Updated: 2023-11-17. Read more below
Nearly everything I write is in Emacs.1
It’s been slightly more than two years, since I made the move to using it as my everyday text editor.
I have a spartan Emacs config, with only a few customisations, that I found by watching David Wilson aka System Crafters’ Emacs From Scratch #1 video and the rest by searching on the web and asking around on the fediverse.
I’ve touched my config only about three times; basically every time I’ve found a new use for emacs.
- When I started editing text
- When I start using it as my Organiser (Org Mode) and
- When I began using it as my Zettelkasten (Org Roam)
Which is to say, I know only the bare bones of how Emacs configuration and Elisp work.
And yet … and yet …
I have this itch that rankles.
You see, every morning I sit at the computer with my cup of coffee, and pull up my tasks and notes and the agenda for the day.
Now I don’t use the agenda much, but the tasks and notes are a must.
So I open the tasks file and maximize my window and then I split my frame and I open the notes file, and then I go back to my tasks and I have it all ready just the way I like it.
Thing is, I’m grumpy in the morning and doing all that grates on me.
There’s gotta be a better way!
So I tried looking around, and came to the conclusion that creating a function, that did all this for me, would be the best thing.
But I know no Elisp.
And right now, I have no time to put into learning it. I did spend close to a day looking at what I could whip up, to no avail.2
So the next best idea I came up with, was recording my actions, doing the file opening, window arranging dance, as a macro and then assigning a keyboard shortcut to it.
That turned out to be iffy.
It’d work fine when I created it, but when I restarted my Emacs daemon (or my system) and then call it again, Emacs would freeze.
My intuition told me that it could be the fact, that a recorded macro3 could not handle opening files and switching buffers.4
Then I realised that I could outsource that part to the command line or my application launcher5 and leave the rest of it to the macro.
So I did just that. I created a Ulauncher shortcut.
It binds the keyword etn
to the command:emacsclient -c --no-wait ~/path/to/tasks.org ~/path/to/my/notes.org
so that Emacs opens both my tasks and notes files as it fires up.
A Ulauncher window, with name, keyword and the actual command to launch emacs
And in Emacs I bound a keyboard macro, to the rest of the recorded macro code that would
- Maximise the frame
- Split the frame into two windows, with my tasks on top and the notes in the bottom
- Have the cursor be ready at the place I needed it to be.
(defalias 'mjbtn
(kmacro "M-x t o g g l e - f r a m e - m a x i m i z e d <return>
C-x 2 C-x o C-x b n o t e s . o r g <return> C-x o M-g g 3 6 <return>"))
;; Assign a keyboard shortcut to the macro above: C-c z
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c z") 'mjbtn)
Et voilà! I have everything, just the way I want it.
And while it might not be fancy, it works without a fuss!
Update: 2023-11-17
One advantage of writing about what you do and putting it out there, is that really kind souls come along and teach you new things!
One of them is @laotang, over on the Fediverse.
Remember when I said, the best solution would be to write an Emacs function that would do what I wanted?
Well, laotang loved my tinkering and then went on to give me just that!
I raise my cup of coffee to you, Sir! You made my day! Thank you, so much!
Here’s the code he suggested.Worked like a charm!
(defun getting-ready ()
"Getting ready for work."
(interactive)
(toggle-frame-maximized)
(split-window-below)
(find-file "~/path/to/notes/notes.org")
(find-file-other-window "~/path/to/tasks/tasks.org"))
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c r") 'getting-ready)
Oh, and if you liked how Org-Roam worked in the past? When it was all just text files?
Well, if you want something like that, check out laotang’s feature-complete6 replica, ORGRR
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with the exception of code. ↩︎
Not much. there are lots of primitives and I cannot separate the language from Emacs specific stuff yet ↩︎
rather, my recorded macro ↩︎
Don’t know if this is true or not. This is just me scratching my head. I’m assuming a function that can call buffers and handle switching between them is the ticket. ↩︎
almost ↩︎