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author | Runxi Yu <harriet@andrewyu.org> | 2023-08-06 11:44:33 +0800 |
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committer | Runxi Yu <harriet@andrewyu.org> | 2023-08-06 11:44:33 +0800 |
commit | fd85c16d29f89568ef4bf5cef3e1147e76b1a5c0 (patch) | |
tree | 9ae6f2880415a2f400ea3c6995cc597f6e4fe896 /note/emacs.html | |
parent | 5eb0c6416bbc3254f886199e788f08e2008a4e20 (diff) | |
download | www-fd85c16d29f89568ef4bf5cef3e1147e76b1a5c0.tar.gz |
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diff --git a/note/emacs.html b/note/emacs.html index 84eb285..2a21741 100644 --- a/note/emacs.html +++ b/note/emacs.html @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ <body> <h1>A Few Problems with Emacs</h1> <p> - <a href="https://emacs.org/">Emacs</a> is supposedly a text editor but is more of a integrated computing environment. At its core is an Emacs Lisp interpreter and a text and buffer-oriented set of conventions that Emacs Lisp code follows. The ``default''/``standard'' build of Emacs contains a World Wide Web browser, newsreader, electronic mail client, Internet Relay Chat client, a few games, and overall a ton of stuff that I do not use, need or want in my environment. Therefore I use a minimal-ish custom build (i.e. simply leaving stuff out during <code>./configure</code>, which makes me feel a bit better. + <a href="https://emacs.org/">Emacs</a> is supposedly a text editor but is more of a integrated computing environment. At its core is an Emacs Lisp interpreter and a text and buffer-oriented set of conventions that Emacs Lisp code follows. The “default”/“standard” build of Emacs contains a World Wide Web browser, newsreader, electronic mail client, Internet Relay Chat client, a few games, and overall a ton of stuff that I do not use, need or want in my environment. Therefore I use a minimal-ish custom build (i.e. simply leaving stuff out during <code>./configure</code>, which makes me feel a bit better. </p> <p id="space-based-alignment"> One problem that I've recently noticed with Emacs is the tendency to use a set amount of spaces, expecting a monospace font, to align items across a buffer. For example, when <code>:tags</code> are used with <code>org-agenda</code>, the agenda page aligns the tags to the right of the page with spaces precalculated from the window size. But when we have double-width unicode characters, for example Chinese characters in the mix, or if we are using a variable-width Latin font, the alignment is completely screwed up. Resizing the window also doesn't update the wrapping and alignment of items inside. Emacs's text buffer-centric design makes it really hard to do otherwise. |