Raman, I'm thinking that 1 is too specific and time consuming. 2 might be useful if other people wanted to contribute. Something like a grab bag of bits that have been useful to emacspeak users at some point in time all in a git repo. 3 Again, this stuff is pretty specific to emacspeak users so the generic emacs wiki doesn't feel right. I could just post to the list and hope that searches turn it up if required. Does anyone else have any stuff that would be contributable to a git repo. Kind regards Bart "T. V. Raman" <tv.raman.tv@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > A few thoughts: > > it's a balance between how much time you're willing to put into > packaging/documenting things vs how broadly it gets used. > > Based on these two parameters here are a range of choices I see: > > 1. Well-packaged/documented: publish via elpa -- easiest for the > user. > > 2. Check it into github as a first step -- with the goal of > getting to 1 -- risk is that it might be yet another > moribund/undiscovered blob of code > > 3. Create a page on the Emacs Wiki with tips and code fragments. >>>>>> "Bart" == Bart Bunting <bart@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > Bart> Morning, I have a couple of bits of glue, both elisp > Bart> and shell scripts that are pretty specific to my > Bart> workflow but never the less may be helpful for someone > Bart> out there. > Bart> > Bart> If anyone is interested let me know and I'll clean them > Bart> up and post. > Bart> > Bart> - I run emacs on the mac. I run windows in a vmware > Bart> fusion vm. I have Some elisp and a shell script that > Bart> let you send a file from a dired buffer over to the vm > Bart> and launch openbook on it and OCR the file. There are > Bart> limitations in that openbook has no scripting so it > Bart> just opens the file in openbook. It may be possible to > Bart> do more with some sort of automation on the windows > Bart> side but I find it convenient enough to just hit a key > Bart> in emacs and have the file OCR and open in windows. > Bart> > Bart> - The other is a bit of elisp that lets you open a file > Bart> from a dired buffer in chrome. Pretty simple but I find > Bart> it helpful. > Bart> > Bart> > Bart> Raman, is there a better way for the community to > Bart> collect these sort of hacks? I'm thinking now of things > Bart> that are really only useful to emacspeak users and not > Bart> the wider community? Perhaps a wiki or some sort of git > Bart> repo? -- > Bart> > Bart> > Bart> Kind regards > Bart> > Bart> Bart > Bart> > Bart> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Bart> To unsubscribe from the emacspeak list or change your > Bart> address on the emacspeak list send mail to > Bart> "emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx" with a subject of > Bart> "unsubscribe" or "help". Bart -- Kind regards Bart
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