show/hide this revision's text 2 fix keybinding error

Someone else mentioned keyboard macros, but provided a broken link.

That feature may seem inane if you've used it with other platforms. But keyboard macros in Emacs are far more powerful, or at least easy to access the power of, than any other system I have used.

You Can can start simply by typing "M-x C-x (", then anything you do is recorded to be played back... which means searches, replacement, opening new files, and so on. Then when you are done you can type "M-x C-x )" to end the macro, and M-x C-x e to replay the last keyboard macro. You can also run name-last-kbd-macro to name it, then use insert-kbd-macro to save off the macro you just defined somewhere (like .emacs).

The real power of macros comes into play when you use multiple cut buffers (registers), to save away various fragments of text in the middle of a macro and re-use the parts elsewhere. You can for example have a macro that expects some key text to be in register A for insertion, perhaps a search term in register B, and some other text to append elsewhere in register C grabbed on the fly within the macro. Or of course use multiple registers like multiple clipboards, all within emacs - the key bindings are different than they once were, but the commands you want are copy-to-register and insert-register.

All that, and it's basically as simple as typing something once (carefully) and then having Emacs repeat what you were doing with very complex changes possible.

I have used the combination of keyboard macros and registers to do things as diverse as turn lines of words into multiple lines of code appropriate for the word on the line, repair damaged LDIF files from an LDAP system, or do various refactoring tasks.

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show/hide this revision's text 1

Someone else mentioned keyboard macros, but provided a broken link.

That feature may seem inane if you've used it with other platforms. But keyboard macros in Emacs are far more powerful, or at least easy to access the power of, than any other system I have used.

You Can start simply by typing "M-x (", then anything you do is recorded to be played back... which means searches, replacement, opening new files, and so on. Then when you are done you can type "M-x )" to end the macro, and M-x e to replay the last keyboard macro. You can also run name-last-kbd-macro to name it, then use insert-kbd-macro to save off the macro you just defined somewhere (like .emacs).

The real power of macros comes into play when you use multiple cut buffers (registers), to save away various fragments of text in the middle of a macro and re-use the parts elsewhere. You can for example have a macro that expects some key text to be in register A for insertion, perhaps a search term in register B, and some other text to append elsewhere in register C grabbed on the fly within the macro. Or of course use multiple registers like multiple clipboards, all within emacs - the key bindings are different than they once were, but the commands you want are copy-to-register and insert-register.

All that, and it's basically as simple as typing something once (carefully) and then having Emacs repeat what you were doing with very complex changes possible.

I have used the combination of keyboard macros and registers to do things as diverse as turn lines of words into multiple lines of code appropriate for the word on the line, repair damaged LDIF files from an LDAP system, or do various refactoring tasks.