X-Git-Url: http://njoseph.me/gitweb/blog.git/blobdiff_plain/3010a505d5a0cbf7d05923ca11bfaac583534100..1ef2f5bcc27e048a60cc8f75436c0b72f79f8303:/content/posts/emacsconf-2019.md diff --git a/content/posts/emacsconf-2019.md b/content/posts/emacsconf-2019.md index 8e10722..8bded44 100644 --- a/content/posts/emacsconf-2019.md +++ b/content/posts/emacsconf-2019.md @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ --- title: "EmacsConf 2019" date: 2019-11-03T15:40:09+05:30 -lastmod: 2019-11-03T15:40:09+05:30 +lastmod: 2019-11-04T15:40:09+05:30 tags : [ "free-software", "emacs" ] categories : [ "conferences" ] layout: post @@ -107,8 +107,12 @@ people presenting it within Emacs and others using exported PDFs. Just like the Quake-inspired terminals Guake and Yakuake, there's one called [Equake](https://gitlab.com/emacsomancer/equake) that launches a drop-down eshell. -You can also use the racket shell called Rash, which is crazy powerful. This has -very good integration with StumpWM. +You can also use the Racket shell called Rash, which is crazy powerful. Equake has +good integration with StumpWM. + +I was aware of the existence of Yasnippet, but never really used it much. I am +more motivated to use this important productivity tool after watching the talk +"Don’t wait! Write your own (yas)snippet" by Tony Aldon. ### Accessibility @@ -130,3 +134,37 @@ building a framework for doing ad-hoc text processing and piping using Emacs. The hard reality is that text processing using macros or Elisp is very slow as compared to using a Python or Perl script. +### Language Server Protocol + +I've always imagined non-IDE editors like Emacs to be ideal for programming in +scripting languages. I tried using Emacs for Scala or Java earlier, but always +end up switching back to IntelliJ. I think the new LSP implementation for Java +is a game-changer. Though I am not a big fan of Java, it is the open-source +language that competes with Microsoft C# and has a lot of Apache projects +written in it. Being able to use Emacs for Java programming with all the +features of an IDE is definitely a big win for free software. Kotlin doesn't +have LSP support yet. Maybe it's a conflict of interest for JetBrains. + +The conference had an excellent live-coding demonstration of LSP by Torstein +Krause Johansen in his presentation titled "How Emacs became my awesome Java +editing environment". + +### Evil mode + +I was kinda disappointed that only one user used EViL mode. I expected that +there were at least one talk on Evil mode itself. There was one talk by Zaiste +about Doom Emacs but the title was too click-baity and showed no code. Maybe I +should do a talk focussed on evil-mode in the next EmacsConf. + + +## Diversity + +The conference seemed to have a good racial mix of speakers. There was a blind +speaker too. I am happy to see some representation from non-programmers among +the speakers. The conference can do better in terms of gender diversity. + +## Conclusion + +The conference was totally worth losing a night's sleep over. I had to stay up +till 5 am due to timezone differences. I am now more motivated to write some +Elisp myself and customize Emacs to my specific needs.