Emacs 22: "And to think... I hesitated."
Feb. 24th, 2008 10:27 pmEmacs 21 came out on January 9, 2001, and it has been what I've been using until just about a week ago. I had tried several times to upgrade to Emacs 22, but 22.0 was just not doing it for me: font management seemed to be screwy and it wasn't using the fonts I'd set. There were other problems with it as well. Fortunately for me, given that Emacs is often my operating system (and Linux is just its device driver), I was paranoid about backing everything up before upgrading, so downgrading was just a matter of swapping install and untarring (that's the Unix version of "unzipping") the old archive.
Well, Emacs 22.1 came out recently and I decided to try the upgrade again. I'm so glad I did. There are so many things that I love about Emacs 22, let me tell you about them:
Well, Emacs 22.1 came out recently and I decided to try the upgrade again. I'm so glad I did. There are so many things that I love about Emacs 22, let me tell you about them:
- Everything I used in Emacs 21 works
- Gnus, Muse, Outline, W3M, LJComposer, LaTex, NoWeb, and Dired worked just fine out of the box. That made me happy. Even better, some of the programming modes are better, like the Javascript and Python modes, Ruby mode is new, and text editing now includes functional highliting and fill-individual-paragraph modes stock.
- ACPI works
- When I upgraded to my new laptop, which uses ACPI Configurable Power Interface, the battery status display, which depened upon APM Power Management, stopped working. Emacs 22 speaks ACPI, and my battery stats are back. Yay!
- Regular Expressions are much improved
- They were great in 21, and even better in 22. Especially the "do over" feature.
- Org-mode rocks my socks off
- I've used outline-mode for a long time, but it's clunky and difficult to grok. Org mode totally works, and fits my brain. It's an outlining mode that's very, very smart about "Do what I mean, organize it the way I want it organized," it speaks both an internal and external linking syntax (that's similar too-- but not exactly like, dammit!-- EmacsMuse's linking syntax, which again is similar too-- but not exactly like, dammit!-- EmacsWiki's linking syntax). I spent two hours organizing the Princess Jera and Prince Darwon stories using it, and was completely happy with it. There are external organizers for Linux, but a really, really good one inside Emacs totally fits the bill for me
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Date: 2008-02-25 04:47 pm (UTC)