I am a newbie to emacs and Linux in general (started my linux journey 2 months ago) and want to learn emacs. Does anyone have good ressources to learn emacs as a beginner? Also should I use a distro like doom Emacs or should I do it from scratch
Do the internal tutorial. Just click on the link of the splash page
Learning emacs is a beautiful journey. I am learning it since 2003, and i think i am in the middle of the the travel. Dont stop if you fall. The road is long.
YouTube has a Lot of great emacs content!
Work through the tutorial.
patience
people who used emacs for 20 years still learn some stuff :)
join irc, or mastodon or any place to chat with people, it helps getting some things faster
watch emacsrocks, videos from a few years ago but excellent ratio between short demo and long term insight :)
Uncle Dave’s Emacs Playlist Is All You Need:
- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLX2044Ew-UVVv31a0-Qn3dA6Sd_-NyA1n
I wrote a website for beginners, focused on writing prose, not code
Read the built in documentation.
Start with vanilla Emacs. Slowly but surely you’ll grow your config to the point of … throw it away. And start again. Same story a few times and in the end, there you have it.
I’m pretty new to emacs too, the best tip I can give you is to start from “raw” emacs, make your own config.
Read Docs, look into others config (do not copy paste), watch systemcrafters tutorial video series.
Atm my emacs config is part of my workflow, I’m pretty happy with it.
I’m glad nobody is recommending garbage like doom emacs, evil and etc.
Just start from the tutorial start adding your keybindings to make your life easy.Don’t use “distros” (doom and such) use the vanilla emacs. Do the tutorial and read the manual.
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Welcome!
Try this one
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/tour/
After I got more familiar with Emacs I spent some time to walk through each chapter of the Emacs manual. Even if you think you know how to search and replace within Emacs, after reading the chapter about it you know even more.
And what is most often forgotten: Use the menu bar. You can find most of the basic commands and their shortcuts there.
I’m not really agreeing with much of what is here, and I say that as someone that recently learnt to use (and abuse) Emacs recently.
For starters, vanilla Emacs is just too raw to be useful (especially for coding), but Doom and Spacemacs I found to be too opinionated and basically felt like too much of a deviation from vanilla and like I had bought an off the shelf IDE.
Eventually I found Prelude, and that seemed to be a happy medium of being quite vanilla but still being ready to use for coding.
The major hurdle at the start was keybindings - but I had trained myself a bit by using the Emacs bindings in VS Code first.