Zero. We didn’t get engagement rings, not later wedding bands. The first few years of our marriage we used to get asked about the wedding bands a lot, but people eventually got used to us not having any. I think it’s probably been about 15 years since we last got asked about them.
That wouldn’t be so useful for academic papers, which is the use case described here: I’ve never heard of a an academic journal that accepts Typst source, but I know of hundreds, probably thousands, that accept LaTeX.
Pocket Casts is fantastic.
What advantage does the Wikipedia app have compared to the mobile website?
Agree on Voyager, that’s what I’m using to post this comment!
My wife and I watched a classic noir film: Double Indemnity (1944). As expected, it was great.
I hope it’s live action.
EDIT: No such luck.
org-ql is an end-user package, you don’t need to be a programmer to use it. It has commands to search among your org files and most options can be customized through Emacs’s customize interface. I highly recommend it for searching through org files, I find it much easier to use and also faster than the Org built-in search commands. Check out the project’s README file, which includes a bunch of screenshots and animated GIFs showing org-ql in action: https://github.com/alphapapa/org-ql
i get that from org-ql.
¡Qué bien encontrarnos por acá!
As you say, they are basically just window configurations, so I do use them ocassionally. If, in addition to remembering an Emacs window configuration I also want to remember whether the frame is maximized or not, I will use frames instead of tabs. I used to put window configurations into registers, before tabs existed, but tabs are better because when you put a window configuration into a register it even remembers the location of point in every buffer. This means that when you restore the window configuration from the register, points get restored to where they were when you stored the configuration, not to the last time you were using it. In this sense tabs are like window configuration registers that automatically update every time you switch away from them.
Tabs only have “useless UI elements” if you want them to! This is Emacs, after all. To use tabs without displaying any UI element set tab-bar-show to nil.
This comment seem out of place here. Did you mean to post this somewhere else?
One small thing I liked in the new version is the grep-use-headings user option, if you set it to t, then grep buffer lists the search results with headings, one per file, instead of repeating the filename every single time.
Wow, just running GUI Emacs is so much easier.
Did you mean counsel-compile?
I should try that!
I use it in all buffers whose major mode is derived from text-mode.
By default undo does work in the scratch buffer so it is something in your configuration that is keeping this from working. As a quick way to check, try running emacs -q
, which skips loading your configuration, and see if you have undo in the scratch buffer there; if so, it’s definitely something you have in you configuration.
You can bisect your configuration to figure out how you are deactivating undo. You can do this manually or with the help of the bug-hunter package.
Acme doesn’t stand for some generic editor! It’s the famous acme text editor by Rob Pike. It’s an interesting editor, very different from Emacs or Vim, and yes, very mousey. In this video Russ Cox gives a great overview: https://youtu.be/dP1xVpMPn8M
Kris Jenkins is a top-notch interviewer! He lets the interviewee talk, really pays attention and asks good follow up questions. I know that sounds like standard things an interviewer should do but at least in tech podcasts few seem to.