I was actually able to read some of the fonts in one corner of the screen. I really liked how you hid the entire presentation behind small fonts in one narrow corner of the screen and left the whole black screen unused. Even the font colors were very wisely chosen to hide from the viewer. I also liked how you never used any of the fonts, themes, pointer features introduced in emacs for more than 10 years to make presentations readable. Keep it up.
I would like to see the corresponding snippets of the configuration that enabled her to do the neat features that she demonstrated in the video. For example, the exact search followed by the use of a comma to switch to a fuzzy search. The other example is the config to enable the preview of documents.
Super talk - I'm so glad I watched it! Edit: Thank you Marie-Helene for such an information dense presentation. The last time I modernized my Emacs config was years ago, when I stepped several levels up with a beautiful and fantastic interactive programming setup for Clojure. I look forward to another round of modernized Emacs based on your recommendations.
@@barspinoza Happy to be of help. My Clojure setup, then and now, revolves around CIDER. Basically CIDER has the concept of 'jacking in' (C-c A-j) into your Clojure projects for interactive programming. Works really well. In addition I have a long list of other Emacs utilities to support completions, etc. It's such a pleasure working in that environment - everything is so on-hand and reachable!
Came to the comments for the same thing. My understanding is it started as macros for Teco editor and eventually became an editor on its own, with the GNU version started by RMS on 84? I think the first publicly available version was in 86. In any case, I think it's fair to say that was a product of the late 70s early 80s
I was actually able to read some of the fonts in one corner of the screen. I really liked how you hid the entire presentation behind small fonts in one narrow corner of the screen and left the whole black screen unused. Even the font colors were very wisely chosen to hide from the viewer. I also liked how you never used any of the fonts, themes, pointer features introduced in emacs for more than 10 years to make presentations readable. Keep it up.
Excellent video, thank you so much. Now we need many many more Emacs videos from Marie-Hélène 😁
I'd love to see the dotfiles of the presenter
asking to see people's dotfiles is like asking to see them without clothes...
@@comed1an So github is a porn site?
I would like to see the corresponding snippets of the configuration that enabled her to do the neat features that she demonstrated in the video. For example, the exact search followed by the use of a comma to switch to a fuzzy search. The other example is the config to enable the preview of documents.
do you call the police when you see someone's dotfiles on Github?
Very nice video. I would like to point out that LSP servers are something you install locally on your own machine not something over the internet
I loved this presentation. The speaker was clear and structured the material beautifully, and I ended up learning a lot.
This is great. Does Marie Helene have other videos on emacs ? I really like that she she is talking about emacs 29 and all the modern machinery.
Super talk - I'm so glad I watched it!
Edit: Thank you Marie-Helene for such an information dense presentation. The last time I modernized my Emacs config was years ago, when I stepped several levels up with a beautiful and fantastic interactive programming setup for Clojure. I look forward to another round of modernized Emacs based on your recommendations.
Clojure is one of my motivations for exploring emacs. Mind sharing what your setup was like? I understand it was years ago, but I'm curious.
@@barspinoza Happy to be of help. My Clojure setup, then and now, revolves around CIDER. Basically CIDER has the concept of 'jacking in' (C-c A-j) into your Clojure projects for interactive programming. Works really well. In addition I have a long list of other Emacs utilities to support completions, etc. It's such a pleasure working in that environment - everything is so on-hand and reachable!
I read people saying the jit feels practically slower because it starts up like the Java jit.
Great to hear some french accent... Going to modify my emacs configuration
Why would anyone use Ranger with Emacs when there is Dired😶🌫️
thank you for the presentation
fantastic talk! thank you so much! emacs is a journey not a destination.
It would have been much better if you had zoomed in
Very nice! Thank you
I guess, it's time to redo some of my configuration
The webcam in the top right is so tiny i didn't even realise it was there until i was 5 minutes into the video
What theme?
Emacs was created in the 60s?
Came to the comments for the same thing. My understanding is it started as macros for Teco editor and eventually became an editor on its own, with the GNU version started by RMS on 84? I think the first publicly available version was in 86.
In any case, I think it's fair to say that was a product of the late 70s early 80s
wikipedia says EMACS in 76, but GNU emacs in 84.
@@bullpup1337 my point, perhaps hidden, perhaps too unpleasant, is that the script/video doesn't know what they are talking about 😅
@@SFDestiny I think you are reaching. Just 1 mistake on a historic side note is not invalidating the video.
@@bullpup1337 I don't understand your point of view. You seem more interested in my content than the accuracy of this INSTRUCTIONAL
👍👍
EMACS YES!
I would really like to hear what you have to say but the audio quaity is too poor.
Audio is fine here
It was fine for me
it's fine, it's obviously not a great mic but it's completely legible
c-x c-= = = = = = = = next time, please.
You might need glasses
M-x glasses-mode
@@chaitanyakumar3809 ~_~