![]() Let us introduce web-mode into Emacs to make plain HTML editing comfortable. Here's an example of that: Install web-mode Therefore, in my Emacs environment, with such patience, only the setting that I say by all means survives. I think it was necessary to have the courage to reset it once because it was assigned to F4 when I noticed it. that was introduced later is often interrupted, so I assigned it to another key, but over time it violates the default value. The execution of the keyboard macro C-x e is two strokes, and the continuous execution C-x e e. However, when the environment is renewed or temporarily changed to another one, the stress of not being able to perform familiar operations is greater, so I will try to live in Emacs with the default values as much as possible. ![]() I think that beginners should devise such ideas for studying. In the old days, I also brushed ~/.emacs up and prepared shortcuts to make it easier to use. Then you may want ~/.emacs to have the following settings as well. 4 to 5 are workarounds when Emacs becomes heavy for editing a file that now has no possible line breaks, and you can also use the required horizontal scrolling. We would like to keep the strict settings for 1 to 3 as default values, but it seems that only 1 is maintained by M-x menu-bar-options-save. M-x toggle-horizontal-scroll-bar … show/hide horizontal scroll bar. ![]() M-x toggle-truncate-lines … truncate/not long lines.M-x isearch-toggle-lax-whitespace … loose/strict whitespace in incremental search.M-x isearch-toggle-case-fold … case-sensitive/not in incremental search.M-x toggle-case-fold-search … case-sensitive/not in search.Here, I will describe the functions considering to describe there. Useful key bindings for Emacs are summarized in detail (but not all) in the “Notes” section of the top navigation area. You can then resume editing after logging back into the OS desktop by booting up and answering the prompts. This is very useful.įrom the Emacs customizer, set Environment - Frames - Desktop - Desktop Save Mode to Enable, and a line '(desktop-save-mode t) will be added to the custom-set-variables. I wrote “session save function” in the title, but it is a function called “emacs desktop save mode”, which allows you to resume from a previous session from ~/.emacs.d/.sktop for example, even if you quit Emacs and start it up again. It just says that if you manually edit here, you write it in such a simple format, and that more than ~/.emacs will not work even if there are the others. If there is more than one, they won't work right. Your init file should contain only one such instance. If you edit it by hand, you could mess it up, so be careful. custom-set-variables was added by Custom. In addition, if you mess with variables as prompted by the Emacs customization feature, the following areas will be added to ~/.emacs.d/init.el. Lines automatically inserted into ~/.emacs These are the lines added to the end of ~/.emacs because Emacs prompted us to turn on the feature when we was trying to execute a command that had the feature turned off for beginners. If you are using Emacs, the content may be added into ~/.emacs.d/init.el. ![]() One of them is valid in this order, not all of them. el was added because it needed a suffix and for offline search, and directory was dug for more storage space about Emacs. Originally it was only the first one, but the. We call ~/.emacs historically, but currently refers to one of the following files:
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