://github.com/bbatsov/zenburn-emacs> which > happens to work great when you use emacs in daemon > mode<http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsAsDaemon>. > Daemon mode allows to share buffers between emacs instances and it runs > faster of course. > > Last but (probably) not least org-mode is very popular it is some kind of > restructured/markdown syntax that can be useful for many things like > generating pdf, latex, creating todos and probably growing a dollar-tree ;) > And tramp <http://www.gnu.org/software/tramp/> is useful if you need to > do editing on a remote location and/or with su rights directly in emacs. > > Since python 24 you can install directly extensions within > emacs<http://emacswiki.org/emacs/ELPA>with «M-x package-list-packages», > browser then hit «i» to install the > extension you are hover, use «x» to effectively install it. You will need > to reboot for the installation to take effect. > > my .emacs is > available<https://github.com/amirouche/dotfiles/blob/master/src/emacs> but > not updated, like I said I use very little extensions so it's very > simple... hence I don't understand why people say you can't use emacs > without configuring it. The only thing I struggled with is space/tabs > things, and minor-modes to have javascript/css highlighted in html files > but this is... minor. > > I forgot to save a file «C-x C-s» and to quit «C-x C-c» > > Regards, > > Amirouche > > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google > Groups "Clojure" group. > To post to this group, send email to clojure@googlegroups.com > Note that posts from new members are moderated - please be patient with > your first post. > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > clojure+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com > For more options, visit this group at > http://groups.google.com/group/clojure?hl=en -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Clojure" group. To post to this group, send email to clojure@googlegroups.com Note that posts from new members are moderated - please be patient with your first post. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to clojure+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/clojure?hl=en