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@CodyReichert
CodyReichert / react-es6-flow-emacs-configuration.md
Last active May 13, 2024 07:35
Configuring Emacs for react, es6, and flow

Configuring Emacs for react, es6, and flow

For a while, JSX and new es6 syntax had flaky support in emacs, but there's been huge work on a lot of packages. Using emacs for JavaScript with React, ES6, and Flow (or Typescript, etc) is really easy and powerful in Emacs these days.

This is how you can work on modern web development projects with full support for tooling like JSX, Flow types, live eslint errors, automatic prettier.js formatting, and more.

Set up web-mode

web-mode provides most of the underlying functionality, so a huge shout-out to the maintainer(s) there.

@itod
itod / split_keyboards.md
Last active June 12, 2024 12:08
Every "split" mechanical keyboard currently being sold that I know of
@azadkuh
azadkuh / vim-cheatsheet.md
Last active July 10, 2024 18:27
vim / vimdiff cheatsheet - essential commands

Vim cheat sheet

Starting Vim

vim [file1] [file2] ...

@mattratleph
mattratleph / vimdiff.md
Last active July 18, 2024 15:03 — forked from roothybrid7/vimdiff_cheet.md
vimdiff cheat sheet

vimdiff cheat sheet

##git mergetool

In the middle file (future merged file), you can navigate between conflicts with ]c and [c.

Choose which version you want to keep with :diffget //2 or :diffget //3 (the //2 and //3 are unique identifiers for the target/master copy and the merge/branch copy file names).

:diffupdate (to remove leftover spacing issues)

:only (once you’re done reviewing all conflicts, this shows only the middle/merged file)