On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 11:00 AM, Eric S Fraga <e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk> wrote: > Matt Lundin <m...@imapmail.org> writes: > >> Jeff Horn <jrhorn...@gmail.com> writes: >> >>> On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 9:51 PM, Matt Lundin <m...@imapmail.org> wrote: >>>> alias emacs="emacsclient -t -a /usr/bin/emacs" >>> >>> Thanks for sharing this. My manual doesn't mention the -t flag. What >>> does it do? (I didn't know about -a, but it looks nifty) >>> >> >> Now that I consider this further (and read the emacs man page), I'm not >> sure if the -t flag is correct here. (It may be new to emacs 24). >> >> In any case, "-nw" is the tried and true flag for doing this. > > IIRC, -t is the same as -nw and is present from emacs 23.1 (maybe > earlier) onwards. Very useful when connecting from a non-graphical > terminal (e.g. a mobile phone) to an existing Emacs running on > X... something I do frequently via =screen= for emulating a persistent > connection.
So IIUC, I have a windowed Emacsen running on a box where I work. If I run `emacsclient -t somefile.txt` from an SSH connection to that box, it uses the server that was started by the windowed emacs, but instead of opening the file in the windowed emacs, it re-routes it to my SSH session? This would be extremely useful to me. However, when I tried that on my box just now, the terminal session froze and the windowed emacs was brought to the front without the correct buffer being displayed... wonder what I'm doing wrong... This is in my bash profile: function ec(){ emacsclient $1 --alternate-editor="" -t & } Any clues? -- Jeffrey Horn http://www.failuretorefrain.com/jeff/ _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode