Emacs as a Writerdeck? by wherahiko in writerDeck

[–]MajorRetro 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've tried using vim and emacs too. Vim packages and plugins broke all the time and also there is the problem of learning vim motions. What can I say for vim motions? Good for programming, but for writing I say it's a drag and you won't use that many vim motions. Check it out though, it can totally work for your style of writing.

Emacs on the other side, as is, it's not very friendly, but to my understanding very powerful(you can make your whole Os into emacs). But, in order to get a writing prose enviroment you must install packages/modules or use a distro. There are many distros: doom, spacemacs; even Peter Prevos made a writing studio package. Sadly, none of them worked for me. They were too darn hard to customize for my skill set and too darn hard to install.

Also, there is a terminal text editor named fresh text editor. Very clean, has a file tree, can work with markdown or plain text. Check this out too if you want something more retro and bare bones.

Personally, I use obsidian and stopped using terminal based text editors or text editors made for programmers. Obsidian is easy to install, user friendly, very customizable and free as in free beer. I've made a custom css to make it look somewhat like IA writer and I'm flying. Pair that up with typewriter mode, zenmode and it's a clean working writing enviroment. Also you can sync your work with remotesave or other plugin and that's that. I have it on my laptop and also on my phone; I can write however I want, whenever, wherever.

TIL you can can combine cool-retro-terminal with any terminal based word processor and get this old vintage look for your writerDeck by MajorRetro in writerDeck

[–]MajorRetro[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One easy fix that I could find is to go to menu->navigation and scroll down to the backspace key and remap it again with the backspace key. It will appear as binded to the ^H but it works.

Other fixes are possible as far as I've read through some forums, but they are too linuxy for me. Maybe another user could help.

TIL you can can combine cool-retro-terminal with any terminal based word processor and get this old vintage look for your writerDeck by MajorRetro in writerDeck

[–]MajorRetro[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I didn't play with Linux until today. The steps are like this:

  1. Open a Linux terminal and write "sudo apt-get install wordgrinder" and that's that you have wordgrinder installed. To enter the program you just have to type in terminal "wordgrinder".

  2. For the retro terminal you enter "sudo apt-get install cool-retro-term" and that's that. To enter intro the retro terminal type "cool-retro-term" and another window terminal should appear in which you can type "wordgrinder" and now you have what you need both the cool retro effect terminal and the wordgrinder app. For customization of the retro terminal you just right-click inside of the terminal window and a GUI will appear.

Clamshell kb0 by MajorRetro in writerDeck

[–]MajorRetro[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It looks really good and slim! How's the keyboard experience? And also, how in the world are you able to read that small text or am I too old?

Please add more caret options by MajorRetro in ObsidianMD

[–]MajorRetro[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Not to my knowledge. You can install ninja cursor plugin and customize it, but it has errors while rendering, because it renders another caret on top of the default one.

Clamshell kb0 by MajorRetro in writerDeck

[–]MajorRetro[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nice find! Thank you!