None if you don’t care for terminal emulation. You can use M-x shell and have a much better experience.
None if you don’t care for terminal emulation. You can use M-x shell and have a much better experience.
A shame that acme(1) only gets a passing mention when the original paper on acme’s predecessor help really drives the point home for having a mouse-friendly interface: https://doc.cat-v.org/plan_9/1st_edition/help/
Sam (and IIRC rio windows) use menus to get the job done which might be worthy of mention too.
Note though that in the computers that acme was used in, the mouse was like this: http://jfloren.net/b/2022/3/2/0
Outline + imenu is the way I roll. For automatic bookmarking, you may look at Bookmark+. I believe it has such a functionality.
mbox would be perfect. You can use Gnus or rmail to view them.
Maybe try org-padding? https://github.com/TonCherAmi/org-padding
There is C-x C-SPC and C-u C-SPC
You can use yank-media to do whatever you want with non-text selections in your clipboard. You can find an example of a function that attaches files copied using a file manager to an org file in this patch: https://yhetil.org/orgmode/[email protected]/
HTH.
You’re looking for rename-file function. For finding out the key of the current entry, you can use bibtex-parse-entry making sure point is on @XXX line.
I agree. The “keyboard warriors” always stick in their nose to boast about their keyboard-only workflow and how it is so-fast, etc., etc. while completely miss the point being made. I have seen this trend far too many times. OTOH, I am too biased to see acme not get the treatment (that I think) it deserves. :P
Ah, by linking the “help” paper, I was hoping to make a point that having a fluid workflow that relies on the mouse is possible. Since every argument preaches that using the mouse introduces friction…
As a pretty mouse-heavy user myself [1], I agree. Using the mouse is simply better for certain tasks and I wrote a “cry-for-help” myself a while back [2] to see if I can improve my mouse usage in Emacs. To this effect, I ended up writing a (hacky) minor mode that implements acme’s tags but I could never bend Emacs’ window management to my will and eventually stopped working on it once my mouse was stolen. :-(
[ Without a scroll wheel that is easy to press, that workflow is annoying. ]