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RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files
From: |
Drew Adams |
Subject: |
RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files |
Date: |
Wed, 14 Jan 2015 13:59:29 -0800 (PST) |
> so I started a personal project of code reading. I would like to start
> with (standard) Emacs files.
>
> However, here's a problem: I'd like to take notes while I'm studying.
> And it's no surprise that I'd like to use Emacs to do this. For obvious
> reasons, I don't want to make my notes in the files themselves (as
> comments). OTOH, if I copy them to some personal directory, I lose the
> ability to use find-function (which will jump to the original files).
>
> Do you have any suggestions for a good workflow for that? I might use
> Org-mode (and links), but it would involve jumping between buffers,
> which might not be optimal. Maybe someone has a better idea?
You can bookmark locations, and use annotations for your notes.
If you use Bookmark+ then you can use Org mode for the annotations.
- Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Marcin Borkowski, 2015/01/14
- RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files,
Drew Adams <=
- Re: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Marcin Borkowski, 2015/01/14
- RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Drew Adams, 2015/01/14
- Re: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Marcin Borkowski, 2015/01/17
- RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Drew Adams, 2015/01/17
- Re: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Marcin Borkowski, 2015/01/23
- RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Drew Adams, 2015/01/23
- Re: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Marcin Borkowski, 2015/01/24
- RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Drew Adams, 2015/01/24
- Re: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Marcin Borkowski, 2015/01/26
- RE: Advice on studying Emacs Lisp files, Drew Adams, 2015/01/26