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Re: Different emacs arrangements in one session


From: Jai Dayal
Subject: Re: Different emacs arrangements in one session
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2014 18:16:13 -0500

Well, I guess Frames does *kind of* what I want it to do, I was just using
it incorrectly.

They're not as disjoint as I'd like, i.e., in one frame, I can access the
files in another.. I guess Frames really just manages window arrangements,
and doesn't actually multiplex different emacs sessions over one server.

Also part of the reason I want multiple terminals is because this code is a
distributed system, so after I compile something and I want to test it, I
like to be able to lauch multiple processes in different windows and see
the output live.

Jai


On Fri, Jan 24, 2014 at 6:09 PM, Dan Espen <despen@verizon.net> wrote:

> Jai Dayal <dayalsoap@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> >   I use Emacs primarily for development over SSH into a remote server. I
> > generally have several terminal sessions, many buffers of code, etc.
>  Often
> > times, I want the window arrangement for my ansi-term buffers to be
> > different than my code buffers.
> >
> > For example, Perhaps, I have my code buffers split into quarters, and
> then
> > I want to switch to one of my ansi-terms to compile the code. As it
> stands
> > now, that ansi-term will just take up one of my quarter screens, when I
> > want this to be my full screen.
> >
> > Any idea how to do this? I've looked at frames, but it doesn't seem to
> > quite work right?
> >
> > It should be noted, that on the remote server, I generally do emacs
> > --daemon and then emacsclient -c -nw
> >
> > this way, my environment persists across different logins.
> >
> > Any idea how I can accomplish the above?
>
> No not really.
>
> But switching to a terminal session to do a compile might not be the
> best way to use Emacs.  I do all my work in a similar ssh'd Emacs
> and save huge amounts of time driving all my compiling _and testing_
> using M-x compile.
>
> There are a lot of benefits to working this way.
> You'll never compile without saving your file first,
> Emacs can use the compiler messages to access lines in error,
> and if multiple files need compiling before a test
> the makefile takes care of all that.
>
> Oh, also, the window configuration is managed by M-x compile.
>
> --
> Dan Espen
>


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