Jim Myhrberg 358d5ff1c4 Disable company-mode in inf-ruby-mode
When entering interactive shells or debug sessions within inf-ruby,
emacs would often lockup for 10-15 seconds as you typed while company
was trying to figure out what possible completions there are. As far as
I saw, it never came back with any completion candidates. So let's just
diable it.
2018-12-20 15:50:35 +00:00
2016-01-30 12:04:36 +00:00
2017-08-08 02:25:01 +01:00
2018-05-20 18:05:50 +01:00
2018-12-20 04:21:10 +00:00

jimeh's .emacs.d (a.k.a. Emacs Siren)

This is my personal Emacs config, currently nicknamed Emacs Siren, and heavily inspired by Emacs Prelude.

However, this is not some form of an Emacs starter kit, it's simply my personal config with any quirks, oddities, bugs, and man-eating errors I live with on a daily basis.

Requirements

  • Emacs 25.3 or later. Earlier versions might work, but I haven't tested them.

Installation

  1. Clone the repo to ~/.emacs.d, and update git submodules:

     git clone git://github.com/jimeh/.emacs.d.git ~/.emacs.d
     cd ~/.emacs.d
    
  2. Launch Emacs and wait a few minutes while it installs all packages.

  3. Enjoy ^_^

Why not use Emacs Prelude?

Prelude is nice and all, but I don't need everything it does. I need a config that does what I need without having to potentially counter and/or work against some config framework. Hence I prefer rolling my own.

The way Prelude structures it's files and code however is very great, and something I took to heart when I started working on a rewrite of my config, and hence Emacs Siren was born.

Why call my config Emacs Siren?

I had been playing a lot of The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, and decided to pick a name based on a enemy type from the game. "Siren" was short and kinda cool sounding.

Siren

Description
My personal Emacs config with any quirks, oddities, bugs, and man-eating errors I live with on a daily basis.
Readme 5.6 MiB
Languages
Emacs Lisp 98.5%
Shell 1%
YASnippet 0.3%
Makefile 0.2%