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Post Made Community Wiki by Community♦
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2 | Added plugs for TRAMP and completion. | ||
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Here's the rundown of my F-keys: F1: Gnus. Takes some learning, but cut my daily email time down to 20 minutes. F2: ansi-term. Fairly full featured terminal emulator with a mode where you can switch back into behaving like an emacs buffer for kill/yank/macro goodness. F3: slime. Crazy good tool for hacking the good hack with Common Lisp. F4: switch-to-buffer "scratch". The scratch buffer is a good place to do fancy Emacs stuff when you don't want to type in the mini-buffer (try C-j). F5: compile. You don't realize how great this is until you also grok next-error and previous-error. F6: visits the buffer I have usually associated with an SQL session, either in an ansi-term or using psql. F7: w3m. Very slick, fast web browser. Perfect for searching documentation. F9: Visit my todo file in org-mode. org-mode, like gnus, takes a while to learn, but you can go so damn fast with it, it's worth it. F10: calendar. Not as nice as org-mode but I haven't switched over all the way yet. F11: open the EMMS playlist. EMMS doesn't come with the usual upstream Emacs distribution, but it's a pretty reasonable OGG/MP3/etc player. F12: I run ERC and bitlbee. F12 brings me to the chat buffer with all my contacts from Google Talk and AIM in it. Insanely cool thing not on one of my F-keys: TRAMP. TRAMP integrates into the way emacs finds, reads, and writes files. You can use file names like /sudo::/etc/passwd to edit things as root without starting another emacs, or /ssh:jfm3@jfm3.org:foo/bar.html to edit files remotely without staring a remote emacs. Generalized ompletion modes and facilities are useful too. I like completion.el, but there are several to choose from. Definitely check out www.emacswiki.org. Tons of good ideas there. Good luck! |
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Here's the rundown of my F-keys: F1: Gnus. Takes some learning, but cut my daily email time down to 20 minutes. F2: ansi-term. Fairly full featured terminal emulator with a mode where you can switch back into behaving like an emacs buffer for kill/yank/macro goodness. F3: slime. Crazy good tool for hacking the good hack with Common Lisp. F4: switch-to-buffer "scratch". The scratch buffer is a good place to do fancy Emacs stuff when you don't want to type in the mini-buffer (try C-j). F5: compile. You don't realize how great this is until you also grok next-error and previous-error. F6: visits the buffer I have usually associated with an SQL session, either in an ansi-term or using psql. F7: w3m. Very slick, fast web browser. Perfect for searching documentation. F9: Visit my todo file in org-mode. org-mode, like gnus, takes a while to learn, but you can go so damn fast with it, it's worth it. F10: calendar. Not as nice as org-mode but I haven't switched over all the way yet. F11: open the EMMS playlist. EMMS doesn't come with the usual upstream Emacs distribution, but it's a pretty reasonable OGG/MP3/etc player. F12: I run ERC and bitlbee. F12 brings me to the chat buffer with all my contacts from Google Talk and AIM in it. Definitely check out www.emacswiki.org. Tons of good ideas there. Good luck! |
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