Hello and thank you for reading this. I’m starting my journey to study Emacs, and I’m interested in turning Emacs in my IDE (mainly C, C++, JavaScript, Rust, and Python, etc…) and taking notes. Could you please give me your best suggestion on how to accomplish my goals? Thank you once more, and have a wonderful day/night.
:^
First off know that it will take time for everything to click and that is ok. One day you’ll go from struggling and annoyance and at various stages you’ll level up and what was once weird or annoying will become easy.
My biggest tips are:
C-H i
I know I put a lot here but if any of it intrigues you just take a note of it for the future and start simple with an initial setup and learn a bit of elisp and you’ll be off to the races!
How do yo deal with mobile?
I’m testing a couple of outlets here. I tend to be a very computer centric person so I’ve got my pc on at home and can step to it for quick check ins and at the office I’m on my PC. I sync everything with Sync thing and am looking to do git updates monthly.
I do have orgzly setup which I’m testing but my config is so specialized I don’t think this is the route I’ll be going full time.
For time tracking activities not when I’m not near a PC I will track time on tasks via an app and then add/update the task at home.
I was a bullet journaler for a while so I’ve been essentially doing a minimalistic mirroring of my tasks via a notebook I take with me. I also have an Ipad with apple pencil I use for hand written notes that I use. I’m sort of stuck on this point for a few reasons:
So for now mobile usage is in the air but it also isn’t a lynchpin for me. I’m torn for various reasons between analog and digital handwriting. Mobile workstation with the newer model iPad has some really interesting implications too.
I just suck it up and keep todoist for tasks, org-mode for the rest.
I get that. Bullet Journal was my long time mainstay which is why that’s my fallback.
Thank you; I will look into what you have said. :^)