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2025-01-13

  • 20:27 UTC (new) (history) 2025-01-13 A minor Org Clive improvement . . . . mbork It’s been a while since I touched Org Clive, but I’m still using it. (Side note: after writing about a dozen articles on my Doctor Who weblog it went a bit dormant. I’m still thinking about it – in fact, even more than thinking, I’m slowly writing it – and I really do hope to come back to publishing there with some regularity. Stay tuned, and if you are interested, keep its RSS feed in your RSS reader.)

2025-01-05

  • 12:33 UTC (new) (history) 2025-01-05 Killing all buffers visiting files in a certain directory . . . . mbork When I leave the office, I generally close all work-related things – I sign out of Slack, shut down the virtual machine, and unmount the encrypted filesystem with work data. Obviously, I also want to kill all buffers “related to” that filesystem, for example all buffers visiting files there.

2024-12-25

  • 20:21 UTC (new) (history) 2024-12-25 Merry Christmas 2024 . . . . mbork What eye has not seen, and ear has not heard, and what has not entered the human heart, what God has prepared for those who love him. Let us rejoice, because Christ is born today to save us from the devil and the consequences of our own evil deeds! And let us rejoice because the Holy Spirit guides us every day so that we may do good, too! And according to the little tradition of mine, I will of course say a decade of Rosary for all of you, my dear readers. Happy Christmas!

2024-12-23

  • 15:48 UTC (new) (history) 2024-12-23 Watching variable changes . . . . mbork Today I have a short Elisp trick, probably slightly more interesting than useful, but still. A long time ago I wrote about some debugging capabilities of Emacs Lisp. The feature mentioned in the last of these posts, debug-on-variable-change, allows to invoke the debugger whenever some Elisp code changes the value of a variable (with a few minor limitations). What I didn’t mention then is that you can actually do things other than start the Emacs debugger when a variable’s value changes.

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