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-rw-r--r-- | content/post/a-new-site.md | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md | 6 |
2 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/content/post/a-new-site.md b/content/post/a-new-site.md index 2285fe7..710a007 100644 --- a/content/post/a-new-site.md +++ b/content/post/a-new-site.md @@ -6,9 +6,9 @@ Title = "A New Site" Date = 2014-06-07T20:16:16Z +++ -I finally got around to making a website. I decided to use [Hugo] with a slightly-modified [Hyde theme]. +I finally got around to making a website. I decided to use [Hugo][]with a slightly-modified [Hyde theme][] -Someday I'll make my own theme, probably using [Stylus] for CSS processing. But for now, this will do. The more important thing is just to create some content. +Someday I'll make my own theme, probably using [Stylus][]for CSS processing. But for now, this will do. The more important thing is just to create some content. [Hugo]: http://hugo.spf13.com/ [Hyde theme]: https://github.com/spf13/hyde diff --git a/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md b/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md index 43ee6f1..4fc097a 100644 --- a/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md +++ b/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md @@ -6,11 +6,11 @@ title = "Opening Projects with Projectile" date = 2014-07-12T09:12:34Z +++ -I use [Projectile] for working with projects in Emacs. It's really good at finding files in projects, working with source code indexes (I use [Global]), and with its [perspective] support, it's also great at separating projects into workspaces. However, I've always felt it lacking in actually opening projects. I tend to work on different projects all the time and `projectile-switch-project` only tracks projects once they've been opened initially (despite the name, it works across Emacs sessions). +I use [Projectile][] for working with projects in Emacs. It's really good at finding files in projects, working with source code indexes (I use [Global][]), and with its [perspective][] support, it's also great at separating projects into workspaces. However, I've always felt it lacking in actually opening projects. I tend to work on different projects all the time and `projectile-switch-project` only tracks projects once they've been opened initially (despite the name, it works across Emacs sessions). With this in mind, I decided to try to add support for opening projects under a given subdirectory, e.g. `~/projects`, regardless of whether or not I've visited them before. -I saw that projectile uses [Dash.el] in some places, and after reading about [anaphoric macros], I decided that I'd try to use them to aid me. +I saw that projectile uses [Dash.el][] in some places, and after reading about [anaphoric macros], I decided that I'd try to use them to aid me. {{% highlight cl %}} (defun ap/subfolder-projects (dir) @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ So, we've got ourselves a list, but now we need to be able to open the project t By wrapping the call to `ap/subfolder-projects` in another function that takes the same directory argument, we can re-use the project parent directory and expand the selected project name into an absolute path before passing it to `projectile-switch-project-by-name`. -We get support for multiple completion systems for free, since projectile has a wrapper function that works with the default system, ido, [grizzl] and recently, [helm]. +We get support for multiple completion systems for free, since projectile has a wrapper function that works with the default system, ido, [grizzl][] and recently, [helm][]. Then I defined some helper functions to make it easy to open work and home projects. |