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show/hide this revision's text 2 Just one suggestion per post, to make Joel happy

A not so well known feature that I find very useful is M-x align-regexp. If you mark a region and execute it, you will be asked for a regular expression, and emacs will then line up the first match of that expression on every line, by padding with spaces (or tabs, if you like). For example, say that you have a list of variables in your code:

int a = 2;
int a_longer_variable_name = 73;
int i = 0;

Then you can mark those lines and to M-x align-regexp and specify = as the expression, and it will align it like:

int a                      = 2;
int a_longer_variable_name = 73;
int i                      = 0;

Maybe not the most important feature in the world, but I use it regularly, and it sometimes impresses non-emacs people. :)

Another absolute favorite of mine is running a shell from within an emacs buffer, with M-x shell.

show/hide this revision's text 1

A not so well known feature that I find very useful is M-x align-regexp. If you mark a region and execute it, you will be asked for a regular expression, and emacs will then line up the first match of that expression on every line, by padding with spaces (or tabs, if you like). For example, say that you have a list of variables in your code:

int a = 2;
int a_longer_variable_name = 73;
int i = 0;

Then you can mark those lines and to M-x align-regexp and specify = as the expression, and it will align it like:

int a                      = 2;
int a_longer_variable_name = 73;
int i                      = 0;

Maybe not the most important feature in the world, but I use it regularly, and it sometimes impresses non-emacs people. :)

Another absolute favorite of mine is running a shell from within an emacs buffer, with M-x shell.