William Xu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: Hi William,
> I think the playlist buffer is hidden by default because it > shouldn't interfer with your work. > > There are already many similar buffers, like *Messages*, *Shell > Command Output*, etc. But I've hardly seen a second buffer named by > staring a space. Yeah, right. It seems only logging, debugging and buffers with nothing interesting for users start with a space. So maybe we should change that. > Are you crazy?!? F3 is `kmacro-start-macro-or-insert-counter', one > of the most useful keys ever! ;-) > > Hmm, Does it diff much from C-x (, C-x ) and C-x e ? It's a combination of the first two. In Emacs 22 you start and end a macro with F3. > But I like the idea of emms being a shorthand for e-p-m-g, but > because that's probably the first function a new user will try out, > it would be good if it opened the playlist buffer plus a message > buffer where the functions and keys to add tracks into it are > listed. If there's an non-empty playlist buffer that can be omitted > of course. > > Yes, i thought of that too. Maybe we can make `emms' a combination of > `emms-add-file'(when playlist is empty) and `emms-playlist-mode-go' > (when playlist is not empty). Thus, for an emms newbie, he can simply > call `emms'. Yes, that's fine for me, too. But I'd let him select a file or a directory and then use the appropriate function. Bye, Tassilo -- When I released GNU Emacs and people started using it, they started sending me improvements in the mail. So I would get a message with a bug fix, and a message with a new feature, and another bug fix, and another new feature, and another... and another... until they were pouring in on me so fast that just taking advantage of all of the help people were giving me was a big job. Microsoft doesn't have this problem. (RMS) _______________________________________________ Emms-help mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emms-help
