Xkcd emacs learning curve It's like that rabbit hole graph of the emacs learning curve. This song was the pun in the title text of 1794: Fire , which was a follow up to "Drew Adams" <address@hidden> writes: >> > The question of whether to consider scrolling from the >> > point of view of the view port / window or the point of >> > view of the paper / data surface / buffer (which >> > is moving?) is as old as the hills. You can try by moving to a code editor first. Why couldn't Emacs be this editor if it is easy > > to use casually? > > Uh, because it fits the "bloated monster" moniker at least as well? > According to my limited Re: Emacs learning curve, Richard Stallman, 2010/07/14 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/13 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/14 Re: Emacs learning curve, Alfred M. Reply reply More replies More replies More replies. XKCD has labled his wrong once, I believe, as well as that MMO His thesis is that one can use Emacs with more or less “standard” keybindings by using the arrow and other special purpose keys and by turning on CUA mode to make Emacs However, I focused on listing something like the top 100 key command sequences that you need in real day-to-day editing life, instead of the most flashy features. in the minibuffer. I used Vim for five years and then switched to Emacs for its great > extensions and extensibility. The current UI won't keep the very > determined hackers away, but in my experience the question most new > users (and most new hackers) ask when encountering Emacs is: "Why > should I bother with it if it's so alien?" My point is that it's not a question of determination. That said, it's incredibly powerful. 2 Meta-X NearlyanyEmacscommandcanbecalledusing M-x +longfunctiondescription. Order it here! No. Sep 7, 2008 · Twice I've tried to learn Emacs. It's identifying a thing you do and researching if you can do it better in emacs. lynbech, 2010/07/13 Re: Emacs learning curve , David Kastrup , 2010/07/13 Re: Emacs learning curve , joakim , 2010/07/13 >Replacing one word in this phrase with almost a synonym >> makes more sense :-) >> >> "NON VI SED EMACS" > > I don't see how this would make more sense since "EMACS" could not > possibly be ablative case in any Latin declension. Share Sort by: Best. Order it here! The learning curve has actually substantially mellowed out over the years. The kill-ring > is nice, but it is not straightforward to explain without visual > feedback. > > > > Not reading something because it doesn't `read' the way you want it to > > um, sounds like sheer laziness. Emacs is as powerful as vim is (arguably more so), although the paradigm in emacs is quite different. You signed out in another tab or window. Casual and quick: Markdown. So it is "scroll down" but at the same time "scroll up David Kastrup <address@hidden> writes: [snip] > People who can't be bothered to think about keybindings can't likely be > bothered to think about programming. Re: Emacs learning curve, Óscar Fuentes, 2010/07/15; Re: Emacs learning curve, David Kastrup, 2010/07/15; Re: Emacs learning Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. Try Jun 28, 2022 · Formal and serious: LaTeX (more specific, LaTeX editors; I'm using Overleaf for online and TeXStudio on my PC for better functions). ; Smooth, pixel-based scrolling (Emacs doesn’t do that by If you want to use vim/emacs as an IDE then yes you'll have to configure stuff, although even that has become far easier with the advent of LSPs. Reply reply [deleted] • The knowledge only comes with Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. On the other hand, some configurations are “heavily” configured, so it changes some core functionality of Emacs (harder to learn), like doom, spacemacs, etc. -- Andreas Schwab, address@hidden GPG Key fingerprint = 58CA 54C7 6D53 942B 1756 01D3 44D5 214B 8276 4ED5 "And now for something completely different. Open comment Machine learning scientist here — Any good Clojure machine learning libraries Jan 4, 2015 · This Programming board for Learning Curves in different Programming languages is made for a period of time —1yr, 2yrs, 3yrs to Experienced and so on Some May 13, 2011 · Emacs and SLIME are too much for a beginner and will never be broadly satisfying to beginners. It just doesn't fit how my brain works, and so I don't use it. The extensible, customizable, self-documenting real-time display editor. It has it's own Lisp variant and it's almost an OS in itself. If you're looking for something to run directly inside the terminal, I would recommend learning either Vim or Emacs - the learning curves are pretty steep for both but they are extremely powerful in the right hands. IMO, the worst decision a developer of an editor can make is to base the keybindings on one specific layout. Andrus’ comment below describes me for the last twenty-five years: > Posted by Dr Andus >Sep 8, 2015 at 10:03 PM >zoe wrote: >I’m finally starting to push beyond the initial Emacs learning curve >Respect! Tom <address@hidden> writes: > Alfred M. > But since old emacs users and users happy with the emacs way would like > to stick to the default bindings, we would have to somehow invend > conventions that fit for both Emacs and Re: Emacs learning curve, (continued). /r/EVE is a place to discuss internet spaceships In an effort to help you get past the Drupal learning curve, I thought I'd take a few minutes to see if I can offer some help. Since he doesn’t really know anything about emacs I need to give him ideas. At first, this seems From Zero to Lightspeed. Reload to refresh your session. Free; Visit Website . > > There are numerous user Óscar Fuentes <ofv <at> wanadoo. PRISM, leaked by a former NSA It doesn't "feel" lightweight. If you can't find the email, click the button below. Use as many modes, sarcasm, math, and language. org> writes: > > > > Maybe they use Eclipse which is a bloated monster, and while they do > > Java development in it, they want a more efficient editor for their > > simpler editing needs. Valheim Genshin Impact Minecraft Pokimane Halo Infinite Call of Duty: Warzone Path of Exile Hollow Knight: Silksong Escape from Tarkov Watch Dogs: Re: Emacs learning curve, Walter Alejandro Iglesias, 2010/08/06 Prev by Date: Re: rename jit-lock-function jit-lock-from Next by Date: Re: Key bindings proposal Re: Emacs learning curve, Alfred M. > Maybe it's time to mark `exchange-dot-and-mark' obsolete. That being Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. Sort by: Best. rulez. Order it here!. The goal of learning emacs, isn't learning emacs. As such, he’s not a canonical Emacs user but he has a provacative set of slides that suggests that, in fact, Emacs doesn’t have a steep learning curve. Szmidt <ams <at> gnu. I think vim is useful in more contexts, and obviously focusing on development instead of your text editor is a good option, but I do think that emacs is genuinely useful. Order it here! On Sun, Jul 11, 2010 at 4:23 AM, Sean Sieger <address@hidden> wrote: > > This is ridiculous, Lennart. My personal opinion is that Emacs ultimately wins unless you have a typing disability (and even then you can configure Emacs to Emacs Has No Learning Curve. Open comment sort options. I tried to collect some real world data on the reasons why newbies don't like Emacs, but the Stack Overflow admins closed the question quickly, because they were afraid of a flame war. <3 Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. That's not true of many 28 votes, 39 comments. 4K subscribers in the planetemacs community. The goal isn't to be immediatly productive, but to train your muscle memory. No other tooling can come close to Emacs, and it's because of this general sense of everything being integrated with everything. Dr. Breaking news: There is no such thing as "Emacs maintainers". org> writes: > >> >> I doubt that words like yank, kill, point, etc hinder new users from >> using emacs. I start with using emacs only for editing text files, then slowly I stop using my terminal and just use eshell. Archived post. Then try to learn one/two keys at a time (not more) by over using them. The Drupal Core is the very basic functionality that gets your content management system started. You can browse the web, read PDFs, use the terminal, have a music player, play games, use a git client (very good one), send Classical learning curves for some common editors I once came across a Tweet telling people how to use Emacs like this: step 1, download Emacs; step 2, spend the next 10 years configuring it. Order it here! Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. Specifically, the kind of people who don't pay too much attention to "ease of use" anyway, but rather head straight for the workbench and grab a power grinder to smooth out >I used Vim for five years and then switched to Emacs > for its great extensions and extensibility. scroll-down scrolls > down through the text, No, it doesn't. Cua mode is not a solution. This is so wrong. Curve-Fitting. org Open. Stallman * everywhere: Change Re: Emacs learning curve, David De La Harpe Golden, 2010/07/12 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/11 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/11 Richard Stallman <address@hidden> writes: > Or use "scroll-up" where it means scroll down, or use > "split-horizontally" where it splits vertically ;) > > These names are used because they are logical. Controversial. Mouseover text: Cauchy-Lorentz: "Something alarmingly mathematical is happening, and you should probably pause to Google my name and check what field I originally worked in. You can learn Emacs without getting distracted by the pre-configured layer—for instance, purcell . PDFprof. Particularly relevant in the era of Cubic Fit models of Covid-19 data. " >From: Lennart Borgman <address@hidden> > Date: Mon, 2 Aug 2010 20:37:59 +0200 > Cc: address@hidden, Stefan Monnier <address@hidden>, > address@hidden > > On Mon, Aug 2, 2010 at 8:13 PM, Eli Zaretskii <address@hidden> wrote: > > > > If someone needs a data point that terminology doesn't matter much, > > read the manual for Vim -- it uses non-standard A subreddit dedicated to learning machine learning Members Online • _quanttrader_ . 1985-10-05 Richard M. g. Proponents of vi(m) argue that you can do pretty much Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. > > > > > Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. But do not assume that the reason Emacs is not on every breakfast table is that it is missing what Fruit Loops has. It's not that Emacs has a steep learning curve. Toggle between your light/dark theme via F12; you can also run own Elisp code triggered by switching themes, e. unix. The task of learning Lisp is hard enough without added technicalities and complications of setting up an environment. I find XKCD to be hilarious and I think that most of my plots are going to be in xkcd style from now on. Order it here! The learning curve is learning to use Emacs to its fullest potential. 192K subscribers in the Eve community. The learning curve looks steep, but try to transfer one page of your favourite maths textbook and you will figure it out quick. Then for notes when I had to take notes in meetings. > > BTW, there is a famous Latin proverb "NON VI SED ARTE" > that translates as "Not with force but with skill" > or "Not by strength but by guile". The argument seems extremly weak. It does not feature the most flashy features or goodies. **Emacs News, Packages, Articles, Videos, Events & more** This is a sister subreddit of 1. Had you complained about learning curve and time spent learning the editor I would have had no complaints. You want to close the gap, fine. Share Add a Comment. Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. emacs in favor > of easing new users experience. > > I think this muscle memory statement is much overstated. Controversial . When it comes to editing text, emacs and vim are about tied, but emacs will also administer your files, send So, finally I made the The Learning Curve a good PDF form and I made sure to make various versions of the process. Borky_ • This is actually interesting tbh Reply reply ZombieLincoln666 It remains unimportant in the grand scale of Emacs deficiencies. The solution would be a minor mode > that preserves CUA keys but disables *completely* emacs ones. I think this muscle memory statement is much overstated. Top. It caters to Emacs ONBOARD gives you much better defaults, for instance: Vertical completion for commands, files, etc. Yeah, but Emacs _is_ kind to those users, to the extent that it's practical and reasonable. Paul E. > > Please try to be more specific. Emacs is a customizable open-source text editor for flexible coding workflows. emacs. Old. You should have received a welcome email with a confirm link when you signed up. > Re: Emacs learning curve, Bernardo Barros, 2010/07/10 Prev by Date: Re: Emacs learning curve Next by Date: RFC: A framework for task management and execution in Emacs On Sat 17 Jul 2010 14:15, Juri Linkov <address@hidden> writes: >> I used Vim for five years and then switched to Emacs >> for its great extensions and extensibility. Interaction and status information is shown in the My partner is a screen printer/graphic designer and he’s going to make me an emacs T-shirt as one of my Xmas gifts. It is Once and for all, the X axis of a learning curve is "Fraction of program learned". Sincerely, xkcd_bot. 2010/7/17 Tassilo Horn <address@hidden>: > On Friday 16 July 2010 22:10:20 Teemu Likonen wrote: > > Hi! > >> Powerful text editor should depend on ergonomics and muscle memory and >> make rebinding keys easy (for different keyboard layouts like Dvorak). >> >> > > As Lennart said before the little things add up. Or, at least, it needn’t have one. The rest of the curve I think is still accurate, if anything it might be even worse now in some ways. New comments cannot be posted. Now that I'm on this side of the learning curve, I wouldn't want to switch. It is explained that this code will, in turn, interpret more source code, specifically code written in HTML . Coins. Productivity: This is an extremely hard topic. Obstinacy doesn't do us any good. Xkcd emacs PDF,Doc ,Images [PDF] [PDF] 1 Review of pipes 2 Regular expressions 3 sed 4 awk 5 Editing. If you don't touchtype (if you can't use your keyboard in total darkness, you don't Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. But if you spend I will also say regarding vim, neovim and emacs one thing I've seen a lot(as a non-vimmer) is that many vim users actually prefer emacs as the vehicle, they edit with Evil-Mode which emulates the vim control scheme. On Friday 16 July 2010 22:10:20 Teemu Likonen wrote: Hi! > Powerful text editor should depend on ergonomics and muscle memory and > make rebinding keys easy (for different keyboard layouts like Dvorak). You might better complain that `C-x 2' and `C-x 3' are not such great bindings for splitting windows. Maybe it's time to mark `exchange-dot-and-mark' obsolete. Szmidt, 2010/07/12 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/12 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/11 151K subscribers in the xkcd community. (Of course, XKCD has weighed in on this. Mar 30, 2016 · I've used emacs solely for orgmode over the last year and I'm not sure I'd recommend it whole-heartedly. This makes this tutorial something that you can print out, Asymptotic learning curve: Both Vim and Emacs have a lot of features, and you will keep discovering new ones after years of use. for adjusting fonts and other personal styling, depending on the theme. Add a Comment. and Ethnicity Ethics and Philosophy Fashion Food and Drink History Hobbies Law Learning and Education Military Movies Music Place Podcasts and Streamers Politics Programming Reading, That xkcd is considerably older. The Drupal learning curve - Drupal core. Then for file management and config editing. Your videos have been a great help in my Emacs learning curve. Order it here! 66K subscribers in the emacs community. In Drupal 7 (just While Vim and Emacs are great, they have their own learning curve, and if you are a beginner programmer, it could be annoying to be learning both the language and editor at the same time. I think you should learn it. If I want to learn a new programming language, I want everything else to stay out of my way while I learn it. >So yes, you are right. I have spent obscene amount of hours searching for a building the perfect dot-emacs file. Q&A. I am hearing good things about Visual Studio Code these days, Sublime Text is also quite famous. There's a group of people who contribute to Emacs development, each one in the area of his/her interests. New. And the answer >> > sometimes depends on the particular application in a >> > logical way (think cockpit); otherwise it is Tom writes: > So yes, you are right. But dont get me wrong I really love it. Helping xkcd readers on mobile devices since 1336766715. Have you ever re-trained your muscle memory for something you do 500 times a day while being concentrated on a higher level task? Emacs Has No Learning Curve [pdf] (freefaculty. Or that they should be reversed, for some reason. d/init. Randall provides us with a – presumably anecdotal – montage of the Internet's changing attitude towards different instant messaging protocols, framed within the context of a team trying to remain in communication while Posted by u/Shaheenthebean - 722 votes and 65 comments 2. es> writes: > Of course it is very hard to show statistics for newbies. Open comment sort options . The more unfamiliar > things the new user encounters the more time and effort he needs to > invest to try emacs and In order to vote, comment or post rants, you need to confirm your email address. It scrolls the text down, moving _up_ through the text in the process. Not only they are different from the current > established ones, they often seem planned with the clear intention of > causing RSI :-) This heavily depends on your keyboard layout. On Friday 16 July 2010 19:12:18 Óscar Fuentes wrote: > If there is something in Emacs that is not sensible nor logical, > that's the keybindings. Sep 19, 2018 · XKCD: Curve-fitting methods and the message they send xkcd. ) Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a There's no central resource for it, though, which I think contributes to the sense of learning curve. explainxkcd. The argument seems extremly weak. It's my major selling point in job applications, because most Haha, welcome. I started with setting it up for coding. org/emacs/emacs_fun. It's a steep curve at first but Emacs is here since decades and shall probably still be there in decades. This comic is a reaction to the recent reveal of a U. Best. > > That's why I suggested to bind it to the CUA key <C-insert>, and also > to another CUA key `C-c' because using the clipboard is the standard > semantics of these CUA keys. His thesis is that one I plotted this curve using the basic template provided in Matplotlib examples, ah I almost forgot, this is the XKCD style curve which I have mentioned in another post previously as well and if you are curious you can head over to XKCD website and admire the artwork as well. The first you thing you need to know is that there is this thing named the "Drupal Core". Order it here! Proselytize for Emacs, if you will, and wrap it in CUA-mode and such if you think that will help you proselytize, but do not confuse your missionary zeal with some real lack on the part of Emacs. Order it here! Alfred M. WebsterPack • Confidence intervals for real though Reply reply [deleted] • Comment deleted by user. Users expect the usual copy and paste > behavior (including the ability to copy and paste among application) > and *will* get completely confused by Emacs' kill-ring. 0 coins. The Emacs Learning Curve . > If someone could go through the manual and docstrings to replace > yank=>paste (and kill => cut|copy), and also find new names for > variables, functions, and commands (which will Re: Emacs learning curve, Richard Stallman, 2010/07/14 Re: Emacs learning curve , grischka , 2010/07/15 Re: Emacs learning curve , Ted Zlatanov , 2010/07/29 Re: Emacs learning curve, christian. Reply reply [deleted] • Very nice set of articles, well written, with code examples! Thank you very much for providing these articles to expose more people to the powers of Emacs. > > As Lennart said before the little things add up. -Miles -- A zen-buddhist walked into a pizza shop and said, "Make me one with everything. Re: Emacs learning curve, Tom, 2010/07/15; Re: Emacs learning curve, Óscar Fuentes, 2010/07/15; Re: Emacs learning curve Re: Emacs learning curve, David De La Harpe Golden, 2010/07/12 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/11 RE: Emacs learning curve , Drew Adams , 2010/07/11 On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 4:56 PM, Wojciech Meyer <address@hidden> wrote: > Yes. There is a Guardian article about it. It's the main argument why VI is better than emacs. > And usage of down/up on Emacs (as for scrolling) contradicts current > stablished practice. Szmidt, 2010/07/22 A more modest proposal (Was: Emacs learning curve) , Daniel Colascione , 2010/07/23 Re: A more modest proposal , David Kastrup , 2010/07/23 Re: Emacs learning curve, (continued). I have just been hoping that user could practically design her own global bindings but even that's not quite possible because the f-b-n-p mnemonics and other default keys are so deeply hard-coded everywhere. Your enthusiasm for Guile in Emacs is heartening, but we are still some David Kastrup <dak <at> gnu. The mode > should be easy to toggle and there need to be evident feedback when it > is on, a screen nagging about advanced features avaiable when you > Re: Emacs learning curve, Óscar Fuentes, 2010/07/23 Please take off-list [Was: Emacs learning curve] , Chong Yidong , 2010/07/23 Re: Emacs learning curve , Sean Sieger , 2010/07/24 Stephen Eilert <address@hidden> writes: > 4- Defaults > Here's where CUA comes in. Unless, I suppose one of the boxes is a trivial learning curve. Then for calendar etc etc. Ask any XKCD | Curve Fitting Share Sort by: Best. Jul 9, 2023 · Visual studio code is the best one I've tried, there's a lot of customization you can do with themes/plugins to make it feel just right for what you want to do with it. Emacs has a practically infinite curve with no asymptotic limit. " Don't get it? explain xkcd. S. Being largely written is Lisp, historically Emacs had also been very On 11/07/10 20:00, Jan Djärv wrote: David De La Harpe Golden skrev 2010-07-11 19. Order it here! Which is a shame, because being able to do more with text, quickly and efficiently, is real power. Orgmode is great, but the emacs learning curve is steep and unforgiving. Posted on 2024-09-30 by jcs. Bullshit. It still feels as if I'm faking my way through an ancient language whenever I fumble through keyboard "shortcuts". Emacs has a few killer features you should look into if you decide to use it: Emacs, after you learn it, allows you to write the highly flexible macros for the text processing but requires to type some very long command names to do most things. " Haskell is a purely functional programming language, a concept that has a debatably steep learning curve, which causes it to be somewhat obscure, as referenced in 1312: Haskell. org> writes: > >> Why should they switch their editor at all if there "is not killer >> feature", never mind the keybindings? >> > > Maybe they use Eclipse which is a bloated monster, and while they do > Java development in it, they want a more efficient editor for their > simpler editing needs. Took me a while) The actual LaTex codes of the The PDF file are seperated into 3 different versions which sort of provide a trail for the entire thing. I'm a classic emacs control user myself. Emacs is relatively easy to get started with as it's "like notepad" or "pico" and the standard arrow key bindings work, etc (and emacs supports GUIs with full menus now) but it's an "open" tool. On 7/17/2010 7:02 AM, Teemu Likonen wrote: Anyway, I'm not trying to change anybody's mind about the default key bindings. 1 RectangleCopy/Paste MarkRectangleRegion C-space(ignorebluemarkingarea) InsertTextineachline C-x r t OpenArea(insertwithspaces) C-x r o CancelArea(overwritewithspaces) C-x r c Asymptotic learning curve: Both Vim and Emacs have a lot of features, (obligatory xkcd reference). Teemu Likonen <address@hidden> writes: > I'm not sure what you mean by context here but maybe you are right that > touch typing reduces the difficulty. It is basically a rolling release distro that never breaks, and if breaks, you can fix it in just a few minutes. Locked post. Start emacs opening manifesto 2 Copy the title and paste it one line below 3 Search for the term 'GNU' how many instances can It is the steepest curve I have ever seen in my life, but when you learn it, it becomes the easiest distro to use (at least for a developer). For some people investing that kind of time for learning doesn't make sense. If that applies to you, you learn how to do it. You signed in with another tab or window. 3. 59: If you want emacs cut and paste to act like other recent X11 apps: (setq mouse-drag-copy-region nil) (setq x-select-enable-primary nil Tom writes: > Ease of entry should be the main target, because more users means more > hackers too You're ignoring the fact that some kinds of new users are far more likely to convert to Emacs hackers. Emacs (or vim) is not significantly better than vim (or Emacs). > IMAO the Emacs maintainers should ignore the winning and threatening of > those users and focus on making Emacs as attractive as possible to the > new generations of hackers. I have been touch typing since > 1992. WallyMetropolis • I'd argue that emacs org-mode probably does tick all the boxes. Order it here! When talking about Emacs learning curve, there is some truth in this picture. . tmoertel • M-x all-hail-emacs! Reply reply petteri • First I thougt that how dumb Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. Some organizations > use it as their motto, and even cast in concrete, e. There are also projects like Spacemacs or Doom that can make Emacs more pleasant for beginners. Both have many options to add to them that allow them to do amazing things. Premium Powerups Explore Gaming. Exactly what argument is it you > think of? Exactly why do you think it is weak? > > I find it weak since it side tracks the real issue, Re: Emacs learning curve, (continued). d, centaur emacs, etc. To me, it means that for a while everything feels normal or at worst quite difficult Emacs is like the Lego set of text editors. Re: Emacs learning curve, Sean Sieger, 2010/07/16; Re: Emacs learning curve, Teemu Likonen, 2010/07/17; Re: Emacs learning >Is there a compelling reason to still use yank/kill, > instead of copy/cut/paste? > > From the Emacs manual: > > Maybe we should make a concerted effort to change the terminology. I personally use the mix of the two since I want to get over some Emacs design flaws and still GNU emacs has been around about 40 years, so there was more than enough time to rethink things, but they work and they work well. Of course I have learned Emacs keys and be > efficient with them but I already I talked with an Undergrad who helps instruct a Python course before the Java course I instruct (also an undergrad). There are more ships, many more valid meta’s, (as opposed to “just fly a rifter, you don’t need anything else”) more options Xkcd emacs PDF , Download,Télécharger ,PDF,Doc,PPT Douments. org) 5 points by nextos 4 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 1 comment: carapace 4 days ago > programming new editing commands was so convenient that even the secretaries in his [Bernie Greenberg] office started learning how to use it. On Sun, Jul 11, 2010 at 10:33 AM, Alfred M. We might even all agree with it, if/when we see that mythical one-line and the effect it has. Come to discuss the comics and Advertisement Coins. Best for text editing customization. Johnson is a member of the Political Science Department at the University of Kansas. Eve is easy once you know the basics, and I say that without a hint of sarcasm. org> writes: > > I doubt that words like yank, kill, point, etc hinder new users from > using emacs. Re: Emacs learning curve, Óscar Fuentes, 2010/07/16 Prev by Date: Re: bookmark from gnus article wrong modification Next by Date: Re: What is emacs architecture ? The lyrics can be used within the context of learning history, and may therefore be considered slightly more valuable to learn than the lyrics of other popular songs. When I started just after Trinity launch, I did not find it too terribly daunting, nowhere near the horror stories of the early years (shitty bounties back then, had to mine all A linear model would do a terrible job of predicting kinetic energy as a function of velocity. Order it here! Steep learning curve; Few customization options; 6 Emacs. , eLisp is really powerful. /r/xkcd is the subreddit for the popular webcomic xkcd by Randall Munroe. I can also have multiple versions of the same software installed and everything works fine. http://xahlee. Add a Comment . Order it here! Re: Emacs learning curve, David De La Harpe Golden, 2010/07/12 Re: Emacs learning curve , Chong Yidong , 2010/07/11 Re: Emacs learning curve , Sebastian Rose , 2010/07/11 >I'd expect the backward compatibility aliases to stick around for >> a *long* time: take a look at the aliases for "screen rather than >> frame", some of them are still with us (tho I think they deserve to >> disappear now). > > > > How much reading would not have gotten done in the history of reading > > because of your illogic. com Search Engine: Report CopyRight Claim : Xkcd emacs. 2010-07-16 19:27, Tassilo Horn skrev: This heavily depends on your keyboard layout. emacs has an invisible interface; even with the menu bar, you get no buttons to click on, and only the most necessary output about what it happening. Order it here! just discovered the best humour of emacs i've ever seen. My first idea was a shirt saying m-x cat since I love cats, but I wanted to hear from others, both gift ideas and pics of peoples own homemade emacs swag! Explanation []. It is even harder to learn than vim is. He was ranting and raving about XKCD (I'm more of a casual reader, though I do subscribe to this sub for good reason). Y axis is "Time it takes to learn such amount". 2. I have no doubt that anything you can get done in Emacs you can also get done in Vim, just not standard. The more unfamiliar things the new user encounters the more time and effort he needs to invest to try emacs and it can be a turn off. >I side with Tom, I wouldn't mind adding one line to my . /r/emacs 2 Re: Emacs learning curve, Alfred M. But take a look at the right hand side of the forum, and theres a lot of helpful utilities to help people figure out what to do. Isolate the variable. You switched accounts on another tab or window. So, without further ado head over to The link to the LaTex files of The Learning Curve - XKCD style plot. Emacs also has a very steep learning curve. From Ecco To Emacs / Org-Mode < Next Topic | Back to topic list | Previous Topic > Posted by cicerosc Nov 29, 2024 at 03:14 PM . They used a manual someone had written which showed how to extend Emacs, but didn't Juri Linkov <address@hidden> writes: >> BUT: I can see no reason, why `clipboard-kill-ring-save' et al could not >> be bound to a sensible and simple key by default. Why couldn't Emacs be this Uday S Reddy <address@hidden> writes: > Just as Eclipse is kind to Emacs-users, I think Emacs should be kind to > Eclipse-users too, and Windows-users and KDE-users and what have > you. 67K subscribers in the emacs community. 2048: Curve-Fitting - explain xkcd . Re: Emacs learning curve, David Kastrup, 2010/07/16 Prev by Date: Re: Emacs User Friendliness Question/Hope Next by Date: Re: Emacs User Friendliness Question/Hope Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. Hours well spent. html Explanation []. It's that users who think in terms of "alien" and "bother" won't Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. Szmidt, 2010/07/22 A more modest proposal (Was: Emacs learning curve) , Daniel Colascione , 2010/07/23 Re: A more modest proposal , David Kastrup , 2010/07/23 Tom <address@hidden> writes: > David Kastrup <dak <at> gnu. If people supposedly get confused by Teemu Likonen <address@hidden> writes: > I'm not sure what you mean by context here but maybe you are right that > touch typing reduces the difficulty. This is a quick and dirty emacs tutorial. el, find (menu-bar-mode -1), and replace it with (menu-bar-mode 1) to enable the menubar after the next restart. Order it here! Emacs (name originally derived from Editor MACroS) is a text editor originally written at MIT in 1976 and adopted into the GNU project in 1984. com Open. Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF? —revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. IMO, the worst decision a developer of an editor can Stefan Monnier <address@hidden> writes: > I'd expect the backward compatibility aliases to stick around for > a *long* time: take a look at the aliases for "screen rather than > frame", some of them are still with us (tho I think they deserve to > disappear now). Allkeychords arebindingstotheselongfunctions,andyes,youcanchangethekeybindingssomeday. Instead, it focuses on solid day-to-day efficiency features. The emacs learning curve is steep enough that I wouldn't recommend it to a new developer. And that's something we should value in software. On the other hand, emacs does more than vim does. > > > > I think you're wrong for promoting not-reading. The learning curve is steep and we usually use it to weed the elves from the dwarves. If anything I see more Emacs love today and much more development than 15 years ago. Szmidt <address@hidden> wrote: > > I doubt that words like yank, kill, point, etc hinder new users > > from using emacs. However, a neural network should learn the well defined quadratic relationship, and explainable factors should be able to show that. Order it here! Teemu Likonen <address@hidden> writes: > - The default movement keys are not ergonomic. Of course I have learned Emacs keys and be > efficient with them but I already More resources on learning Doom Emacs: This comment was inspired by xkcd#37. electronic telecom surveillance program called PRISM, run by the NSA. The control key sees extensive use in Emacs, and since it's hard to reach, users Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. The current UI won't keep the very > determined hackers away, but in my experience the question most > new users (and > most new hackers) ask when encountering Emacs is: "Why should I > bother with it if it's so alien?" Tassilo Horn <address@hidden> wrote: > And we would need to define new guidelines for modes. With other tooling, features only work inside their respective apps, but with Emacs everything works basically everywhere. These > recommendations are also in conflict with CUA: snip stuff about C-c . Order it here! Juri Linkov <address@hidden> writes: > "NON VI SED EMACS" What do you have against sed? Andreas. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. Order it here! For Emacs lovers (including me). , then I replace mutt with gnus, then docview instead of my pdf reader etc Direct image link: Curve-Fitting. It would be interesting if anyone has some Juri Linkov <address@hidden> writes: >> I used Vim for five years and then switched to Emacs >> for its great extensions and extensibility. Emacs is a customizable, open-source text editor used by developers and programmers who require a flexible and adaptable tool for coding and text editing. But for learning emacs it is a good idea to enable it: edit . All of this is inconsequential. They just look daunting from the foot of the hill that is the emacs learning curve :) Don't get me wrong, I like making things more accessible. BTW, there is a famous Latin proverb "NON VI SED ARTE" that translates as "Not with force but with skill" or "Not by strength but by guile". And if you put a lot of work into configuring and Special 10th anniversary edition of WHAT IF?—revised and annotated with brand-new illustrations and answers to important questions you never thought to ask—out now. ktguzhz qead abf ejd rcgyz zyot apfzfmy wecw kwu gnezvl