;; JD Smith 2024, based on https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/BufferLocalKeys | |
(defvar-local custom-buffer-local-keys nil | |
"Key-bindings to be set up local to the current buffer. | |
A single (KEY . BINDING) cons or list of such conses, of the form | |
`bind-keys' accepts. Set this as a file-local variable to make | |
bindings local to that buffer only.") | |
;; Only include this if you trust the files you open | |
(put 'custom-buffer-local-keys 'safe-local-variable 'consp) |
I used ion3 and later notion for a while and got used with its tiling style. It looked like this:
Idea is pretty simple - by default all new windows is adding to current frame as a tab. And current frame may be splitted horisontal/vertical. The Ion3's tiling is static - frames stays splitted even after window is closed. You can think about it as emacs's windows(ion's frame) and buffers(X's window). You can split window whatever you like and put any buffer to any window.
Ion3 was abandoned since 2009 and its successor "notion" did not change it much. My configs from 2008 still works pretty fine :)
I was always intrested in Xmonad project. First of all Xmonad's with Xmobar default theme looks pretty cool and its enough for me to check it. I tried Xmonad (and actually most of the other tiling WMs) many times, but always got back to notion. At this time I decided to take ion's tiling style with me to XMonad.
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