From c5546a858e7d09d4ab329e6039c28b8fd0be2bbc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Bhavin Gandhi Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2020 23:19:27 +0530 Subject: Formatting, typos - talk 30, 32 --- 2020/info/30.md | 42 ++++++++++++++---------------------------- 2020/info/32.md | 32 ++++++++++++++------------------ 2 files changed, 28 insertions(+), 46 deletions(-) (limited to '2020') diff --git a/2020/info/30.md b/2020/info/30.md index e568ce30..1d54ac13 100644 --- a/2020/info/30.md +++ b/2020/info/30.md @@ -19,46 +19,32 @@ URL: - # Questions - ## Q5: Does/will this work with 'emacs -nw'? +Yes, it does. -yes, it does - - -## Q4: Thats a nice looking prompt, do you have it on a git repo we could see, or something of that manner? Thanks, I use bash right now so I didn't know it was the default on the others. - -It is not the default, but it is available easily with oh-my-zsh or similar on fish. I think the prompt is this: +## Q4: Thats a nice looking prompt, do you have it on a Git repo we could see, or something of that manner? Thanks, I use Bash right now so I didn't know it was the default on the others. +It is not the default, but it is available easily with oh-my-zsh or +similar on fish. I think the prompt is this: - ## Q3: Is there a plan to avoid the initial compilation step? +Not any time soon. You will have to compile vterm the first time you +start it. -Not any time soon. You will have to compile vterm the first time you start it. - - -## Q2: What are differences between Eshell and Vterm? - -performance - -Vterm is like xterm but in Emacs, eshell is like bash but in Emacs. +## Q2: What are differences between Eshell and vterm? +Performance. vterm is like xterm but in Emacs, Eshell is like Bash but +in Emacs. - -## Q1: could you put your testing scripts up somewhere? - -256colors: - -title: - -I cannot pastebin the 1MB of data, I pasted a sample of it: - +## Q1: Could you put your testing scripts up somewhere? +- 256colors: +- title: +- I cannot pastebin the 1MB of data, I pasted a sample of it: + # Notes - - diff --git a/2020/info/32.md b/2020/info/32.md index afabb47d..cc63fa0b 100644 --- a/2020/info/32.md +++ b/2020/info/32.md @@ -22,31 +22,27 @@ Elisp tools like generic functions, structs, and objects. - # Questions - ## Q3: Have you done any other projects using EIEIO and/or defstruct? - -"Right, EBDB is super deep into EIEIO, and was kind of written as a project for learning it, and the new gnus-search library is a more restrained usage. The search engines are defclasses, and much of the code is shared, which works quite well." +Right, EBDB is super deep into EIEIO, and was kind of written as a +project for learning it, and the new gnus-search library is a more +restrained usage. The search engines are defclasses, and much of the +code is shared, which works quite well. -## Q2: Is there may activity on maintenance of gnus today? (and is Lars involved/aware of this work?) - -"Yes, there's still development going on. I don't think Lars is very focused on Gnus right now, but I run all changes by him first. He fixes bugs, but as far as I know, I'm the only one adding features right now, which is a terrifying thought." - +## Q2: Is there may activity on maintenance of Gnus today? (and is Lars involved/aware of this work?) +Yes, there's still development going on. I don't think Lars is very +focused on Gnus right now, but I run all changes by him first. He +fixes bugs, but as far as I know, I'm the only one adding features +right now, which is a terrifying thought. ## Q1: How much of this 90's funny code :) can be replaced and how much will have to stay forever? - -Eventually I think we can get most of it out of there. I was - -happy to be able to replace obarrays-as-hashtables with real - -hashtables, though that was a very painful process - +Eventually I think we can get most of it out of there. I was happy to +be able to replace obarrays-as-hashtables with real hashtables, though +that was a very painful process # Notes - - -Famous last words: "Sometimes the only thing that's worse than not knowing why something doesn't work is not knowing why it does work." +Famous last words: "Sometimes the only thing that's worse than not +knowing why something doesn't work is not knowing why it does work." -- cgit v1.2.3