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Re: Adding refactoring capabilities to Emacs


From: Philip Kaludercic
Subject: Re: Adding refactoring capabilities to Emacs
Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2023 13:38:50 +0000

João Távora <joaotavora@gmail.com> writes:

> On Tue, Sep 26, 2023 at 11:57 AM Dmitry Gutov <dmitry@gutov.dev> wrote:
>>
>> On 26/09/2023 11:06, João Távora wrote:
>> > On Tue, Sep 26, 2023 at 6:36 AM Alfred M. Szmidt<ams@gnu.org>  wrote:
>> >
>> >> If you have a diff on file, you are most probobly going to apply it,
>> >> and also probobly going to remove a hunk or two or edit the diff in
>> >> some manner.  (That this is "relatively rare" I disagree from my own
>> >> usage and experience).  Not to mention that visiting a file on disk,
>> >> that is read-write, and Emacs making it read-only would be very
>> >> strange.
>> > I completely agree with these two points.  Even non-file diff-mode
>> > buffers, such as the ones provided by piping git diff into Emacs
>> > (yes, I can do that 😄 ) are generally better left read-write,
>> > since I frequently edit them to kill hunks I'm not interested in.
>>
>> 'k' (or M-k), 'C-c C-s' and 'C-_' all work fine in a read-only diff-mode
>> buffer. 'C-x C-s' also works, of course.
>
> I think it's very inconsistent to have specialized commands to modify
> a buffers contents and not allow all the other regular commands that
> modify a buffer do their work.  I don't have unlimited brain address
> space for keybindings and I think C-SPC C-n a few times C-w does
> the job just fine.

While I get this perspective, I also think that being able to close a
diff using 'q' is a nice, ergonomic-wise.

> Opening regular files of a special type read-only mode would be a
> spectacular failure in the basic ergonomics of an editor.
>
> João



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