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org-babel functions for lfe evaluation
This is the official Emacs mode for editing Julia programs.
Let it snow in Emacs! Command `snow displays a buffer in which it snows. The storm varies in intensity, a gentle breeze blows at times, and snow accumulates on the terrain in the scene.
Because Sass's indentation schema is similar to that of YAML and Python, many indentation-related functions are similar to those in yaml-mode and python-mode. To install, save this on your load path and add the following to your .emacs file: (require sass-mode) sass-mode requires haml-mode, which can be found at http://github.com/nex3/haml-mode.
pcsv provides parser of csv based on rfc4180 http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4180.txt ## Install: Put this file into load-path'ed directory, and byte compile it if desired. And put the following expression into your ~/.emacs. (require pcsv) ## Usage: Use `pcsv-parse-buffer`, `pcsv-parse-file`, `pcsv-parse-region` functions to parse csv. To handle huge csv file, use the lazy parser `pcsv-file-parser`. To handle csv buffer like cursor, use the `pcsv-parser`.
Preserve the state of scratch buffers across Emacs sessions by saving the state to and restoring it from a file, with autosaving and backups. Save scratch buffers: `persistent-scratch-save and `persistent-scratch-save-to-file'. Restore saved state: `persistent-scratch-restore and `persistent-scratch-restore-from-file'. To control where the state is saved, set `persistent-scratch-save-file'. What exactly is saved is determined by `persistent-scratch-what-to-save'. What buffers are considered scratch buffers is determined by `persistent-scratch-scratch-buffer-p-function'. By default, only the `*scratch* buffer is a scratch buffer. Autosave can be enabled by turning `persistent-scratch-autosave-mode on. Backups of old saved states are off by default, set `persistent-scratch-backup-directory to a directory to enable them. To both enable autosave and restore the last saved state on Emacs start, add (persistent-scratch-setup-default) to the init file. This will NOT error when the save file doesn't exist. To just restore on Emacs start, it's a good idea to call `persistent-scratch-restore inside an `ignore-errors or `with-demoted-errors block.
No description available.
This library implements a Slack backend for the Org exporter, based on the `md and `gfm back-ends.
This is a naive implementation of RFC4122 Universally Unique IDentifier generation in elisp. Currently implemented are UUID v1 v3, v4 and v5 generation. The resolution of the time based UUID is microseconds, which is 10 times of the suggested 100-nanosecond resolution, but should be enough for general usage. Get development version from git: git clone git://github.com/kanru/uuidgen-el.git
This library strives to be the most accurate possible with title-casing sentences, lines, and regions of text in English prose according to a number of styles guides capitalization rules. It is necessarily a best-effort; due to the vaguaries of written English it's impossible to completely correctly capitalize aribtrary titles. So be sure to proofread and copy-edit your titles before sending them off to be published, and never trust a computer. INSTALLATION and USE: Make sure both titlecase.el and titlecase-data.el are in your `load-path', and `require titlecase. You should then be able to call the interactive functions defined in this file. ; CUSTOMIZATION: Only two customization options are probably going to be of any interest: `titlecase-style (the style to use for capitalizing titles), and `titlecase-dwim-non-region-function', which determines what to do when `titlecase-dwim isn't acting on a region. If you want to use your own title-casing code, or a third party, you can customize `titlecase-command to something other than its default. One possibility is titlecase.pl, written John Gruber and Aristotle Pagaltzis: https://github.com/ap/titlecase.
Defines a major mode for editing gnuplot scripts. I wanted to keep it simpler than other modes -- just syntax highlighting, indentation, and a command to plot the file. Some of this code is adapted from a more full-featured version by Bruce Ravel (available here https://github.com/bruceravel/gnuplot-mode; GPLv2). Thanks to everyone, including Christopher Gilbreth and Ralph Möritz, for sending suggestions, improvements, and fixes. ; Installation: Use package.el. You'll need to add MELPA to your archives: (require package) (add-to-list package-archives ("melpa" . "https://melpa.org/packages/") t) Alternatively, you can just save this file and do the standard (add-to-list load-path "/path/to/gnuplot-mode.el") ; Configuration: If you installed this via `package.el', you should take advantage of autoloading. You can customize features using `defvar and `eval-after-load', as illustrated below: ;; specify the gnuplot executable (if other than "gnuplot") (defvar gnuplot-program "/sw/bin/gnuplot") ;; set gnuplot arguments (if other than "-persist") (defvar gnuplot-flags "-persist -pointsize 2") ;; if you want, add a mode hook. e.g., the following turns on ;; spell-checking for strings and comments and automatically cleans ;; up whitespace on save. (eval-after-load gnuplot-mode (add-hook gnuplot-mode-hook (lambda () (flyspell-prog-mode) (add-hook before-save-hook whitespace-cleanup nil t)))) If you installed this file manually, you probably don't want to muck around with autoload commands. Instead, add something like the following to your .emacs: (require gnuplot-mode) ;; specify the gnuplot executable (if other than "gnuplot") (setq gnuplot-program "/sw/bin/gnuplot") ;; set gnuplot arguments (if other than "-persist") (setq gnuplot-flags "-persist -pointsize 2") ;; if you want, add a mode hook. e.g., the following turns on ;; spell-checking for strings and comments and automatically cleans ;; up whitespace on save. (add-hook gnuplot-mode-hook (lambda () (flyspell-prog-mode) (add-hook before-save-hook whitespace-cleanup nil t)))
Do trivial arithmetic on the numbers at point. Attempts to preserve padding when it can. Examples: M-x number/add 1 RET 1 -> 2 05 -> 06 6.30 -> 7.30 07.30 -> 08.30 -08.30 -> -07.30 M-x number/pad 2 RET 5 -> 05 M-x number/pad 2 RET 6 RET 3.141 -> 03.141000 The "guessing" where the number is isn't yet quite awesome, e.g. it doesn't know that the 05 in "2014-05-01" is a month and not, e.g. the number -05. But you can use the region to explicitly denote the start and end of the number. The following keybindings might be nice to use: (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-+") number/add) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C--") number/sub) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-*") number/multiply) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-/") number/divide) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-0") number/pad) (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-=") number/eval)
Org-Babel support for evaluating Elm code ; System Requirements: All you need is Elm >= 0.19 installed on your system
AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short documents, articles, books and UNIX man pages. AsciiDoc files can be translated to HTML and DocBook markups. adoc-mode is an Emacs major mode for editing AsciiDoc files. It emphasizes on the idea that the document is highlighted so it pretty much looks like the final output. What must be bold is bold, what must be italic is italic etc. Meta characters are naturally still visible, but in a faint way, so they can be easily ignored.
Usage: evaluate (ipcalc "192.168.0.23/21")
Org-Babel support for evaluating mermaid diagrams. ; Requirements: mermaid.cli | https://github.com/mermaidjs/mermaid.cli
GNU Emacs 24 major mode for editing Raku code. Currently only provides very basic syntax highlighting.
Run Conway's Game of Life, in all windows, using the original window content as seed. In addition, when performing the animation, the original characters and the colors they have, are retained, resulting is a much more living result than when simply using, say, stars. By "seed", it means that the original content of the windows are seen as dots in the plane. All non-blank characters are seen as live dots. The Game of Life animation can be started as a screensaver, so that it starts automatically when Emacs has been idle for a while. By default, it stops after 1000 generations. Screenshot:  Usage: `gameoflife-animate -- Start the Game of Life animation. `gameoflife-screensaver-mode -- Run as a screensaver. The animation is started when Emacs has been idle for a while. About Conway's Game of Life: Conway's Game of Life is a simple simulation, originally developed in 1970, taking place in a two-dimentional grid -- think of it as an infinite chess board. A square can either be dead or alive. In each step in the simulation, the following rule applies: - A live square stays alive only if it has two or three neighbours. - A dead square is resurrected if it has exactly three neighburs. Personal reflection: I have noticed that sparse programming languages with a lot of highlighting, like C and C++, produde the most beautiful animations. More dense programming languages, like elisp, tend to "kill" many squares in the first generation, making them less suited for Game of Life seeds.
This let's you locally override functions, in the manner of `flet', but with access to the original function through the symbol: `this-fn'.
A quail-based input method for the Ogham script (beith-luis-nion).
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. This is a another exporter for org-mode that translates Org-mode file to beautiful PDF file EXAMPLE ORG FILE HEADER: #+title:Readme ox-notes #+author: Matthias David #+options: toc:nil #+ou:Zoom #+quand: 20/2/2021 #+projet: ox-minutes #+absent: C. Robert,T. tartanpion #+present: K. Soulet,I. Payet #+excuse:Sophie Fonsec,Karine Soulet #+logo: logo.png
Bongo is a flexible and usable media player for GNU Emacs. For detailed documentation see the projects README file at https://github.com/dbrock/bongo/
BNF Mode is a GNU Emacs major mode for editing BNF grammars. Presently it provides basic syntax and font-locking for BNF files. BNF notation is supported exactly form as it was first announced in the ALGOL 60 report.
Backend for company mode for the PicoLisp programming language