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jahnertz 2020-12-28 14:24:31 +11:00
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> **EDIT:** Syke! I now use [emacs-mac](https://bitbucket.org/mituharu/emacs-mac) because it plays better with the tiling window manager, [Yabai](https://github.com/koekeishiya/yabai).
Emacs is great. After using the MacOS carbon version of Emacs for about a year, I've come to depend on Org-mode as a second brain. It's become the place where I store notes, plan work and track my progress toward personal goals. Why would you want to use a text editor as an organizer? I'm by no means a coder. I do however, tinker and take things apart (without intending to put them back together). Emacs feels like its built for this purpose, not like it's pushing me toward publishing code. Emacs is great. After using the MacOS carbon version of Emacs for about a year, I've come to depend on Org-mode as a second brain. It's become the place where I store notes, plan work and track my progress toward personal goals. Why would you want to use a text editor as an organizer? I'm by no means a coder. I do however, tinker and take things apart (without intending to put them back together). Emacs feels like its built for this purpose, not like it's pushing me toward publishing code.
I came to Emacs via Vim and though the keys aren't nearly as natural, I was surprised to find that emacs editing keys are usable in most regular text editing in MacOS. After figuring out the standard bindings, the speed of all my text editing increased, not just when working in Emacs. I came to Emacs via Vim and though the keys aren't nearly as natural, I was surprised to find that emacs editing keys are usable in most regular text editing in MacOS. After figuring out the standard bindings, the speed of all my text editing increased, not just when working in Emacs.