Hi, I always use elisp-mode, which is super well documented and well supported with Emacspeak. Just follow the usual documentation, and Emacspeak will give you context-sensitive information. Transient buffers are one of the more annoying parts of Emacs because they don't fit within the usual model of exploring the buffer/screen and making a choice. However, Emacspeak does support some packages, like the Transient package used by packages like Magit. I haven't dug deep enough into this to see how much of the support is on transient itself, versus Magit's usage of transient. Either way, I'd say elisp is required learning for anyone using Emacs and Emacspeak. Unfortunately, per my subjective standards, subjective being the keyword, it is not as plug and play as I'd expect. Hope this helps, Parham Sent from my iPhone > On 7 Apr 2025, at 08:35, Dhruv <emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Hello: > > 1. For people who substantively work on elisp, what does your workflow look like? do you use a particular mode? is there anything in emaspeak which enhances the experience? > > 2. A bunch of different packages seem to open transient popups/minibuffers with additional details (which-key for example, or Embark). Has anyone worked with these? is there a way to read them? > Emacspeak discussion list -- emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe send email to: > emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with a subject of: unsubscribe
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