From 8568ada6ddde91e4cd53ae2351385bca4d7d6531 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alan Pearce Date: Fri, 3 Apr 2020 21:44:24 +0200 Subject: Use more common front matter markers --- content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md | 14 +++++++------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) (limited to 'content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md') diff --git a/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md b/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md index d88d309..8c6d2bc 100644 --- a/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md +++ b/content/post/opening-projects-with-projectile.md @@ -1,10 +1,10 @@ -+++ -Categories = ["Emacs"] -Description = "" -Tags = ["emacs", "lisp"] -title = "Opening Projects with Projectile" -date = 2014-07-12T09:12:34Z -+++ +--- +Categories: ["Emacs"] +Description: "" +Tags: ["emacs", "lisp"] +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). -- cgit 1.4.1