Julio Biason
5 years ago
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title = "Mastering Emacs, Mickey Petersen" |
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date = 2019-11-18 |
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[taxonomies] |
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tags = ["en-au", "books", "reviews", "emacs", "mickey petersen"] |
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[GoodReads summary](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25587882-mastering-emacs): |
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Learn Emacs from the ground up. In the Mastering Emacs ebook you will learn |
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the answers to all the concepts that take weeks, months or even years to truly |
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learn, all in one place. |
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{{ stars(stars=4) }} |
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Why is an avid VIM user -- to the point that I usually do some *gatekeeping* in |
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which is the true editor for real programmers [^1] -- reading a book about |
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Emacs? |
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Well, for one, I wanted to learn how to use Org-Mode better, but with my usual |
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EVIL bindings, its keybinds feel alien and did not make a lot of sense. |
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And, thus, I decided to read a book about Emacs, to gear me up for using Emacs |
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without EVIL and make a more smooth passage to Org-Mode. |
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In that, I guess I can say that the book helped me, although I'm pretty |
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confident that I'm going to use VIM/EVIL bindings from time to time -- muscle |
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memory is not that easy to change. |
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One thing that stuck with me after reading the book is the concept of "flow", |
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in which you start a sequence of commands all with the same modifiers (or, at |
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least, with a bigger set and then with a reduced set). For example, how you |
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can keep Ctrl+Alt pressed and execute a bunch of changes without ever removing |
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your hand from Ctrl+Alt, or maybe just dropping one of those two keys, but you |
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keep the modifiers up all the time through the transformation. And while this |
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sounds awesome, it also shows that some Emacs commands do not follow the flow |
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and make a big mess of "Ctrl+Alt+key, key, Alt+key" in sequence -- thus, |
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removing you from the "flow". |
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Even with that, I feel not everything was perfect: |
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- There is a push towards using the configuration buffer/tool inside Emacs, |
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instead of showing the elisp command for that. I do understand that this |
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makes the book lighter and removes a lot of redundant information (why |
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describe how to set things up twice?) but with some things not being able to |
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configure through the configuration tool and some not, it just looks... |
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weird. And, to be honest, I'd prefer to see the elisp changes, 'cause one |
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could expand it into "let me show you some changes you can make on your |
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`init.el` to make this work" and, from there, you could expand to everything, |
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including package management. |
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- Speaking of package management, I already have experience with use-package, |
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which would download and enable packages, but there is no mention of it |
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(maybe it is a recent addition?) |
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- Sometimes, there is the same mistake VIM books do: explaining some topic and |
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going through it in a way to never come back. Although it does make sense |
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sometimes, sometimes it does not: You can be talking about movement and, |
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instead of explaining every single movement, you go to how to modify your |
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code and then come back to movement to explain more complex things, 'cause |
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they make more sense with text modification, making it easier to grasp the |
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movement concepts than explaining it along several others (and, again, |
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that's a mistake several VIM books do). |
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- As pointed, sometimes it shows how the flow can be broken, which would be |
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better moved out of the way and kept at the very end of the book, which |
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could be taken as being an example of the above point. |
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I could point that I'd like to have an EVIL topic, but the book starts saying |
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that it wouldn't touch that, so far point -- although I'd still prefer to have |
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some chapter about EVIL. |
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Also, I'd like to have a chapter about Org-Mode, but we can argue if that |
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makes sense to put along a "Mastering Emacs" topic or it should belong to some |
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other "Advanced" Emacs concepts. |
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In general, it's a good book about Emacs, specially pushing the concept of the |
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flow. |
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[^1]: Again, this is me playing with gatekeeping, a real programmer uses |
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whatever editor fits their workflow better -- and that includes editors |
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which do not fit my workflow. |
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