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# Emacs as a Highschooler: How It Changed My Life
Pierce Wang
Could Emacs be humanity's solution to the turbulent years of
adolescence? So much more than a text editor, Emacs changed the way I
approach everything at the age of 15. In the two years since
discovering Emacs in my sophomore year of high school, I have been
constantly amazed at what Emacs is capable of. In this talk, I would
like to share this journey of discovery and what I've learned along
the way, beginning with what led me to Emacs. I will reflect on my
experience of the Emacs learning curve and then also talk about the
many ways that Emacs has shaped my life as a student, programmer,
violinist, and a productive and happy adolescent. In each case, I
have thoroughly enjoyed figuring out the best way to make Emacs work
for me. Finally, I will reflect on my journey thus far and briefly
talk about my plans for the future.
<!-- from the pad --->
- Actual start and end time (EST): Start: 2020-11-29T13.06.20; Q&A: 2020-11-29T13.16.52; End: 2020-11-29T13.21.51
# Questions
## Q6: How would you introduce other classmates to emacs? Meaning what's the "gateway" drug to emacs?+1+1+1
### Would probably start with doom or spacemacs
### try to find their reason for using emacs
## Q5: What made you use Vim in the first place? Were you looking for a note-taking system in plain text (such as Markdown), or were you using it for programming?+1+1
### Used vim first time mainly for programming not for Markdown.
## Q4: I tend to think that life in school-age is somehow simple to organize since categories are easy to distinguish (years/classes, hobbies, …) in contrast to business life (many projects in parallel with many touch-points in-between them). From your point of view: do I have wrong memories on my time in school or did school change that much?
### School makes it easier to have a structured system.
## Q3: Assuming you keep real time notes during your lessons how do you manage to keep up with the lecturer's speed. I can write latex fragments pretty fast but I am not yet at the point that I can keep up with them. What are the tricks/snippets you use? Oh and do you have a git repo with your Emacs dots that we can see?
### Types pretty fast (~110 wpm); for math/science uses cdlatex, yasnippet expansion, and latex fragments
### Emacs config! <https://piercegwang.github.io/emacsd/init>
## Q2: What do your friends think :) ? (Do you collaborate with your friends?)
### Overwhelmed them by the positive experience at first :). Now that the configuration is somewhat stable Emacs doesn't come up as often in discussions, though. [someone can probably come up with a better summary of this answer]
### The general concensus is that it's an amazing piece of software, but they think it's too complicated for them to use. I think they also still have PTSD from the initial days when I was talking about Emacs **all** the time (whooops)
## Q1: Do you use Emacs for school assignments?
### answered in talk: yes, org-mode, export to latex -> PDF
### one org-mode template file with latex-fragments that is used for exporting
# Notes
## Discovered Emacs from: <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWD1Fpdd4Pc>
## Tried various note taking tools - settled on Org mode in Emacs.
## YouTube channel: <https://www.youtube.com/user/eywang/>
## Emacs config: <https://piercegwang.github.io/emacsd/init>
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