It is a story as old as time. A stubborn, shell-dwelling, and melodramatic vimmer—envious of the features of modern text editors—spirals into despair before he succumbs to the dark side. This is his config.
This is a community for discussing Doom Emacs; an Emacs Framework for stubborn martian hackers.
This will be my third time attempting to adopt emacs, but this time is different.
I’d decided to move away from VS Code and back to neovim with the intent of tying it together with my Obsidian files when I realized I could just be in one app all the time with org-mode. Also more inclined to learn emacs lisp now that I have experience with lisps via Clojure.
Any suggestions on packages to look into? Thanks.
Context: senior software engineer working primarily in Typescript, React, and AWS lambdas via Serverless framework. Into improving productivity and note taking with org-mode.
To all evil-mode users, how do you work with vterm?
As a long time Vimmer, I have recently started using Emacs out of sheer curiosity. I chose Doom Emacs as it has evil-mode enabled by default, and do not want to dive down the rabbit hole of configuring the editor from scratch (at least, not yet!).
After installing and enabling libvterm in Emacs, I am having a frustrating experience. I configured ZSH shell to use vi-mode keybindings which interferes with evil-mode whenever I press Esc or C-[.
After having searched a little, I came across a workaround to disable evil-mode when in vterm. But it is still not a smooth experience. For instance, when switching between buffers (C-w C-w).
I would like to know how others in the community tackled this problem. Is there a better solution to this problem? Or have you made peace with the aforementioned workaround? Or have you stopped using vterm entirely?
Set of eye pleasing themes for GNU Emacs. Supports both GUI and terminal. - GitHub - ogdenwebb/emacs-kaolin-themes: Set of eye pleasing themes for GNU Emacs. Supports both GUI and terminal.