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[emacs/en] Basic Emacs tutorial (#3562)
* Basic Emacs tutorial * Added a "category" line to the metadata * Fixed a mistake
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---
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category: tool
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tool: emacs
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filename: emacs.txt
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contributors:
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- ["Joseph Riad", "https://github.com/Joseph-Riad"]
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lang: en-en
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---
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Emacs started its life as ["the extensible, customizable display
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editor"](https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/emacs-paper.html) and grew
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over the years into a full-blown ecosystem. Many tasks, usually
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relegated to a diverse set of tools can be accomplished from within
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Emacs in a consistent, familiar interface. Examples include directory
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management, viewing PDF documents, editing files over SSH, managing git
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repos,… (the list is quite long). In short, Emacs is yours to make of it
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what you will: the spectrum of users varies from those who use it to
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edit text files to extreme purists who use it to virtually replace their
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operating system.
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Emacs is extensible via a specialized dialect of Lisp known as Emacs
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Lisp (Elisp) which has a lot of macros geared towards editing text and
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managing text buffers. Any key (combination) you use in Emacs is bound
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to an Emacs Lisp function and may be remapped to any other function,
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including ones you write
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yourself.
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# Key Notation
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``` text
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The Emacs manual and the community in general uses a convention to refer to different key combinations used within Emacs. Specifically, Emacs has the notion of a "modifier key" that is pressed along with another key to modify its action.
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An example of this notation is "C-c". In this key combination "C" is the modifier and stands for the "Ctrl" key and "c" is the key whose action is being modified (the literal character "c").
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The modifier shorthand:
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"C-" --> The "CTRL" key
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"M-" --> The "Meta" key (usually, the "Alt" key)
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"s-" --> The "Super" key (the "Cmd" key on Macs and the "Windows" key on PCs)
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There are other, less commonly used modifiers that I will not get into here.
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The key combination "C-x C-s" means you press "Ctrl+x" followed by "Ctrl+s"
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In addition to the above modifiers, the special keys "Esc", "Return (Enter)" and "Shift" are denoted by "ESC", "RET" and "S", respectively.
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```
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# Basic Emacs Concepts
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Here, I discuss some basic Emacs concepts and terminology that may be
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confusing to newcomers (especially to people used to Vim terminology)
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- A bunch of text that Emacs is editing is known as a **buffer**
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- A buffer does not necessarily correspond to an actual file on disk.
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It may be just a bunch of text in memory.
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- When a buffer corresponds to a file on disk, we say that the buffer
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is **visiting** that file.
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- Emacs typically has many buffers open at once.
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- The display of Emacs may be split into different **windows** (not to
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be confused with your operating system's windows: the operating
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system window for Emacs can have multiple Emacs windows inside it).
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- An operating system window for Emacs is called an Emacs **frame**.
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Thus, when the Emacs manual talks about opening a new frame, this
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essentially means opening a new OS *window* containing an(other)
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instance of Emacs.
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- The concepts conventionally known as cutting and pasting are
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referred to as **killing** and **yanking**, respectively in Emacs
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parlance.
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- The current position of the cursor is called the **point** in Emacs.
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Technically, **point** is defined as the position right before the
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character where the cursor currently is.
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- Finally, each buffer may have several **modes** associated with it:
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a **major mode** and possibly several **minor modes**.
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- The **major mode** defines the main behavior of Emacs in the
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currently selected buffer. This can be roughly thought of as the
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file type. For example, if you're editing a Python file, the major
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mode is (by default) `python-mode` which causes Emacs to highlight
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Python syntax and automatically indent and outdent your code blocks
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as syntactically required by your Python code.
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- **Minor modes** define subtle changes in behavior and several minor
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modes may be active at once in the same buffer. An example minor
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mode is `flyspell-mode` which automatically highlights spelling
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errors in your
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buffer.
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# Navigation Basics
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``` text
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The GUI version of Emacs can be navigated with the mouse like you would expect from a conventional GUI text editor.
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The aim here is to focus on navigation solely using the keyboard as this enhances productivity immensely.
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* Line movement
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C-n --> Next line
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C-p --> Previous line
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* Character movement
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C-f --> Go forward one character
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C-b --> Go backward one character
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* Word movement
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M-f --> Go forward one word
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M-b --> Go backward one word
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* Sentence movement
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M-a --> Move to the beginning of the sentence
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M-e --> Move to the end of the sentence
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* Beginning and end of line
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C-a --> Move to the beginning of the line
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C-e --> Move to the end of the line
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* Beginning and end of buffer
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M-< ("Meta+Shift+,") --> Go to the beginning of the buffer
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M-> ("Meta+Shift+.") --> Go to the end of the buffer
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* Screen movement
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C-v --> Scroll down by one screen-full (the last two lines of the previous screen are kept as overlap for a smoother transition)
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M-v --> Scroll up by one screen-full (same as above but with the first two lines)
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* Centering the screen
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C-l --> Move current line to the screen's center
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The above key combination actually cycles through different states depending on how many times it's been pressed.
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C-l --> Move current line to the screen's center
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C-l C-l --> Move current line to the top of the screen
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C-l C-l C-l --> Restore the position of the current line to where it was before the first C-l was pressed
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If you press "C-l" a 4th time, it cycles back to centering the current line.
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* Repeating movement commands
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Most movement commands take a numerical prefix argument that says "repeat the following command that many times".
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Example:
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C-u 3 C-p --> Go up 3 lines
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C-u 5 C-f --> Go forward 5 characters
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One notable exception are the screen scrolling commands:
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C-u 3 C-v --> Scroll downward 3 lines (maintaining the position of the cursor)
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```
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Bonus: many of the above navigation commands are the default navigation
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commands in Bash (e.g. pressing "C-b" while entering a Bash command
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takes you back one
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character).
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# File editing basics
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``` text
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* Quitting Emacs [ Now you can't say you don't know how to quit Emacs :-) ]
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C-x C-c --> Quit Emacs and get prompted to save any unsaved files (buffers not visiting a file will simply be discarded unless you're running in client-server mode)
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* Saving a buffer
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C-x C-s --> Save the current buffer. If not visiting a file, it will prompt you for a file name to use to save the buffer.
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* Searching within a buffer
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C-s --> Search forwards within the buffer. Search is incremental and case-insensitive by default.
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Press C-s to move to the next match.
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If you press "RET", point is moved to the currently highlighted word and the search ends.
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C-r --> Same as C-s except it searches backward
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C-_ or C-/ --> Undo the last action. Keep pressing it to move up the undo tree.
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C-? or M-_ --> Redo the previous change
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The "undo" and "redo" commands can take prefix numerical arguments to undo or redo that many actions:
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C-u 3 C-_ --> Undo the last 3 changes.
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```
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# Executing Elisp Functions
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``` text
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You can execute any currently loaded Elisp functions (including ones you have written yourself) via "M-x"
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M-x RET --> Prompts you for name of function to execute (Tab completion is available).
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Example:
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M-x RET search-forward-regexp RET --> Prompts you for a regular expression and searches forward in the buffer for it
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```
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# Emacs Configuration
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Emacs is configured using Elisp. On startup, it looks for a
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configuration file either in `~/.emacs` or `~/.emacs.d/init.el` where
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`~` refers to your home directory. If you're on Windows, consult [this
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article](https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/efaq-w32/Location-of-init-file.html)
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for the appropriate location of your configuration file.
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# Vim inside Emacs
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If you are considering the transition from Vim to Emacs and you're put
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off by the non-modal nature of Emacs editing, there is an Emacs
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extension known as `evil-mode` which lets you have many Vim concepts
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inside Emacs. Here are some things added to Emacs by `evil-mode`:
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- Modal editing: you get normal, insert, visual and block visual modes
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like Vim. In addition, you get an "Emacs" mode where movement and
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navigation follow the Emacs bindings.
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- Same movement keys as Vim in normal mode
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- Leader key combinations
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- Pressing ":" in normal mode allows you to execute commands
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(including system commands)
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In my own experience, `evil-mode` helps make the transition seamless and
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allows you to blend the arguably more intuitive and ergonomic
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keybindings of Vim with the unbridled power of Emacs for a truly
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superior editing experience.
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# Discoverable Help
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Emacs features a pretty powerful help system that allows you to discover
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new functionality all the
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time.
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``` text
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Obtaining help on specific topics. Tab completion is available for function and variable names.
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C-h f RET --> Prompts you for the name of an elisp function and
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displays help text on it along with a clickable link
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to its source code.
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C-h v RET --> Same as above with variables
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C-h k RET --> Allows you to enter a key combination and displays the
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name of the elisp function bound to it.
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Searching for help:
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C-h a --> Prompts you for a string to search for a command in the
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help system. Similar to the 'apropos' or 'man -k'
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commands in Unix systems.
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Starting a tutorial:
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C-h C-t --> Starts a tutorial designed to familiarize you with
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basic Emacs functionality.
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```
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# Emacs "Killer Apps"
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As I hinted above, Emacs functionality goes way beyond being a mere text
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editor. I will list here a couple of Emacs "apps" that are fairly
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powerful and popular and may interest you in and of themselves.
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## Org
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Technnically, `org-mode`, a major mode for buffer editing that provides
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organizational tools. It is very difficult to succinctly describe what
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Org can do because it's a behemoth of a tool that has many diverse uses
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to different people. I will attempt to describe the main features I use
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briefly.
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- Divide your file into sections and sub-sections for easy outlining
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and organizing of concepts.
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- Different headings in the outline are foldable/expandable so that
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you can focus on what you need to focus on and eliminate
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distractions.
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- You can maintain a TODO list within Org
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- You can compile TODO lists from many files into an agenda
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- Track the time you spend on each TODO task
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- Manage tables in plain text (including spreadsheet-like
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capabilities)
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- Using the extension `org-babel`, write and execute code blocks in
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your file. The results are captured and are re-usable within the
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file itself. Think Jupyter notebook for any language.
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- Display inline images and LaTeX formulas as images within your file
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(makes for a great note-taking system and/or personal wiki)
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- Export your file into many different formats (LaTeX, PDF, html,…)
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Org mode is a very powerful tool to add to your productivity arsenal
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and, on a personal note, was the reason that caused me to start using
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Emacs after years of using Vim.
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## Magit
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This is a frontend to `git` from within Emacs. It features a very
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intuitive and discoverable interface, yet exposes very powerful
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functionality that allows you to manage commits at the chunk level,
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inspect diffs, rebase, cherry-pick, … all from within the comfort of
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your own editor.
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# A Word of Advice
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If you are considering using Emacs, a common trap that beginning users
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fall into is to copy someone else's configuration file and use it as is.
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I highly recommend against doing this for several reasons:
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- It will discourage you from learning and finding things out for
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yourself
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- Someone else's configuration will probably contain many things
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relevant to them that you won't need or ever use.
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- It defeats the purpose of having a customizable text editor that can
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fit your own needs.
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What I encourage you to do is to look at other people's configurations
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and seek to understand them and adapt only what makes sense to you. You
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can find out about new features of Emacs through many YouTube videos,
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screencasts or blog posts and then learn for yourself how to add them to
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your configuration and workflow. This way, you grow your configuration
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incrementally while increasing your knowledge of Emacs along the way.
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# Additional Resources
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- [The GNU Emacs Manual](https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/emacs.html)
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- [Emacs Stack Exchange](https://emacs.stackexchange.com/)
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- [Emacs Wiki](https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/EmacsWiki)
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