I'm on an i5 first gen and when it opens it immediately pegs one of my
cores to 100% -- and pretty much stays that way, making Emacs very, very
slow and bogged down. The file is ~ 20,000 lines and weighs under 1 mg, so,
yeah, it shouldn't be a problem. Starting with no-init does clear up the
issue;
Lawrence Bottorff writes:
> How about a raw compact guide. The complete guide won't really load into
> Emacs very well on my machine.
Is this also the case when reading with emacs -q? If not, you have bad
mojo in your config. My five year old 1.8Ghz machine loads the file in a
couple of second
How about a raw compact guide. The complete guide won't really load into
Emacs very well on my machine.
On Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 12:18 PM, Rasmus wrote:
> Lawrence Bottorff writes:
>
> > What would the github link be?
>
> https://github.com/tsdye/orgmanual
>
> Tom frequents the list regularly
Lawrence Bottorff writes:
> What would the github link be?
https://github.com/tsdye/orgmanual
Tom frequents the list regularly if you want to know more about it.
—Rasmus
--
Evidence suggests Snowden used a powerful tool called monospaced fonts
What would the github link be?
On Tue, Feb 10, 2015 at 12:06 PM, Rasmus wrote:
> Lawrence Bottorff writes:
>
> > I'd like a copy of the documentation (short, long manuals) in their
> > original .org format. Where can I find them? My first logical guess was
> to
> > get the org distribution. But
Lawrence Bottorff writes:
> I'd like a copy of the documentation (short, long manuals) in their
> original .org format. Where can I find them? My first logical guess was to
> get the org distribution. But /doc/ doesn't seem to have them as .org files.
It's in texi. E.g. doc/org.texi. There's a
I'd like a copy of the documentation (short, long manuals) in their
original .org format. Where can I find them? My first logical guess was to
get the org distribution. But /doc/ doesn't seem to have them as .org files.
LB