* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <mailman.3343.1068146343.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2003-11-06 23:45 ` Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-07 4:10 ` Bruce Ingalls ` (4 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-11-06 23:45 UTC (permalink / raw) Dan Anderson wrote: > I was wondering what other people have in their .emacs file. I would > like to challenge everyone to add at least one cool tip / trick to: Sixteen is at least one. :-) -- Kevin Rodgers ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <mailman.3343.1068146343.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-06 23:45 ` Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-11-07 4:10 ` Bruce Ingalls 2003-11-07 9:08 ` roodwriter ` (3 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Bruce Ingalls @ 2003-11-07 4:10 UTC (permalink / raw) Dan Anderson wrote: > I was wondering what other people have in their .emacs file. I would > like to challenge everyone to add at least one cool tip / trick to: > > http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/DotEmacs The better place is <url: http://www.dotemacs.de/ > the very (un)official .emacs home. -Bruce, editor of http://emacro.sf.net/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <mailman.3343.1068146343.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-06 23:45 ` Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-07 4:10 ` Bruce Ingalls @ 2003-11-07 9:08 ` roodwriter 2003-11-07 16:58 ` Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-08 18:01 ` roodwriter 2003-11-07 11:27 ` Gareth Rees ` (2 subsequent siblings) 5 siblings, 2 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: roodwriter @ 2003-11-07 9:08 UTC (permalink / raw) Dan Anderson wrote: > I was wondering what other people have in their .emacs file. I would > like to challenge everyone to add at least one cool tip / trick to: > > http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/DotEmacs > > -Dan As a non-Lisper I've wondered if anyone thinks it might be useful to open up a category to include macros. I realize the vast majority are probably too personalized to be useful to the next person but I have a few that might be handy for beginners as a small drop-in push-button feature. One is a macro that reads the name of the file in your grep output and calls it up. Another will add groups of numbers and put the answer in your file. People that are much more technically adept than I am may have some macros that are almost magical. The advantage from this is that someone could just cruise down the list and have something they've never thought of that's extremely useful. This would probably have to be monitored by someone to insure that too-specialized macros wouldn't get on the list (say, requiring certain files or directories) or malicious macros deleting files from Dired. There may be severe drawbacks I haven't considered but I'm just tossing it out as an idea. --Rod -- Author of "Linux for Non-Geeks--Clear-eyed Answered for Practical Consumers" and "Boring Stories from Uncle Rod." Both are available at http://www.rodwriterpublishing.com/index.html To reply by e-mail, take the extra "o" out of the name. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 9:08 ` roodwriter @ 2003-11-07 16:58 ` Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-07 18:35 ` roodwriter 2003-11-08 18:01 ` roodwriter 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-11-07 16:58 UTC (permalink / raw) roodwriter@core.com wrote: > One is a macro that reads the name of the file in your grep output and calls > it up. Another will add groups of numbers and put the answer in your file. > People that are much more technically adept than I am may have some macros > that are almost magical. How does this differ from `M-x grep' followed by `C-x `'? -- Kevin Rodgers ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 16:58 ` Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-11-07 18:35 ` roodwriter 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: roodwriter @ 2003-11-07 18:35 UTC (permalink / raw) Kevin Rodgers wrote: > roodwriter@core.com wrote: > >> One is a macro that reads the name of the file in your grep output and >> calls it up. Another will add groups of numbers and put the answer in >> your file. People that are much more technically adept than I am may have >> some macros that are almost magical. > > How does this differ from `M-x grep' followed by `C-x `'? > It just doesn't work as well for me. This does. It might be some kind of charming eccentricity of my machine. --Rod -- Author of "Linux for Non-Geeks--Clear-eyed Answered for Practical Consumers" and "Boring Stories from Uncle Rod." Both are available at http://www.rodwriterpublishing.com/index.html To reply by e-mail, take the extra "o" out of the name. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 9:08 ` roodwriter 2003-11-07 16:58 ` Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-11-08 18:01 ` roodwriter 2003-11-11 10:48 ` Oliver Scholz 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: roodwriter @ 2003-11-08 18:01 UTC (permalink / raw) roodwriter@core.com wrote: > > There may be severe drawbacks I haven't considered but I'm just tossing it > out as an idea. I'm guessing from the lack of responses that it's a bad idea. --Rod -- Author of "Linux for Non-Geeks--Clear-eyed Answered for Practical Consumers" and "Boring Stories from Uncle Rod." Both are available at http://www.rodwriterpublishing.com/index.html To reply by e-mail, take the extra "o" out of the name. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 18:01 ` roodwriter @ 2003-11-11 10:48 ` Oliver Scholz 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Oliver Scholz @ 2003-11-11 10:48 UTC (permalink / raw) "roodwriter@core.com" <roodwriter@core.com> writes: > roodwriter@core.com wrote: > >> >> There may be severe drawbacks I haven't considered but I'm just tossing it >> out as an idea. > > I'm guessing from the lack of responses that it's a bad idea. >From the lack of responses I'd rather guess that people *don't* think that it is a bad idea. :-) Personally I'd appreciate some extended stuff on keyboard macros. I hardly ever use them, because I tend to write throw-away Lisp functions for everything. But maybe it would be a good idea to use them more often (or rather: use them at all), so I'd love to read your stuff. You probably should check whether there is already something on the Emacswiki about keyboard macros, though. Oliver -- 21 Brumaire an 212 de la Révolution Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <mailman.3343.1068146343.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-07 9:08 ` roodwriter @ 2003-11-07 11:27 ` Gareth Rees 2003-11-07 14:06 ` Adam Hardy ` (4 more replies) 2003-11-07 18:09 ` Reiner Steib 2003-11-07 23:41 ` Edward Dodge 5 siblings, 5 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Gareth Rees @ 2003-11-07 11:27 UTC (permalink / raw) Dan Anderson wrote: > I was wondering what other people have in their .emacs file. I would > like to challenge everyone to add at least one cool tip / trick to: Here's my cool tip: Delete your .emacs! This means that you can go to a new machine, run Emacs on it, and it works just the same as on your old machine! No more confusion over non-default keybindings, unusual settings for variables, bizarre mode hooks, etc. And when you find a problem you know it's really to do with Emacs and not with some "cool" trick you copied out of someone else's .emacs without understanding it. -- Gareth Rees ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 11:27 ` Gareth Rees @ 2003-11-07 14:06 ` Adam Hardy [not found] ` <mailman.3403.1068214062.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> ` (3 subsequent siblings) 4 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Adam Hardy @ 2003-11-07 14:06 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: help-gnu-emacs On 11/07/2003 12:27 PM Gareth Rees wrote: > Here's my cool tip: > > Delete your .emacs! > > This means that you can go to a new machine, run Emacs on it, and it > works just the same as on your old machine! No more confusion over > non-default keybindings, unusual settings for variables, bizarre mode > hooks, etc. And when you find a problem you know it's really to do with > Emacs and not with some "cool" trick you copied out of someone else's > .emacs without understanding it. Can you provide some lisp to put in my .emacs to do that? ;) Adam -- GNU Emacs 21.3.1 on Linux 2.4.20 RH9 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
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* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] ` <mailman.3403.1068214062.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2003-11-07 14:28 ` David Kastrup 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2003-11-07 14:28 UTC (permalink / raw) Adam Hardy <emacs@cyberspaceroad.com> writes: > On 11/07/2003 12:27 PM Gareth Rees wrote: > > Here's my cool tip: > > Delete your .emacs! > > This means that you can go to a new machine, run Emacs on it, and it > > works just the same as on your old machine! No more confusion over > > non-default keybindings, unusual settings for variables, bizarre mode > > hooks, etc. And when you find a problem you know it's really to do with > > Emacs and not with some "cool" trick you copied out of someone else's > > .emacs without understanding it. > > Can you provide some lisp to put in my .emacs to do that? ;) (condition-case error (delete-file user-init-file) (error (message "While trying to delete .emacs:%s" error-message-string error))) -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 11:27 ` Gareth Rees 2003-11-07 14:06 ` Adam Hardy [not found] ` <mailman.3403.1068214062.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2003-11-07 16:54 ` Dan Anderson 2003-11-07 17:19 ` Rob Thorpe [not found] ` <mailman.0.1068227823.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 4 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Dan Anderson @ 2003-11-07 16:54 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: help-gnu-emacs > Here's my cool tip: > > Delete your .emacs! > > This means that you can go to a new machine, run Emacs on it, and it > works just the same as on your old machine! No more confusion over > non-default keybindings, unusual settings for variables, bizarre mode > hooks, etc. And when you find a problem you know it's really to do with > Emacs and not with some "cool" trick you copied out of someone else's > .emacs without understanding it. Start emacs with -q when you have a problem. It sets it to default mode. If you can only reproduce the problem when using your .emacs you can go about debugging your .emacs file. Of course, some people are probably saying "but debugging LISP is hard!" Well, fear not. Remove the last thing you inserted. It's probably what's causing the screw up. (Or restore the backup you made of your .emacs from the last time you edited it. Didn't make one? Try loading ~/.emacs~) I'd also like to point out that many of us who use Emacs and customize it until we couldn't think of another feature to code use Emacs for coding. Learning LISP is not hard and we are certainly qualified to make changes to the .emacs I'd also like to point out that your site administrator probably has created a site lisp file similar to the .emacs to customize emacs for your company or organization. That or you've never needed to install a single .el file. (Come on, not everything is stock). Plus, if you've ever changed anything in Emacs and hit the save button you probably /have/ created machine generated in your .emacs to save your settings. -Dan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 11:27 ` Gareth Rees ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-07 16:54 ` Dan Anderson @ 2003-11-07 17:19 ` Rob Thorpe [not found] ` <mailman.0.1068227823.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 4 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Rob Thorpe @ 2003-11-07 17:19 UTC (permalink / raw) gareth.rees@pobox.com (Gareth Rees) wrote in message news:<e867ce6d.0311070327.4cd5decc@posting.google.com>... > Dan Anderson wrote: > > I was wondering what other people have in their .emacs file. I would > > like to challenge everyone to add at least one cool tip / trick to: > > Here's my cool tip: > > Delete your .emacs! > > This means that you can go to a new machine, run Emacs on it, and it > works just the same as on your old machine! No more confusion over > non-default keybindings, unusual settings for variables, bizarre mode > hooks, etc. And when you find a problem you know it's really to do with > Emacs and not with some "cool" trick you copied out of someone else's > .emacs without understanding it. I'm not so extreme. I would say: - Never use lisp code you don't understand - Customize as little as you can possibly bear with - Don't customize things because its cool - Examine your .emacs code every few weeks, remove what isn't used. - Remember everything that's in it. For all my good intentions my biggest .emacs file is 80 lines long. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
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* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] ` <mailman.0.1068227823.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak 2003-11-07 18:20 ` Kevin Rodgers ` (6 more replies) 0 siblings, 7 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Jody M. Klymak @ 2003-11-07 17:45 UTC (permalink / raw) Hi Dan, Dan Anderson <dan@mathjunkies.com> writes: [snip much good advice...] > Learning LISP is not hard... Heh, heh. Compared to what? Assembly code? I personally find lisp quite difficult. The opportunities to code in it are few and far enough between, and the syntax so different from any other modern language, that I have a one-day overhead just to spool up to the point where I can do even the simplest thing. And thus the coding opportunities get even fewer and further between, and the cycle spirals to the point where I am dependent on the good nature of package maintainers to tweak what I want. This must limit the base of emacs coders. Despite this, of course, there are many wonderful packages written for emacs. It causes me to wonder if this is despite lisp or in some way because of it. Cheers, Jody ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak @ 2003-11-07 18:20 ` Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-07 19:37 ` Dan Anderson ` (5 subsequent siblings) 6 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-11-07 18:20 UTC (permalink / raw) Jody M. Klymak wrote: > Hi Dan, > > Dan Anderson <dan@mathjunkies.com> writes: > > [snip much good advice...] > > >>Learning LISP is not hard... >> > > Heh, heh. Compared to what? Assembly code? Compared to any imperative language where each statement has its own syntax. > I personally find lisp quite difficult. The opportunities to code in > it are few and far enough between, Hardly! You can spend all day writing Emacs customizations and extensions. :-) My Franz and Common Lisp coding days were a decade ago. :-( > and the syntax so different from any other modern language, I see this as a benefit: Java's syntax is tolerable, and I'm a fairly proficient shell scripter, but I think C/C++ and Perl are unreadable and unwriteable. > that I have a one-day overhead just to > spool up to the point where I can do even the simplest thing. And > thus the coding opportunities get even fewer and further between, and > the cycle spirals to the point where I am dependent on the good nature > of package maintainers to tweak what I want. Fortunately most of them are good natured, indeed. The hard part about Emacs Lisp is not the Lisp core, but the Emacs features. The Lisp control structures, data types, and the operators are similar to many other languages. But the Emacs objects like buffers, windows, frames, keymaps, display tables, coding systems, processes, etc. are complex, and it can be hard to learn how to program in a way to meet the conventions of its rich user interface. > This must limit the base of emacs coders. I haven't noticed. :-) > Despite this, of course, there are many wonderful packages written for > emacs. It causes me to wonder if this is despite lisp or in some way > because of it. I think it's obviously because of it. Hang in there, it's a very rewarding way to program. -- Kevin Rodgers ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak 2003-11-07 18:20 ` Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-11-07 19:37 ` Dan Anderson [not found] ` <mailman.11.1068237562.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> ` (4 subsequent siblings) 6 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Dan Anderson @ 2003-11-07 19:37 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: help-gnu-emacs > > Learning LISP is not hard... > > Heh, heh. Compared to what? Assembly code? You shouldn't cut and paste snippets which lose their meaning. The original paragraph said that many people who use Emacs use it to program. For most professional programmers learning LISP should not be hard at all. For people who have never done any programming or taken computer science courses, I can understand how it might cause problems. Of course, sometimes one gets stuck in a rut or paradigm and forgets how to leave. This should not be confused with difficulty programming in it, but trouble adapting to new habits. -Dan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
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* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] ` <mailman.11.1068237562.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2003-11-07 22:17 ` Jody M. Klymak 2003-11-08 1:22 ` Jesper Harder ` (3 more replies) 2003-11-08 10:15 ` Oliver Scholz 1 sibling, 4 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Jody M. Klymak @ 2003-11-07 22:17 UTC (permalink / raw) Hello Dan, Dan Anderson <dan@mathjunkies.com> writes: > Of course, sometimes one gets stuck in a rut or paradigm and > forgets how to leave. This should not be confused with difficulty > programming in it, but trouble adapting to new habits. My point was that the rut occupied by C, python, perl, etc is wide and shallow compared to the rather narrow and deep rut occupied by lisp. I'm not trying to say that lisp is a bad language, but, adapting to new habits takes time. Having to jump ruts is an obstacle to those of us who do not choose to invest this time. I wonder how many more developers there might be for emacs if it had a more accessible programming language. And I wonder if being wedded to lisp will have an impact on emacs' future. Certainly, for me, it makes casual dilettante hacking for my own uses difficult, whereas I can usually muddle by in a piece of perl code. But perhaps your sentiments are correct - maybe the litmus test of having to learn lisp keeps out the riff-raff and leaves emacs to be developed by the dedicated "professional programmers." Maybe that is why it has remained so successful and the quality of what is out there so high. I'm just trying to point out the point of view from a longtime user in the trenches. Cheers, Jody ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 22:17 ` Jody M. Klymak @ 2003-11-08 1:22 ` Jesper Harder 2003-11-08 3:23 ` Kin Cho ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Jesper Harder @ 2003-11-08 1:22 UTC (permalink / raw) "Jody M. Klymak" <jklymak@coas.oregonstate.edu> writes: > My point was that the rut occupied by C, python, perl, etc is wide > and shallow compared to the rather narrow and deep rut occupied by > lisp. I'm not trying to say that lisp is a bad language, but, > adapting to new habits takes time. Well, languages like C or Java would be completely unsuitable as an Emacs extension language because they're non-interactive and static. If you couldn't extend Emacs interactively, then Emacs wouldn't really be fundamentally different from, say, vim. Python might be adequate. But it's less powerful than Lisp, so in that sense it would be a step in the wrong direction. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 22:17 ` Jody M. Klymak 2003-11-08 1:22 ` Jesper Harder @ 2003-11-08 3:23 ` Kin Cho 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-08 23:15 ` Joe Fineman 2003-11-10 15:59 ` Stefan Monnier 3 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Kin Cho @ 2003-11-08 3:23 UTC (permalink / raw) "Jody M. Klymak" <jklymak@coas.oregonstate.edu> writes: > My point was that the rut occupied by C, python, perl, etc is wide and > shallow compared to the rather narrow and deep rut occupied by lisp. > I'm not trying to say that lisp is a bad language, but, adapting to > new habits takes time. Having to jump ruts is an obstacle to those of > us who do not choose to invest this time. > > I wonder how many more developers there might be for emacs if it had a > more accessible programming language. And I wonder if being wedded to > lisp will have an impact on emacs' future. Certainly, for me, it > makes casual dilettante hacking for my own uses difficult, whereas I > can usually muddle by in a piece of perl code. > My point was that the rut occupied by C, python, perl, etc is wide and > shallow compared to the rather narrow and deep rut occupied by lisp. > I'm not trying to say that lisp is a bad language, but, adapting to > new habits takes time. Having to jump ruts is an obstacle to those of > us who do not choose to invest this time. > > I wonder how many more developers there might be for emacs if it had a > more accessible programming language. And I wonder if being wedded to > lisp will have an impact on emacs' future. Certainly, for me, it > makes casual dilettante hacking for my own uses difficult, whereas I > can usually muddle by in a piece of perl code. I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do (almost) all these things in elisp. Except for the limitation of 28 bit integers (which is about the only time I need to drop to perl), elisp is much more powerful and elegant. Some of the things I wrote elisp to do include: run special compilation commands depending on project directory, mount loopback filesystem devices within dired, parse tcpdump output, etc... In short, elisp makes it possible for me to create my very own (text-based) IDE. > But perhaps your sentiments are correct - maybe the litmus test of > having to learn lisp keeps out the riff-raff and leaves emacs to be > developed by the dedicated "professional programmers." Maybe that is > why it has remained so successful and the quality of what is out > there so high. I'm just trying to point out the point of view from a > longtime user in the trenches. I suspect many excellent elisp authors aren't "professional programmers", but smart tinkerers. -kin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 3:23 ` Kin Cho @ 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-08 13:20 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen ` (4 more replies) 0 siblings, 5 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Artur Hefczyc @ 2003-11-08 10:34 UTC (permalink / raw) Kin Cho <kin@techie.com> writes: > I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl > scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as > doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do > (almost) all these things in elisp. I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting language also. However I would like to know if it is possible to use it that way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script to update my Linux box system with new releases of some packages. Is it possible to run it from command line like all other scripts, bash, perl etc.? I mean file script starting from: #!/usr/bin/emacs Or any other elisp interpreter? Artur -- Artur Hefczyc, Open Source Developer: http://www.geotools.org/ http://generguide.sourceforge.net/ http://wttools.sourceforge.net/ http://maven-plugins.sourceforge.net/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc @ 2003-11-08 13:20 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-08 20:06 ` David Kastrup ` (3 subsequent siblings) 4 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-08 13:20 UTC (permalink / raw) Artur Hefczyc <DONTkobit@SPAMplusnet.MEpl> writes: > Is it possible google for: sesquicolon anagram swaby you may try "feeling lucky". thi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-08 13:20 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-08 20:06 ` David Kastrup 2003-11-08 21:45 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-09 3:20 ` Kin Cho ` (2 subsequent siblings) 4 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2003-11-08 20:06 UTC (permalink / raw) Artur Hefczyc <DONTkobit@SPAMplusnet.MEpl> writes: > Kin Cho <kin@techie.com> writes: > > I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl > > scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as > > doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do > > (almost) all these things in elisp. > > I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting language > also. However I would like to know if it is possible to use it that > way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script to update my Linux box > system with new releases of some packages. > > Is it possible to run it from command line like all other scripts, > bash, perl etc.? > > I mean file script starting from: > #!/usr/bin/emacs > > Or any other elisp interpreter? #!/usr/bin/emacs -batch -l -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 20:06 ` David Kastrup @ 2003-11-08 21:45 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-08 22:02 ` Artur Hefczyc 0 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Artur Hefczyc @ 2003-11-08 21:45 UTC (permalink / raw) David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org> writes: >> I mean file script starting from: >> #!/usr/bin/emacs >> Or any other elisp interpreter? > #!/usr/bin/emacs -batch -l Well, it doesn't work :-( It looks like emacs thinks that it got one parameter: "-batch -l" which is not recognized as any valid option. I tried also to use: #!/usr/bin/emacs --batch --script with the same effect. Only if I will but only '--batch' option emacs starts in batch mode, however it doesn't read the rest of script content. Any other ideas? Artur -- Artur Hefczyc, Open Source Developer: http://www.geotools.org/ http://generguide.sourceforge.net/ http://wttools.sourceforge.net/ http://maven-plugins.sourceforge.net/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 21:45 ` Artur Hefczyc @ 2003-11-08 22:02 ` Artur Hefczyc 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Artur Hefczyc @ 2003-11-08 22:02 UTC (permalink / raw) Artur Hefczyc <DONTkobit@SPAMplusnet.MEpl> writes: >> #!/usr/bin/emacs -batch -l > Well, it doesn't work :-( > It looks like emacs thinks that it got one parameter: "-batch -l" which > is not recognized as any valid option. I tried also to use: > #!/usr/bin/emacs --batch --script At last I found it, this one works as expected: #!/usr/bin/emacs --script Artur -- Artur Hefczyc, Open Source Developer: http://www.geotools.org/ http://generguide.sourceforge.net/ http://wttools.sourceforge.net/ http://maven-plugins.sourceforge.net/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-08 13:20 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-08 20:06 ` David Kastrup @ 2003-11-09 3:20 ` Kin Cho 2003-11-12 5:15 ` David Masterson 2003-11-23 8:08 ` Tim X 4 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Kin Cho @ 2003-11-09 3:20 UTC (permalink / raw) Artur Hefczyc <DONTkobit@SPAMplusnet.MEpl> writes: > Kin Cho <kin@techie.com> writes: > > I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl > > scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as > > doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do > > (almost) all these things in elisp. > > I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting language > also. However I would like to know if it is possible to use it that > way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script to update my Linux box > system with new releases of some packages. > > Is it possible to run it from command line like all other scripts, > bash, perl etc.? > > I mean file script starting from: > #!/usr/bin/emacs > > Or any other elisp interpreter? Well, the preferred way is to make a interactive defun and run it with M-x. That way, you can write it, debug it, and enhance it -- all in the comfort of the emacs environment. -kin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-09 3:20 ` Kin Cho @ 2003-11-12 5:15 ` David Masterson 2003-11-12 8:12 ` Matthew Kennedy 2003-11-12 18:21 ` Pascal Bourguignon 2003-11-23 8:08 ` Tim X 4 siblings, 2 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: David Masterson @ 2003-11-12 5:15 UTC (permalink / raw) >>>>> Artur Hefczyc writes: > Kin Cho <kin@techie.com> writes: >> I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl >> scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as >> doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do >> (almost) all these things in elisp. > I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting language > also. However I would like to know if it is possible to use it that > way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script to update my Linux box > system with new releases of some packages. > Is it possible to run it from command line like all other scripts, > bash, perl etc.? > I mean file script starting from: > #!/usr/bin/emacs > Or any other elisp interpreter? Given how big Emacs is, I would think that it would be best to start emacs in background (say, from your .login) and then use something like gnudoit or emacsclient to send your elisp to the background Emacs. Done correctly, I would think that it would execute your scripts much faster, no? -- David Masterson ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-12 5:15 ` David Masterson @ 2003-11-12 8:12 ` Matthew Kennedy 2003-11-12 18:21 ` Pascal Bourguignon 1 sibling, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Matthew Kennedy @ 2003-11-12 8:12 UTC (permalink / raw) David Masterson <dsm@rawbw.com> writes: >>>>>> Artur Hefczyc writes: > [...] >> I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting language >> also. However I would like to know if it is possible to use it that >> way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script to update my Linux box >> system with new releases of some packages. > >> Is it possible to run it from command line like all other scripts, >> bash, perl etc.? > >> I mean file script starting from: >> #!/usr/bin/emacs > >> Or any other elisp interpreter? > > Given how big Emacs is, I would think that it would be best to start > emacs in background (say, from your .login) and then use something > like gnudoit or emacsclient to send your elisp to the background > Emacs. Done correctly, I would think that it would execute your > scripts much faster, no? How about using: ,----[ C-h f dump-emacs RET ] | dump-emacs is a built-in function. | (dump-emacs FILENAME SYMFILE) | | Dump current state of Emacs into executable file FILENAME. | Take symbols from SYMFILE (presumably the file you executed to run Emacs). | This is used in the file `loadup.el' when building Emacs. | | You must run Emacs in batch mode in order to dump it. `---- This way you can have your scripts compiled and dumped into a standalone executable. Its very fast[1]. If you don't like that, try placing the following at the top of your emacs lisp scripts, and then chmod +x the script. :;exec emacs --batch --no-init-file --no-site-file --load $0 --func main $* Footnotes: [1] http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/DumpingEmacs -- Matthew Kennedy ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-12 5:15 ` David Masterson 2003-11-12 8:12 ` Matthew Kennedy @ 2003-11-12 18:21 ` Pascal Bourguignon 2003-11-13 19:54 ` Artur Hefczyc 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Pascal Bourguignon @ 2003-11-12 18:21 UTC (permalink / raw) David Masterson <dsm@rawbw.com> writes: > >>>>> Artur Hefczyc writes: > > > Kin Cho <kin@techie.com> writes: > >> I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl > >> scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as > >> doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do > >> (almost) all these things in elisp. > > > I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting language > > also. However I would like to know if it is possible to use it that > > way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script to update my Linux box > > system with new releases of some packages. > > > Is it possible to run it from command line like all other scripts, > > bash, perl etc.? > > > I mean file script starting from: > > #!/usr/bin/emacs > > > Or any other elisp interpreter? > > Given how big Emacs is, I would think that it would be best to start > emacs in background (say, from your .login) and then use something > like gnudoit or emacsclient to send your elisp to the background > Emacs. Done correctly, I would think that it would execute your > scripts much faster, no? No. emacs IS NOT big. $ ls -l emacs perl -rwxr-xr-t 1 pascal regular 4433296 2003-11-12 19:08 emacs* -rwxr-xr-x 1 pascal regular 1113248 2003-11-12 19:08 perl* emacs is already in core memory so forking additionnal emacs processes does not cost anything significant. Starting a script in perl or in emacs takes the same time. (Any time below 0.7 s IS the same time). #!/bin/bash echo ================================================= time emacs -batch -no-site-file -q \ -eval '(progn (message "Hello from emacs") (kill-emacs))' echo ================================================= time clisp -q -ansi -norc \ -x '(progn (format t "Hello from clisp!~%") (ext:quit))' echo ================================================= time sbcl --noinform --noprint --sysinit /dev/null --userinit /dev/null \ --eval '(progn (format t "Hello from sbcl!~%") (SB-EXT:QUIT))' echo ================================================= echo '(display "Hello from scsh\n") ,exit' | bash -c 'time scsh' echo ================================================= time perl -e 'printf "Hello from perl\n";exit' echo ================================================= exit 0 ./script-times ================================================= Hello from emacs real 0m0.060s user 0m0.040s sys 0m0.010s ================================================= Hello from clisp! real 0m0.023s user 0m0.010s sys 0m0.010s ================================================= Hello from sbcl! real 0m0.024s user 0m0.010s sys 0m0.010s ================================================= Scsh 0.5.3 > Hello from scsh #f > real 0m0.076s user 0m0.030s sys 0m0.020s ================================================= Hello from perl real 0m0.009s user 0m0.000s sys 0m0.000s ================================================= To allow the use of #! for emacs, I implemented this small wrapper: lisp-script.c: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ /****************************************************************************** FILE: lisp-script.c LANGUAGE: ANSI-C SYSTEM: POSIX USER-INTERFACE: POSIX DESCRIPTION This is a simple tool that encapsulate clisp or emacs invokation as script interpreters. USAGE Insert #!/usr/local/bin/emacs-script or #!/usr/local/bin/clisp-script as the first line of a lisp program, and run it. AUTHORS <PJB> Pascal J. Bourguignon MODIFICATIONS 2003-10-27 <PJB> Added SBCL. 2002-04-06 <PJB> Creation. BUGS LEGAL GPL Copyright Pascal J. Bourguignon 2002 - 2003 This file is part of lisp script tools. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; see the file COPYING; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA ******************************************************************************/ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <string.h> #include <sysexits.h> #ifndef EMACS #define EMACS "/usr/local/bin/emacs" #endif #ifndef CLISP #define CLISP "/usr/local/bin/clisp" #endif #ifndef SBCL #define SBCL "/usr/local/bin/sbcl" #endif #ifdef MACOSX /* Not exactly correct. We should grab GNU dirname/basename.*/ static const char* basename(const char* path) { const char* slash=strrchr(path,'/'); if(slash==0){ return(path); }else{ return(slash+1); } }/*basename*/ #else #include <libgen.h> #endif const char* pname="lisp-script"; void usage(const char* pname) { fprintf(stderr, "%s usage:\n"\ " %s -h|--help | script-file [script-arguments...]\n", pname,pname); }/*usage*/ int main(int argc,char** argv) { int i; int length; int position; char* script_file=0; char* script_option; char* init_file; enum { emacs, clisp, sbcl } kind; pname=basename(argv[0]); if(strcmp(pname,"emacs-script")==0){ kind=emacs; }else if(strcmp(pname,"clisp-script")==0){ kind=clisp; }else if(strcmp(pname,"sbcl-script")==0){ kind=sbcl; }else{ lisp_script: fprintf(stderr,"%s: should be invoked either as emacs-script, " "clisp-script or sbcl-script.\n",pname); return(EX_USAGE); } if((strcmp(argv[1],"-h")==0)||(strcmp(argv[1],"--help")==0)){ usage(pname); return(EX_OK); } if(1<argc){ script_file=argv[1]; }else{ fprintf(stderr,"%s: missing script-file argument.\n",pname); usage(pname); return(EX_USAGE); } if(0!=access(script_file,R_OK)){ fprintf(stderr,"Can't read script file '%s'.\n",script_file); return(EX_NOINPUT); } init_file=(char*)malloc(strlen(argv[0])+8); switch(kind){ case emacs: sprintf(init_file,"%s.el",argv[0]); break; case clisp: case sbcl: sprintf(init_file,"%s.lisp",argv[0]); break; default: goto lisp_script; } if(0!=access(init_file,R_OK)){ fprintf(stderr,"Can't read %s init file '%s'.\n",argv[0],init_file); return(EX_UNAVAILABLE); } length=0; for(i=1;i<argc;i++){ length+=3+strlen(argv[i]); } script_option=(char*)malloc(length+16); position=0; position+=sprintf(script_option+position,"(script "); for(i=1;i<argc;i++){ position+=sprintf(script_option+position,"\"%s\" ",argv[i]); } position+=sprintf(script_option+position,")"); /* fprintf(stderr,"init_file=%s\n",init_file); fprintf(stderr,"script_option=%s\n",script_option); */ switch(kind){ case emacs: execl(EMACS,"emacs","--batch","--no-site-file","--no-init-file", "--load",init_file, "--eval",script_option, 0); fprintf(stderr,"Can't execl '%s'.\n",EMACS); break; case clisp: execl(CLISP,"clisp","-q", "-i",init_file, "-x",script_option, 0); fprintf(stderr,"Can't execl '%s'.\n",CLISP); break; case sbcl: execl(SBCL,"sbcl","--noinform", "--userinit",init_file, "--eval",script_option, 0); fprintf(stderr,"Can't execl '%s'.\n",SBCL); break; default: goto lisp_script; } return(EX_UNAVAILABLE); }/*main*/ /*** lisp-script.c -- 2003-10-27 22:57:16 -- pascal ***/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ emacs-script.el: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ;; ;; elisp initialization for emacs scripts. ;; We try to install some stuff to make it more like Common-Lisp. ;; GPL ;; (add-to-list 'load-path "") (require 'cl) (defun script (file &rest arguments) " DO: reads the FILE, skip the first line if it begins with '#!' and " (unless (file-readable-p file) (error "Can't read file %S." file)) (setq ext:*args* arguments) (setq *load-pathname* file) (setq *LOAD-PATHNAME* *load-pathname* EXT:*ARGS* ext:*args*) (find-file file) (let ((buf (current-buffer))) (unwind-protect (progn (toggle-read-only 1) (goto-char (point-min)) (if (looking-at "#!") (forward-line 1)) (narrow-to-region (point) (point-max)) (eval-buffer) ) (kill-buffer buf))) );;script ;; Exit status from <sysexit.h> (defconst EX_OK 0 "successful termination") (defconst EX__BASE 64 "base value for error messages") (defconst EX_USAGE 64 "command line usage error") (defconst EX_DATAERR 65 "data format error") (defconst EX_NOINPUT 66 "cannot open input") (defconst EX_NOUSER 67 "addressee unknown") (defconst EX_NOHOST 68 "host name unknown") (defconst EX_UNAVAILABLE 69 "service unavailable") (defconst EX_SOFTWARE 70 "internal software error") (defconst EX_OSERR 71 "system error (e.g., can't fork)") (defconst EX_OSFILE 72 "critical OS file missing") (defconst EX_CANTCREAT 73 "can't create (user) output file") (defconst EX_IOERR 74 "input/output error") (defconst EX_TEMPFAIL 75 "temp failure; user is invited to retry") (defconst EX_PROTOCOL 76 "remote error in protocol") (defconst EX_NOPERM 77 "permission denied") (defconst EX_CONFIG 78 "configuration error") (defconst EX__MAX 78 "maximum listed value") (defun ext:exit (&optional status) " DO: stops the script, exiting with the given status. " (unless status (setq status EX_OK)) (kill-emacs status) );;ext:exit ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;; Common-Lisp / Elisp (defun read-line (&optional input-stream eof-error-p eof-value recursive-p) " DO: Implement partially Common-Lisp read-line function. " (unless input-stream (setq input-stream standard-input)) (let ( (standard-input input-stream) (line nil) (char (read-char)) ) (while (not (member char '(10 13))) (push char line) (setq char (read-char)) ) (funcall 'concat (nreverse line)) );;let );;read-line (defalias 'EXT:EXIT 'ext:exit) (defalias 'READ-LINE 'read-line) ;;;; emacs-script.el -- 2003-02-08 04:35:08 -- pascal ;;;; ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- __Pascal_Bourguignon__ http://www.informatimago.com/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-12 18:21 ` Pascal Bourguignon @ 2003-11-13 19:54 ` Artur Hefczyc 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Artur Hefczyc @ 2003-11-13 19:54 UTC (permalink / raw) Pascal Bourguignon <spam@thalassa.informatimago.com> writes: >> > Kin Cho <kin@techie.com> writes: >> >> I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl >> >> scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as >> >> doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do >> >> (almost) all these things in elisp. >> > I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting language >> > also. However I would like to know if it is possible to use it that >> > way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script to update my Linux box >> > system with new releases of some packages. >> > Is it possible to run it from command line like all other scripts, >> > bash, perl etc.? >> > I mean file script starting from: >> > #!/usr/bin/emacs >> > Or any other elisp interpreter? >> Given how big Emacs is, I would think that it would be best to start >> emacs in background (say, from your .login) and then use something >> like gnudoit or emacsclient to send your elisp to the background >> Emacs. Done correctly, I would think that it would execute your >> scripts much faster, no? > No. > emacs IS NOT big. > $ ls -l emacs perl > -rwxr-xr-t 1 pascal regular 4433296 2003-11-12 19:08 emacs* > -rwxr-xr-x 1 pascal regular 1113248 2003-11-12 19:08 perl* > emacs is already in core memory so forking additionnal emacs processes > does not cost anything significant. > Starting a script in perl or in emacs takes the same time. (Any time > below 0.7 s IS the same time). > <snip> Thank you all for your comments. They are very valuable for me. I am emacs user for many years but not an expert of elisp or any other Lisp implementation. So I don't care whether it is efficient or not, fast or slow, I just want to learn lisp and become good in it. Therefore I want to start using it whenever possible. At the moment, with emacs-cvs ver. 21.3.50 using emacs as script interpreter is pretty easy without any additional tricks. Just put to your first line of script file: #!/use/bin/emacs --script ;; And after that you can use regular elisp code: (princ "Hello world!") ;; end. Of course it doesn't work with earlier versions and does _not_ work construction presented below: #!/use/bin/emacs --batch -l $0 because for some reason emacs thinks that the whole parameter string: "--batch -l $0" is one option - unknown for him. Artur -- Artur Hefczyc, Open Source Developer: http://www.geotools.org/ http://generguide.sourceforge.net/ http://wttools.sourceforge.net/ http://maven-plugins.sourceforge.net/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-12 5:15 ` David Masterson @ 2003-11-23 8:08 ` Tim X 4 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Tim X @ 2003-11-23 8:08 UTC (permalink / raw) >>>>> "Artur" == Artur Hefczyc <DONTkobit@SPAMplusnet.MEpl> writes: Artur> Kin Cho <kin@techie.com> writes: >> I used to carry around a collection of shell, sed, awk, and perl >> scripts to do various text/file/directory processing, as well as >> doing cvs/rcs stuff, running compilation and gdb etc... Now I do >> (almost) all these things in elisp. Artur> I like this idea! I would like to use elisp as scripting Artur> language also. However I would like to know if it is possible Artur> to use it that way. I mean, lets assume I create elisp script Artur> to update my Linux box system with new releases of some Artur> packages. Artur> Is it possible to run it from command line like all other Artur> scripts, bash, perl etc.? Artur> I mean file script starting from: #!/usr/bin/emacs Artur> Or any other elisp interpreter? Artur> Artur -- Artur Hefczyc, Open Source Developer: Artur> http://www.geotools.org/ http://generguide.sourceforge.net/ Artur> http://wttools.sourceforge.net/ Artur> http://maven-plugins.sourceforge.net/ For this sort of thing, I'd be tempted to just use lisp, not emacs lisp. There are numerous lisp implementations which will allow you to do this sort of thing. The thing about elisp is that its got lots of things which are useful when dealing with text, buffers, displays characters etc. However, its not as good as a general lisp if you want ot do more general stuff. Tim -- Tim Cross The e-mail address on this message is FALSE (obviously!). My real e-mail is to a company in Australia called rapttech and my login is tcross - if you really need to send mail, you should be able to work it out! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 22:17 ` Jody M. Klymak 2003-11-08 1:22 ` Jesper Harder 2003-11-08 3:23 ` Kin Cho @ 2003-11-08 23:15 ` Joe Fineman 2003-11-10 15:59 ` Stefan Monnier 3 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Joe Fineman @ 2003-11-08 23:15 UTC (permalink / raw) "Jody M. Klymak" <jklymak@coas.oregonstate.edu> writes: > But perhaps your sentiments are correct - maybe the litmus test of > having to learn lisp keeps out the riff-raff and leaves emacs to be > developed by the dedicated "professional programmers." Alas, it doesn't always work. I am a nonprogrammer, and Elisp is the only programming language I have ever used, unless you count some youthful hacks in Basic. Riffraffishly, -- --- Joe Fineman jcf@TheWorld.com ||: Masochist: "Hurt me!" :|| ||: Sadist: "No." :|| ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 22:17 ` Jody M. Klymak ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-08 23:15 ` Joe Fineman @ 2003-11-10 15:59 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-11-10 20:58 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-10 21:00 ` Burton Samograd 3 siblings, 2 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-11-10 15:59 UTC (permalink / raw) > My point was that the rut occupied by C, python, perl, etc is wide and > shallow compared to the rather narrow and deep rut occupied by lisp. Seeing how much trouble you seem to have getting from your C rut to elisp's, I have a hard time understanding why you consider the C rut as being wide and shallow. I still haven't heard from a Lisp hacker who found it difficult to switch to C or Java (painful, yes of course, but not difficult, except maybe for manual memory management), so I'd say that Lisp's rut is rather shallow indeed. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-10 15:59 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-11-10 20:58 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-10 21:00 ` Burton Samograd 1 sibling, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-10 20:58 UTC (permalink / raw) Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > Lisp's rut is rather shallow indeed. the confusion lies in the concept of "rut" as a directional gouging of the mud (that is, one's mental makeup ;-). lisp's gouging is shallow or deep depending on the softness of the mud, but more importantly, it is expansive, so much so that it engulfs mere 1d ruts in its 2d nature. you pour effort into other languages and pox-ridden sewer grot emerges, you pour effort into lisp and the field of wildflowers grows. thi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-10 15:59 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-11-10 20:58 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-10 21:00 ` Burton Samograd 2003-11-11 10:34 ` Alan Mackenzie 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Burton Samograd @ 2003-11-10 21:00 UTC (permalink / raw) Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: >> My point was that the rut occupied by C, python, perl, etc is wide and >> shallow compared to the rather narrow and deep rut occupied by lisp. > > Seeing how much trouble you seem to have getting from your C rut to > elisp's, I have a hard time understanding why you consider the C rut as > being wide and shallow. > > I still haven't heard from a Lisp hacker who found it difficult to switch to > C or Java (painful, yes of course, but not difficult, except maybe for manual > memory management), so I'd say that Lisp's rut is rather shallow indeed. >From my experience, switching to lisp is a bit more work than the other way around, due to the type of people that helped shape lisp in the first place. C and UNIX were developed around the "worse is better" type philosophy, where LISPy systems were more focused on the consistent and perfect side. Each philosophy has it's advantages, but the perfect side has the drawback of having to learn idiosyncratic perfections, rather than diving in and just doing something. Current operating systems have evolved from the experience and knowledge of UNIX systems, where Common Lisp evolved from the now defunct LISP machines of the 80's. Emacs seems one of the last bastions of LISP being found in production work (there are exceptions, but they aren't heard of them that much anymore), and even still it's not part of the production process and lies in the users own desire and drive to learn, which requires un-learning many things before the power and beauty of lisp can be fully realized. For the ones that want to attack the LISP learning curve there are plenty of resources available from the existing LISP community, but don't expect much help if you dive in and start telling them thier language should be changed because you "don't get it". LISP is great and LISP is fun, but it's still a programming language, but much more akin to a sketchbook than a paintroller. Sketching is quite fun, but with lisp the finalization of programs (such as for relesase) can be obscure and won't be found with much research, guidance and the ability to accept things how they are, at least for the time being. My 2cents based on my research, -- burton samograd http://kruhftwerk.dyndns.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-10 21:00 ` Burton Samograd @ 2003-11-11 10:34 ` Alan Mackenzie 2003-11-11 14:32 ` Jesper Harder 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd 0 siblings, 2 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Alan Mackenzie @ 2003-11-11 10:34 UTC (permalink / raw) Burton Samograd <kruhft@hotmail.com> wrote on Mon, 10 Nov 2003 21:00:03 GMT: > Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: >> I still haven't heard from a Lisp hacker who found it difficult to >> switch to C or Java (painful, yes of course, but not difficult, except >> maybe for manual memory management), so I'd say that Lisp's rut is >> rather shallow indeed. > From my experience, switching to lisp is a bit more work than the other > way around, due to the type of people that helped shape lisp in the > first place. C and UNIX were developed around the "worse is better" > type philosophy, where LISPy systems were more focused on the > consistent and perfect side. All due respect, and everything, but the above is incoherent nonsense. "Worse is better"? What's that supposed to mean? "..due to the type of people that helped shape lisp"? That seems disparaging. What have personalities got to do with the difficulties of learning a new programing language? [ .... ] > For the ones that want to attack the LISP learning curve there are > plenty of resources available from the existing LISP community, but > don't expect much help if you dive in and start telling them their > language should be changed because you "don't get it". LISP is great > and LISP is fun, but it's still a programming language, but much more > akin to a sketchbook than a paintroller. A "pain troller". What a strange concept! Such posters are, thankfully, not common on gnu.emacs.help, but they are regretfully abundant elsewhere on Usenet. :-( > -- > burton samograd > http://kruhftwerk.dyndns.org -- Alan Mackenzie (Munich, Germany) Email: aacm@muuc.dee; to decode, wherever there is a repeated letter (like "aa"), remove half of them (leaving, say, "a"). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 10:34 ` Alan Mackenzie @ 2003-11-11 14:32 ` Jesper Harder 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Jesper Harder @ 2003-11-11 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw) Alan Mackenzie<none@example.invalid> writes: > Burton Samograd <kruhft@hotmail.com> wrote: > >> From my experience, switching to lisp is a bit more work than the other >> way around, due to the type of people that helped shape lisp in the >> first place. C and UNIX were developed around the "worse is better" >> type philosophy, where LISPy systems were more focused on the >> consistent and perfect side. > > All due respect, and everything, but the above is incoherent nonsense. > "Worse is better"? What's that supposed to mean? It's an expression coined by Richard P. Gabriel (a Lisp hacker) while trying to explain why C and Unix became so popular even though they (in his view) were technically inferior to The Right Thing, i.e. Lisp. See <http://www.dreamsongs.com/WorseIsBetter.html> for more details. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 14:32 ` Jesper Harder @ 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Burton Samograd @ 2003-11-11 17:00 UTC (permalink / raw) Jesper Harder <harder@myrealbox.com> writes: > Alan Mackenzie<none@example.invalid> writes: >> All due respect, and everything, but the above is incoherent nonsense. >> "Worse is better"? What's that supposed to mean? > > It's an expression coined by Richard P. Gabriel (a Lisp hacker) while > trying to explain why C and Unix became so popular even though they > (in his view) were technically inferior to The Right Thing, i.e. Lisp. > > See > > <http://www.dreamsongs.com/WorseIsBetter.html> > > for more details. Thanks for the clarification; I thought that paper was more widely known. Although the wording of the sentance is a bit inflammitory without reference, I happen to find that it's closer to the way the world works than being technically perfect (better translated as academic). In the end I'm still using a "worse" UNIX based OS, while the LISP machines have faded into history (although many of the ideas still live on inside of emacs). -- burton samograd http://kruhftwerk.dyndns.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 10:34 ` Alan Mackenzie 2003-11-11 14:32 ` Jesper Harder @ 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd 2003-11-11 20:04 ` Alan Mackenzie 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Burton Samograd @ 2003-11-11 17:00 UTC (permalink / raw) Alan Mackenzie<none@example.invalid> writes: > Burton Samograd <kruhft@hotmail.com> wrote on Mon, 10 Nov 2003 21:00:03 > GMT: >> Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > >>> I still haven't heard from a Lisp hacker who found it difficult to >>> switch to C or Java (painful, yes of course, but not difficult, except >>> maybe for manual memory management), so I'd say that Lisp's rut is >>> rather shallow indeed. > >> From my experience, switching to lisp is a bit more work than the other >> way around, due to the type of people that helped shape lisp in the >> first place. C and UNIX were developed around the "worse is better" >> type philosophy, where LISPy systems were more focused on the >> consistent and perfect side. > > All due respect, and everything, but the above is incoherent nonsense. > "Worse is better"? What's that supposed to mean? "..due to the type of > people that helped shape lisp"? That seems disparaging. What have > personalities got to do with the difficulties of learning a new > programing language? Another poster replied as to what "Worse is better" was refering to. Just because you haven't heard of something doesn't make it nonsense. As a hint, when you're wondering what something is supposed to mean, rather than do an instant-flame, try googling. Also, try hanging out in comp.lang.lisp for a while where you'll get to hear discussions and talk with the people that helped form the CL standard. There are some very smart people that have some very good reasons for why things are the way they are in the lisp world and their personalities have *a lot* to do with it. They have a knowledge base of many years of experience that they have incorporated into the Lisp standard, and it takes almost as long to learn all the nuances. This is part of the difficulty where people that are new to something find it different to what they are used to so they feel a need to change it to something more like what they are comfortable with rather than learning why it was done that way in the first place. > > [ .... ] > >> For the ones that want to attack the LISP learning curve there are >> plenty of resources available from the existing LISP community, but >> don't expect much help if you dive in and start telling them their >> language should be changed because you "don't get it". LISP is great >> and LISP is fun, but it's still a programming language, but much more >> akin to a sketchbook than a paintroller. > > A "pain troller". What a strange concept! Such posters are, thankfully, > not common on gnu.emacs.help, but they are regretfully abundant elsewhere > on Usenet. :-( That's "paint roller"; sorry for missing a space. I figured that most posters like yours were a bit less abundant in these groups...I was just sharing my thoughts on a programming language. -- burton samograd http://kruhftwerk.dyndns.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd @ 2003-11-11 20:04 ` Alan Mackenzie 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Alan Mackenzie @ 2003-11-11 20:04 UTC (permalink / raw) Burton Samograd <kruhft@hotmail.com> wrote on Tue, 11 Nov 2003 17:00:06 GMT: > Alan Mackenzie<none@example.invalid> writes: >> Burton Samograd <kruhft@hotmail.com> wrote on Mon, 10 Nov 2003 21:00:03 >> GMT: >>> From my experience, switching to lisp is a bit more work than the >>> other way around, due to the type of people that helped shape lisp in >>> the first place. C and UNIX were developed around the "worse is >>> better" type philosophy, where LISPy systems were more focused on the >>> consistent and perfect side. >> All due respect, and everything, but the above is incoherent nonsense. >> "Worse is better"? What's that supposed to mean? "..due to the type >> of people that helped shape lisp"? That seems disparaging. What have >> personalities got to do with the difficulties of learning a new >> programing language? > Another poster replied as to what "Worse is better" was refering to. > Just because you haven't heard of something doesn't make it nonsense. > As a hint, when you're wondering what something is supposed to mean, > rather than do an instant-flame, try googling. Apologies. [ .... ] > -- > burton samograd > http://kruhftwerk.dyndns.org -- Alan Mackenzie (Munich, Germany) Email: aacm@muuc.dee; to decode, wherever there is a repeated letter (like "aa"), remove half of them (leaving, say, "a"). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] ` <mailman.11.1068237562.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-07 22:17 ` Jody M. Klymak @ 2003-11-08 10:15 ` Oliver Scholz 2003-11-08 12:03 ` Orm Finnendahl 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Oliver Scholz @ 2003-11-08 10:15 UTC (permalink / raw) Dan Anderson <dan@mathjunkies.com> writes: [...] > For most professional programmers learning LISP should not be hard > at all. For people who have never done any programming or taken > computer science courses, I can understand how it might cause > problems. I firmly disagree. Emacs Lisp was my first programming language and I do not recall having any troubles learning it which I could justifiedly attribute to the language. On the contrary the (mostly) uniform and very simple syntax of Lisp makes it very easy for a beginner. You may simply forget about the syntax, once you understood the meaning of `'', and concentrate on the much more important and much more difficult task of learning how to program. Without having to struggle with semicolons and operator precedence or whatever. After all, by definition a beginner had no prior exposure to a pure imperative, semicolon-driven language. Lisp is very friendly especially for beginners. Oliver PS: I would also like to note that copying and yanking only half understood Lisp snippets may also be a good first step into learning Emacs Lisp. -- 18 Brumaire an 212 de la Révolution Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-08 10:15 ` Oliver Scholz @ 2003-11-08 12:03 ` Orm Finnendahl 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Orm Finnendahl @ 2003-11-08 12:03 UTC (permalink / raw) Am 08. November 2003, 11:15 Uhr (+0100) schrieb Oliver Scholz: > > Lisp is very friendly especially for beginners. I agree. I had quite some problems learning Lisp *because* I was quite fluent in imperative languages and used to be amazed reading about lisp being easy to learn until I started teaching it by myself to complete novices. They don't have any problems whatsoever. It is amazing how fast they progress even with tricky tasks. Without any doubt Lisp and especially scheme are very friendly to beginners and would be my first choice for teaching programming. I wouldn't start with emacs lisp for the tricky parts concerning emacs, though. -- Orm ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak ` (2 preceding siblings ...) [not found] ` <mailman.11.1068237562.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2003-11-08 1:28 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-08 14:09 ` Ole Laursen ` (2 subsequent siblings) 6 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-08 1:28 UTC (permalink / raw) "Jody M. Klymak" <jklymak@coas.oregonstate.edu> writes: > Heh, heh. Compared to what? Assembly code? hard like a diamond, more precious than softest silk. shards, as you find them, but round-wound and finest-built. capriciously crafted, though the careless do bleed indeed. atomic-width knifepoint -- eval not the random seed! shift left shift right, lose the high bit: over{n,s}ight. store direct, load indexed, flush the cache if caught perplexed. pipe stall pipe stall pipe stall (is that *really* all?). write to set, write to clear, read as zero (i hope, i fear). betwixt the extremes the hapless human sits. quatrains befuddled and almost dropping to free verse. one generation drops its bombs on the next and forgets. children grow into machines and repeat the mistakes. what use is it to lovingly collect future junkpiles so easy to neglect? thi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-08 1:28 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-08 14:09 ` Ole Laursen 2003-11-23 8:02 ` Tim X 2003-12-07 15:56 ` Kai Grossjohann 6 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Ole Laursen @ 2003-11-08 14:09 UTC (permalink / raw) "Jody M. Klymak" <jklymak@coas.oregonstate.edu> writes: [...] > I personally find lisp quite difficult. The opportunities to code in > it are few and far enough between, and the syntax so different from > any other modern language, that I have a one-day overhead just to > spool up to the point where I can do even the simplest thing. And > thus the coding opportunities get even fewer and further between, and > the cycle spirals to the point where I am dependent on the good nature > of package maintainers to tweak what I want. > > This must limit the base of emacs coders. Lisp was once very hot, and Emacs was started in eighties. I think you are underestimating the number of people on Unix who know Lisp. It is still being taught in many computer science classes. If you find Emacs Lisp confusing, you could try learning Scheme first. Scheme is a very small Lisp dialect. -- Ole Laursen http://www.cs.auc.dk/~olau/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak ` (4 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-08 14:09 ` Ole Laursen @ 2003-11-23 8:02 ` Tim X 2003-12-07 15:56 ` Kai Grossjohann 6 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Tim X @ 2003-11-23 8:02 UTC (permalink / raw) >>>>> "Jody" == Jody M Klymak <jklymak@coas.oregonstate.edu> writes: Jody> Hi Dan, Jody> Dan Anderson <dan@mathjunkies.com> writes: Jody> [snip much good advice...] >> Learning LISP is not hard... Jody> Heh, heh. Compared to what? Assembly code? Jody> I personally find lisp quite difficult. The opportunities to Jody> code in it are few and far enough between, and the syntax so Jody> different from any other modern language, that I have a one-day Jody> overhead just to spool up to the point where I can do even the Jody> simplest thing. And thus the coding opportunities get even Jody> fewer and further between, and the cycle spirals to the point Jody> where I am dependent on the good nature of package maintainers Jody> to tweak what I want. Jody> This must limit the base of emacs coders. Jody> Despite this, of course, there are many wonderful packages Jody> written for emacs. It causes me to wonder if this is despite Jody> lisp or in some way because of it. Wow, that sounds familiar. I found the same thing, at first. However, after investing considerable time I now *think* I see the light at the end of the tunnel. to some extent, I think its harder to get your head around lisp when you come form a background of more procedural type languages such as C. Those starting with lisp rather than moving to it from another language seem to have an easier time. It think its because lisp (and elisp) represent a totally different way of thinking about problems, coding the solutions and debugging. While I still class myself as very much a novice with elisp, I am at last beginning to see some of the elegance and find my own solutions are beginning to reflect my shift to a more elisp/lisp approach. Once you get there, you begin to find its very quick compard to languages like C. Now, I'm less hesitant when I come across something which doesn't quite work the way I like it and often find myself stunned by how few lines and how easily I can modify or add some functionality. I've even started prototyping some of my ideas in lisp and if applicable elisp. then, if the idea seems to bare fruit and I want to apply it to some project I'm doing in another language, I recode it in that language. this is very enlightening as you begin to see how some things are very simple to do in lisp and much more complicated or time consuming to do in C or some other language. the thing I'm really pleased about is I believe my C coding, scripting and work I do generally has improved - solutions/algorithims seem to be clearer and to me, more elegant. While it does take time, I think there is a lot to recommend lisp/elisp for both coding and learning. Tim -- Tim Cross The e-mail address on this message is FALSE (obviously!). My real e-mail is to a company in Australia called rapttech and my login is tcross - if you really need to send mail, you should be able to work it out! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak ` (5 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-23 8:02 ` Tim X @ 2003-12-07 15:56 ` Kai Grossjohann 6 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Kai Grossjohann @ 2003-12-07 15:56 UTC (permalink / raw) "Jody M. Klymak" <jklymak@coas.oregonstate.edu> writes: > I personally find lisp quite difficult. The opportunities to code in > it are few and far enough between, and the syntax so different from > any other modern language, that I have a one-day overhead just to > spool up to the point where I can do even the simplest thing. I guess it's not that bad. Lisp, especially the Emacs Lisp dialect, is quite a small language. It can be learned quickly. Of course, actually using Emacs Lisp requires you to also learn the "standard library", which is really huge. But once you have learned the basic language, you never have to struggle with the syntax again. And in Lisp, there is not much syntax to speak of. And I find that after not using Emacs Lisp for a while, I just need the confidence to think that the standard library function is already there -- then a bit of persistence with M-x apropos RET or index search in the info file will get me there ;-) Kai ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <mailman.3343.1068146343.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> ` (3 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-07 11:27 ` Gareth Rees @ 2003-11-07 18:09 ` Reiner Steib 2003-11-07 18:37 ` lawrence mitchell 2003-11-07 23:41 ` Edward Dodge 5 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Reiner Steib @ 2003-11-07 18:09 UTC (permalink / raw) On Thu, Nov 06 2003, Dan Anderson wrote: > http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/DotEmacs | (put 'narrow-to-region 'disabled nil) I don't think it's a good idea to recommend this to users who probably aren't aware what this means. They will never find `widen', I guess, and believe that they lost all text outside the region. | (setq require-final-newline 'query) Hm, it works, but maybe it should be "ask", see `files.el'. | Additional `C-x LETTER' key bindings for useful commands (notice | uppercase LETTER): `C-x LETTER' is not reserver for users, better use `C-c LETTER'. | Turn on Mouse Wheel Scrolling: | | ;; turn on mouse wheel scrolling | (defun sd-mousewheel-scroll-up (event) What's wrong with `mouse-wheel-mode'? Bye, Reiner. -- ,,, (o o) ---ooO-(_)-Ooo--- PGP key available via WWW http://rsteib.home.pages.de/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 18:09 ` Reiner Steib @ 2003-11-07 18:37 ` lawrence mitchell 2003-11-08 17:06 ` Reiner Steib 0 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: lawrence mitchell @ 2003-11-07 18:37 UTC (permalink / raw) Reiner Steib wrote: [...] > | (setq require-final-newline 'query) > Hm, it works, but maybe it should be "ask", see `files.el'. Whilst the defcustom form for REQUIRE-FINAL-NEWLINE has 'ask in it, note the docstring: | Non-nil but not t says ask user whether to add a newline when | there isn't one. nil means don't add newlines. Note also this code from BASIC-SAVE-BUFFER: | (or (eq require-final-newline t) | (and require-final-newline | (y-or-n-p | (format "Buffer %s does not end in newline. Add one? " | (buffer-name))))) i.e. any non-nil but not-t value will have the same effect as any other. Setting it to 'ask, or 'query makes sense for someone looking at the variable binding later. Though (setq require-final-newline 'fnord) should work equally well. [...] -- lawrence mitchell <wence@gmx.li> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 18:37 ` lawrence mitchell @ 2003-11-08 17:06 ` Reiner Steib 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Reiner Steib @ 2003-11-08 17:06 UTC (permalink / raw) On Fri, Nov 07 2003, lawrence mitchell wrote: > Reiner Steib wrote: >> | (setq require-final-newline 'query) > >> Hm, it works, but maybe it should be "ask", see `files.el'. > > Whilst the defcustom form for REQUIRE-FINAL-NEWLINE has 'ask in > it, note the docstring: > > | Non-nil but not t says ask user whether to add a newline when > | there isn't one. nil means don't add newlines. [...] > Though (setq require-final-newline 'fnord) should work equally well. Yes you are right (I already said that it works, see above). I _thought_ that 'ask is more typical as 'query in Emacs and therefore it's preferable to use it. Grepping[1] the sources shows that 'query is used two times (`checkdoc.el', `sendmail.el') and 'ask 11 times, i.e. not so clear as I expected. ;-) Is there a coding convention for 'ask vs. 'query? BTW, now I learned from (info "(elisp)Composite Types"), what's the difference between (const :tag "Ask" foo) and (other :tag "Ask" foo) in defcustom. :-) Bye, Reiner. [1] grep -n -e "\\(const\\|other\\).* \\(query\\|ask\\))" *.el */*.el -- ,,, (o o) ---ooO-(_)-Ooo--- PGP key available via WWW http://rsteib.home.pages.de/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <mailman.3343.1068146343.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> ` (4 preceding siblings ...) 2003-11-07 18:09 ` Reiner Steib @ 2003-11-07 23:41 ` Edward Dodge 2003-11-10 16:04 ` Stefan Monnier 5 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Edward Dodge @ 2003-11-07 23:41 UTC (permalink / raw) Dan Anderson <dan@mathjunkies.com> writes: > I was wondering what other people have in their .emacs file. I would > like to challenge everyone to add at least one cool tip / trick to: > > http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/DotEmacs > > -Dan My personal favorite: (defun autocompile nil "compile itself if ~/.emacs" (interactive) (if (string= (buffer-file-name) (concat default-directory ".emacs")) (byte-compile-file (buffer-file-name)))) (add-hook 'after-save-hook 'autocompile) Never byte-compile your .emacs file by hand again! -- Edward Dodge /GNU Emacs 21.3.50.1 (powerpc-apple-darwin5.5) of 2002-10-11 on G3/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-07 23:41 ` Edward Dodge @ 2003-11-10 16:04 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-11-10 21:17 ` kgold 0 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-11-10 16:04 UTC (permalink / raw) > Never byte-compile your .emacs file by hand again! Better yet: Never byte-compile your .emacs file This way, you save disk space, time, and energy when things don't work as expected. Have you ever measured a speed difference between starting Emacs with .emacs.el and with .emacs.elc ? I strongly doubt it (unless you write a lot of real elisp code in your .emacs which is a bad idea in the first place). -- Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-10 16:04 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-11-10 21:17 ` kgold 2003-11-11 10:43 ` Alan Mackenzie 0 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: kgold @ 2003-11-10 21:17 UTC (permalink / raw) Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > > Never byte-compile your .emacs file by hand again! > > Better yet: > > Never byte-compile your .emacs file > > This way, you save disk space, time, and energy when things don't work > as expected. > Have you ever measured a speed difference between starting Emacs with > .emacs.el and with .emacs.elc ? I strongly doubt it (unless you write > a lot of real elisp code in your .emacs which is a bad idea in the > first place). Even better yet, use gnuserv. Who cares how long it takes to start when you do it twice a year. -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-10 21:17 ` kgold @ 2003-11-11 10:43 ` Alan Mackenzie 2003-11-11 15:39 ` Eli Zaretskii 2003-11-11 15:52 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 2 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Alan Mackenzie @ 2003-11-11 10:43 UTC (permalink / raw) kgold <kgold@watson.ibm.com> wrote on 10 Nov 2003 21:17:28 GMT: > Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: >> > Never byte-compile your .emacs file by hand again! >> Better yet: >> Never byte-compile your .emacs file >> This way, you save disk space, time, and energy when things don't work >> as expected. >> Have you ever measured a speed difference between starting Emacs with >> .emacs.el and with .emacs.elc ? I strongly doubt it (unless you write >> a lot of real elisp code in your .emacs which is a bad idea in the >> first place). > Even better yet, use gnuserv. Who cares how long it takes to start > when you do it twice a year. <flamebait> Some of us actually have to pay for our electricity. Some of us care that leaving a computer running continuously spews carbon dioxide into the atmosphere (fuelling global warming) and creates radioactive waste. We switch our computers off when not in use. I often boot my computer several times a day. But I don't like leaving Emacs running, even when my PC is on. You see, jit-lock runs continuously in the background, consuming vast amounts of CPU usage, thus contributing even more to global warming, et al. <\flamebait> -- Alan Mackenzie (Munich, Germany) Email: aacm@muuc.dee; to decode, wherever there is a repeated letter (like "aa"), remove half of them (leaving, say, "a"). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 10:43 ` Alan Mackenzie @ 2003-11-11 15:39 ` Eli Zaretskii 2003-11-11 15:52 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2003-11-11 15:39 UTC (permalink / raw) > From: Alan Mackenzie<none@example.invalid> > Newsgroups: gnu.emacs.help > Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2003 10:43:35 +0000 > > <flamebait> You've got it ;-) > Some of us actually have to pay for our electricity. Some of us care > that leaving a computer running continuously spews carbon dioxide into > the atmosphere (fuelling global warming) and creates radioactive waste. Power-saving settings, which can switch off almost everything during idle time without requiring a reboot, were invented for this. > But I don't like leaving Emacs running, even when my PC is on. You see, > jit-lock runs continuously in the background, consuming vast amounts of > CPU usage, thus contributing even more to global warming, et al. JIT-lock only eats up cycles as long as there are buffers that aren't completely fontified; then it stops. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 10:43 ` Alan Mackenzie 2003-11-11 15:39 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2003-11-11 15:52 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-11-11 17:35 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-11-11 15:52 UTC (permalink / raw) > Some of us actually have to pay for our electricity. Some of us care > that leaving a computer running continuously spews carbon dioxide into > the atmosphere (fuelling global warming) and creates radioactive waste. > We switch our computers off when not in use. I often boot my computer > several times a day. Why not `suspend' it ? [ Incidentally: does anybody here have experience configuring a Linux desktop machine to behave "a bit like a laptop" and turn off its drive when not used, ... This is not only to save power but to save my ears as well. ] > But I don't like leaving Emacs running, even when my PC is on. You see, > jit-lock runs continuously in the background, consuming vast amounts of > CPU usage, thus contributing even more to global warming, et al. Not continuously: only until it's all been re-font-lock'd. And if you don't like it, you can turn off the background jit-locking by setting jit-lock-stealth-time to nil. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 15:52 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-11-11 17:35 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-12 7:25 ` Lars Brinkhoff [not found] ` <mailman.197.1068625639.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-11 17:35 UTC (permalink / raw) Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > [ Incidentally: does anybody here have experience configuring a Linux > desktop machine to behave "a bit like a laptop" and turn off its drive > when not used, ... > This is not only to save power but to save my ears as well. ] check out the openbrick and similar small-form-factor systems. i'm happy to use the one here to work on emacs, guile, etc., even though it's only 300MHz. it is more silent than the ambiant noise and much more silent than the dude twiddling the guitar waiting for the compile to finish... otherwise, if you have an IDE drive try "hdparam -S 1 /dev/hda". thi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-11 17:35 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen @ 2003-11-12 7:25 ` Lars Brinkhoff [not found] ` <mailman.197.1068625639.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Lars Brinkhoff @ 2003-11-12 7:25 UTC (permalink / raw) Thien-Thi Nguyen <ttn@glug.org> writes: > Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > > Incidentally: does anybody here have experience configuring a Linux > > desktop machine to behave "a bit like a laptop" and turn off its drive > > when not used, ... > > This is not only to save power but to save my ears as well. > if you have an IDE drive try "hdparam -S 1 /dev/hda". Be aware that all the starting and stopping can be bad for the drive. Listen carefully for the whining nose the drive makes when the bearings starts to wear out, and run, don't walk, to the nearest computer hard- ware store to buy a replacement. -- Lars Brinkhoff, Services for Unix, Linux, GCC, HTTP Brinkhoff Consulting http://www.brinkhoff.se/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
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* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] ` <mailman.197.1068625639.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2003-11-12 10:22 ` Colin Marquardt 2003-11-12 11:15 ` David Kastrup 0 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: Colin Marquardt @ 2003-11-12 10:22 UTC (permalink / raw) Lars Brinkhoff <lars@nocrew.org> writes: > Thien-Thi Nguyen <ttn@glug.org> writes: >> if you have an IDE drive try "hdparam -S 1 /dev/hda". > > Be aware that all the starting and stopping can be bad for the drive. Also, mount the disks with the "noatime" option in order to prevent unnecessary spin up. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-12 10:22 ` Colin Marquardt @ 2003-11-12 11:15 ` David Kastrup 2003-11-12 13:47 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 61+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2003-11-12 11:15 UTC (permalink / raw) Colin Marquardt <c.marquardt@alcatel.de> writes: > Lars Brinkhoff <lars@nocrew.org> writes: > > > Thien-Thi Nguyen <ttn@glug.org> writes: > >> if you have an IDE drive try "hdparam -S 1 /dev/hda". > > > > Be aware that all the starting and stopping can be bad for the drive. > > Also, mount the disks with the "noatime" option in order to prevent > unnecessary spin up. But be aware that this means periodic disk cleaning on /tmp directories and similar for files that have not been accessed for a certain time will then not heed how recently the files have indeed been in use. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file 2003-11-12 11:15 ` David Kastrup @ 2003-11-12 13:47 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-11-12 13:47 UTC (permalink / raw) > But be aware that this means periodic disk cleaning on /tmp > directories and similar for files that have not been accessed for a > certain time will then not heed how recently the files have indeed > been in use. That's OK: periodic cleaning of /tmp is braindead anyway since it can remove a file that was not accessed for a long time but that is still in use nevertheless. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
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* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <E1AIRNX-0002YI-H9@monty-python.gnu.org> @ 2003-11-08 22:01 ` Joe Corneli 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Joe Corneli @ 2003-11-08 22:01 UTC (permalink / raw) > PS: I would also like to note that copying and yanking only half > understood Lisp snippets may also be a good first step into learning > Emacs Lisp. I agree with Oliver. My main learning steps (so far) were approximately these: writing macros | saving them | ~ nine months (also learned bash) tweaking them | importing Lisp snippets | tweaking them | ~ eight months (bash use peaks) writing basic defuns | learning some Lisp concepts | writing somewhat more complicated defuns | ~ six months (little bash) Only after quite a while of writing basic defuns did I ever do anything that might be considered to be more complicated. Also, only after that did I begin to understand how to use built-in Emacs functionality at all well. Joe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
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* Re: Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file [not found] <E1AI57v-00032q-9p@monty-python.gnu.org> @ 2003-11-07 14:31 ` Joe Corneli 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Joe Corneli @ 2003-11-07 14:31 UTC (permalink / raw) Gareth Rees, > Delete your .emacs! How about just ditching the computer and working with pen and ink? > This means that you can go to a new machine, run Emacs on it, and it > works just the same as on your old machine! Or maybe as a more moderate course, be careful to write a .emacs that works universally? This might be more or less challenging, but I think it is a good goal for participants in the emacswiki .emacs project to keep in mind. At least say whether the code is *designed* to work on any Emacs or whether it is hand-crafted for some specific setup. > And when you find a problem you know it's really to do with > Emacs and not with some "cool" trick you copied out of someone else's > .emacs without understanding it. C-h k <string> will tell you where your keystrokes are defined, from there it shouldn't be too hard to track down the source of the problems you find. You can always delete code you don't understand if you think it is causing you trouble. Joe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
* Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file @ 2003-11-06 19:18 Dan Anderson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 61+ messages in thread From: Dan Anderson @ 2003-11-06 19:18 UTC (permalink / raw) I was wondering what other people have in their .emacs file. I would like to challenge everyone to add at least one cool tip / trick to: http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/DotEmacs -Dan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 61+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2003-12-07 15:56 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 61+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <mailman.3343.1068146343.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-06 23:45 ` Cool and Useful LISP for the .emacs file Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-07 4:10 ` Bruce Ingalls 2003-11-07 9:08 ` roodwriter 2003-11-07 16:58 ` Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-07 18:35 ` roodwriter 2003-11-08 18:01 ` roodwriter 2003-11-11 10:48 ` Oliver Scholz 2003-11-07 11:27 ` Gareth Rees 2003-11-07 14:06 ` Adam Hardy [not found] ` <mailman.3403.1068214062.21628.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-07 14:28 ` David Kastrup 2003-11-07 16:54 ` Dan Anderson 2003-11-07 17:19 ` Rob Thorpe [not found] ` <mailman.0.1068227823.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-07 17:45 ` Jody M. Klymak 2003-11-07 18:20 ` Kevin Rodgers 2003-11-07 19:37 ` Dan Anderson [not found] ` <mailman.11.1068237562.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-07 22:17 ` Jody M. Klymak 2003-11-08 1:22 ` Jesper Harder 2003-11-08 3:23 ` Kin Cho 2003-11-08 10:34 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-08 13:20 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-08 20:06 ` David Kastrup 2003-11-08 21:45 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-08 22:02 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-09 3:20 ` Kin Cho 2003-11-12 5:15 ` David Masterson 2003-11-12 8:12 ` Matthew Kennedy 2003-11-12 18:21 ` Pascal Bourguignon 2003-11-13 19:54 ` Artur Hefczyc 2003-11-23 8:08 ` Tim X 2003-11-08 23:15 ` Joe Fineman 2003-11-10 15:59 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-11-10 20:58 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-10 21:00 ` Burton Samograd 2003-11-11 10:34 ` Alan Mackenzie 2003-11-11 14:32 ` Jesper Harder 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd 2003-11-11 17:00 ` Burton Samograd 2003-11-11 20:04 ` Alan Mackenzie 2003-11-08 10:15 ` Oliver Scholz 2003-11-08 12:03 ` Orm Finnendahl 2003-11-08 1:28 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-08 14:09 ` Ole Laursen 2003-11-23 8:02 ` Tim X 2003-12-07 15:56 ` Kai Grossjohann 2003-11-07 18:09 ` Reiner Steib 2003-11-07 18:37 ` lawrence mitchell 2003-11-08 17:06 ` Reiner Steib 2003-11-07 23:41 ` Edward Dodge 2003-11-10 16:04 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-11-10 21:17 ` kgold 2003-11-11 10:43 ` Alan Mackenzie 2003-11-11 15:39 ` Eli Zaretskii 2003-11-11 15:52 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-11-11 17:35 ` Thien-Thi Nguyen 2003-11-12 7:25 ` Lars Brinkhoff [not found] ` <mailman.197.1068625639.2005.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2003-11-12 10:22 ` Colin Marquardt 2003-11-12 11:15 ` David Kastrup 2003-11-12 13:47 ` Stefan Monnier [not found] <E1AIRNX-0002YI-H9@monty-python.gnu.org> 2003-11-08 22:01 ` Joe Corneli [not found] <E1AI57v-00032q-9p@monty-python.gnu.org> 2003-11-07 14:31 ` Joe Corneli 2003-11-06 19:18 Dan Anderson
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