Jesse Alama <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Today I decided finally to devote some time to making planner better > for me. I often wanted to think of planner as a bona fide emacs > application in its own frame like emacs-w3m and gnus, but I ended up > having to really work to think about planner this way. Part of that > is to be expected: Planner is supposed to be a kind of pervasive > application in the way that emacs-w3m and gnus are not. Nonetheless, > it seems to me that some progress can be made by putting the Planner > in its own frame, making it more like emacs-w3m (see > `w3m-pop-up-frames') and gnus (`gnus-other-frame'). The result is > planner-frame.el: a way to devote a distinguished frame to the > Planner.
Hmm, I've been essentially doing this same thing with elscreen. I fire up emacs, and start elscreen, which is to emacs what gnu screen is to xterm. I have one tab for each of: gnus, planner, erc, and eshell. For the most part, the related buffers never stray, and C-x b "Does the right thing" in each tab. But, since everything is running in the same session, remember is always there :) You can find out more here: http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?EmacsLispScreen -- Seeya, Paul _______________________________________________ emacs-wiki-discuss mailing list emacs-wiki-discuss@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-wiki-discuss