* ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
@ 2016-07-27 16:43 Robert Weiner
2016-07-28 17:16 ` Charles Philip Chan
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Robert Weiner @ 2016-07-27 16:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
GNU Hyperbole (pronounced Ga-new Hi-per-bo-lee), or just Hyperbole, is an
amazing programmable hypertextual information management system implemented as
a GNU Emacs package. This is the first public release in 2016. Hyperbole has
been greatly expanded and modernized for use with the latest Emacs 25
releases; it supports GNU Emacs 24.4 or above. It contains an extensive set
of improvements that can greatly boost your day-to-day productivity with Emacs
and your ability to manage information stored across many different machines
on the internet. People who get used to Hyperbole find it helps them so much
that they prefer never to use Emacs without it.
Hyperbole includes easy-to-use, powerful hypertextual button types and links
that can be made without the need to learn a markup language. without the need
to learn a markup language. It also includes a hierarchical, record-based
contact manager, a rapid window and frame control system and a powerful
multi-level auto-numbered outliner. All features are aimed at making textual
information management and display fast and easy.
Hyperbole embeds hypertext buttons within unstructured and structured files,
mail messages and news articles. It offers intuitive keyboard and mouse-based
control of information display within multiple windows. It also provides
point-and-click access to World-Wide Web URLs, Info manuals, ftp archives, etc.
The Hyperbole wiki page, "https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/Hyperbole", explains
the many ways it differs from and is complementary to Org mode.
Instructions follow on how to download, install and utilize GNU Hyperbole as an
Emacs package. These are followed by What's New with Hyperbole in 2016.
Bob Weiner designed and programmed GNU Hyperbole. He and Mats Lidell maintain
it for the Free Software Foundation. It includes an interactive demo to
introduce you to its features and a detailed reference manual.
===========================================================================
* About
===========================================================================
GNU Hyperbole consists of five parts:
* Buttons and Smart Keys
a set of hyperbutton types which supply core hypertext and other
behaviors. Buttons may be added to documents (explicit buttons)
with a simple drag between windows, no markup language needed.
Implicit buttons are patterns automatically recognized within text
that perform actions, e.g. bug#24568 displays the bug status
information for that bug number.
Buttons are accessed by clicking on them or referenced by name
(global buttons), so they can be activated regardless of what is on
screen. Users can make simple changes to button types. Emacs Lisp
programmers can prototype and deliver new types quickly.
Hyperbole includes two special `Smart Keys', the Action Key and the
Assist Key, that perform an extensive array of context-sensitive
operations across emacs usage, including activating and showing
help for Hyperbole buttons. In many popular Emacs modes, they
allow you to perform common, sometimes complex operations without
having to a different key for each operation. Just press a Smart
Key and the right thing happens;
* Contact and Text Finder
an interactive, textual information management interface,
including fast, flexible file and text finding commands. A
powerful, hierarchical contact manager, HyRolo, which anyone can
use, is also included. It is easy to learn since it introduces
only a few new mechanisms and has a menu interface, which may be
operated from the keyboard or the mouse;
* Screen Control
the fastest, easiest-to-use window and frame control available for
GNU Emacs, called HyControl. With just a few keystrokes, you can
shift from increasing a window's height by 5 lines to moving a
frame by 220 pixels or immediately moving it to a screen corner.
Text in each window or frame may be enlarged or shrunk (zoomed) for
easy viewing, plus many other features;
* Hypertextual Outliner
an advanced outliner, the Koutliner, with multi-level
autonumbering and permanent identifiers attached to each outline
node for use as hypertext link anchors, per node properties and
flexible view specifications that can be embedded within links or
used interactively;
* Programming Library
a set of programming libraries, for system developers who want to
integrate Hyperbole with another user interface or as a back-end
to a distinct system. (All of Hyperbole is written in Emacs Lisp
for ease of modification. It has been engineered for real-world
usage and is well structured).
The GNU Hyperbole project home page gives a more extensive description:
"https://www.gnu.org/software/hyperbole/".
===========================================================================
* Package Installation
===========================================================================
Once you have Emacs set up at your site, GNU Hyperbole may be
installed simply by using the Emacs Package Manager. If you are not
familiar with it, see the Packages section of the GNU Emacs Manual,
"(emacs)Packages", or:
"https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Packages.html".
If you have Hyperbole 5.10 or higher already installed and simply want to
upgrade it, invoke the Emacs Package Manager with {M-x list-packages RET},
then use the {U} followed by the {x} key to upgrade all out-of-date
packages, Hyperbole among them. Then skip the text below and move on to
the next section, Invocation.
Otherwise, to download and install the Hyperbole package, add the following
lines to your personal Emacs initialization file, typically "~/.emacs".
(require 'package)
(setq package-enable-at-startup nil) ;; Prevent double loading of libraries
(package-initialize)
(unless (package-installed-p 'hyperbole)
(package-refresh-contents)
(package-install 'hyperbole))
(require 'hyperbole)
Now restart Emacs and Hyperbole will be downloaded and compiled for use with
your version of Emacs. You may see a bunch of compilation warnings but these
can be safely ignored.
===========================================================================
* Invocation
===========================================================================
Once Hyperbole has been installed for use at your site and loaded into your
Emacs session, it is ready for use. You will see a Hyperbole menu on your
menubar and {C-h h} will display a Hyperbole menu in the minibuffer for
quick keyboard-based selection.
You can invoke Hyperbole commands in one of three ways:
use the Hyperbole menu on your menubar;
type {C-h h} or {M-x hyperbole RET} to bring up the Hyperbole main menu
in the minibuffer window, for fast keyboard or mouse-based selection;
select an item from this menu by typing the item's first letter; use {q}
to quit from the menu.
use a specific Hyperbole command such as an Action Key click {M-RET} on
a pathname to display the associated file or directory.
Use {C-h h d d} for an interactive demonstration of standard Hyperbole
button capabilities.
{C-h h k e} offers a interactive demonstration of the Koutliner,
Hyperbole's multi-level autonumbered hypertextual outliner.
To try out HyControl, Hyperbole's interactive frame and window control
system, use {C-h h s w} for window control or {C-h h s f} for frame
control. {t} switches between window and frame control once in one of
them.
The above are the best interactive ways to learn about Hyperbole. The
Hyperbole Manual is a reference manual, not a simple introduction. It is
included in the "man/" subdirectory of the Hyperbole package directory in
four forms:
"man/hyperbole.info" - online Info browser version
"man/hyperbole.html" - web HTML version
"man/hyperbole.pdf" - printable version
"man/hyperbole.texi" - source form
The Hyperbole package installation places the Info version of this manual
where needed and adds an entry for Hyperbole into the Info directory under
the Emacs category. {C-h h d i} will let you browse the manual. For web
browsing, point your browser at "${hyperb:dir}/man/hyperbole.html",
wherever the Hyperbole package directory is on your system; often this is:
"~/.emacs.d/elpa/hyperbole-${hyperb:version}/".
===========================================================================
* User Quotes
===========================================================================
*** MAN I love Hyperbole!!! Wow! ***
-- Ken Olstad
Cheyenne Software, Inc.
-------
I *love* koutlines.
-- Bob Glickstein
Z-Code Software Corporation
-------
For me, Emacs isn't Emacs without Hyperbole. I have depended on Hyperbole
daily since 1992, when I first started using it to manage my development
environment. It didn't take long before I could summon almost any
information I needed directly from within my editing environment with an
implicit button. Since I almost never have to slow down to look for
things--one context-dependent button usually produces exactly what I need
--I am able to maintain focus on the task I am working on and complete it
more quickly. With its gestural interface, seamless integration with other
Emacs packages and incredibly useful set of core features. I think that
Hyperbole is one of the best designed and most easily extensible software
products I have ever come across. It is certainly the one which has made
the biggest improvement in my personal productivity.
-- Chris Nuzum
Co-founder, Traction Software, Inc.
-------
I've found Hyperbole (in conjunction with XEmacs) to be very useful
for signal processing algorithm development.
For me, it has almost completely obsoleted the engineering notebook:
I keep a set of files with ideas, algorithms, and results, linked
together and to the implementation in C++ files. Using XEmacs'
support for embedding graphics, I've written a mode that accepts
image tags (formatted like HTML), and reads in GIF files to display
plots. I have another program that converts the file to HTML (not
perfect, but adequate), so I can put any aspect of development on
our internal web for others to see.
-- Farzin Guilak
Protocol Systems, Inc., Engineer
-------
I am blind and have been using Hyperbole since 1992. I used to use a PC as
a talking terminal attached to a UNIX system, but then I developed
Emacspeak which lets me use Emacs and Hyperbole from standard UNIX
workstations with an attached voice synthesizer.
My main uses are:
1) Global and implicit buttons for jumping to ftp sites.
2) The contact manager with Emacspeak support.
3) Explicit buttons as part of comments made about a structured document.
Each button jumps to the document section referred to by the comment.
This is very, very useful.
4) The Hyperbole Koutliner, which I find a very useful tool. I've
implemented Emacspeak extensions to support it.
-- TV Raman
Google Inc.
-------
I've been a grateful Hyperbole user for a few years now. Hyperbole's
flexibility and ease of use is a marvel.
Mainly, I write easy little implicit button types (and corresponding action
types) to make my life easier. For example, I have an implicit button type
to bury certain buffers when I click at their bottoms, one that recognizes
a bug report record in various contexts and edits it, one that links pieces
of test output in a log file to the corresponding test case source code
(EXTREMELY helpful in interpreting test output), others that support our
homegrown test framework, one that handles tree dired mode the way I'd
like, one that completely handles wico menus (I've also overloaded the
wconfig actions triggered by diagonal mouse drags with wicos actions), and
a couple that support interaction with BBDB.
Other than that, I keep a global button file with 30 or so explicit buttons
that do various little things, and I index saved mail messages by putting
explicit link-to-mail buttons in an outline file.
-- Ken Olstad
Cheyenne Software, Inc.
-------
In general, Hyperbole is an embeddable, highly extensible hypertext
tool. As such, I find it very useful. As it stands now, Hyperbole is
particularly helpful for organizing ill-structured or loosely coupled
information, in part because there are few tools geared for this purpose.
Hyperbole also possesses a lot of potential in supporting a wider
spectrum of structuredness, ranging from unstructured to highly
structured environments, as well as structural changes over time.
Major Uses:
* Menu interface to our own collaborative support environment called
CoReView: This interface brings together all top-level user commands
into a single partitioned screen, and allows the end user to interact
with the system using simple mouse-clicking instead of the meta-x key.
* Gateway to internet resources: this includes links to major Internet
archive sites of various types of information. Links are made at both
directory and file levels.
* Alternative directory organizer: The hierarchical nature of the Unix
file system sometimes makes it difficult to find things quickly and
easily using directory navigational tools such as dired. Hyperbole
enables me to create various "profile" views of my directory tree, with
entries in these views referring to files anywhere in the hierarchy.
* Organizing and viewing online documentation: using Hyperbole along with
Hyper-man and Info makes it truly easy to look up online documentation.
* Other desktop organization tasks: including links to various mail
folders, saved newsgroup conversation threads, online note-taker,
emacs-command invocations, etc.
-- Dadong Wan
University of Hawaii
-------
Hyperbole is the first hyper-link system I've run across that is
actually part of the environment I use regularly, namely Emacs. The
complete flexibility of the links is both impressive and expected -- the
idea of making the link itself programmable is clever, and given that one
assumes the full power of Emacs. Being able to send email with buttons
in it is a very powerful capability. Using ange-ftp mode, one can make
file references "across the world" as easily as normal file references.
-- Mark Eichin
Cygnus Support
-------
I just wanted to say how much I enjoy using the Hyperbole Koutliner.
It is a great way to quickly construct very readable technical documents
that I can pass around to others. Thanks for the great work.
-- Jeff Fried
Informix
-------
The Hyperbole system provides a nice interface to exploring corners of
Unix that I didn't know existed before.
-- Craig Smith
===========================================================================
* What's New in GNU Hyperbole
===========================================================================
NOTE: Version 6.0.1 is the first public release by the author, Bob Weiner,
since version 4.18. All version 5 releases made this year were test releases,
so you should look through all of the V5 news items to understand all that is
new in V6 as well. In other words, all news items listed below are new for
2016.
===========================================================================
* V6.0.0 - V6.0.1
===========================================================================
HYROLO
- The Hyperbole contact manager has been renamed to HyRolo and all of its
identifiers now begin with hyrolo-. If you had a custom value of
`rolo-file-list' in your ~/.emacs file, you should rename it to
`hyrolo-file-list'.
KEYS
- Removed the {RET} key bindings of the Action Key in read-only modes since
it was not consistent across all modes and probably was little used. It
also could interfere with mode-specific usage of this key. Just use the
standard Action Key bindings.
MAIL
- Implicit mail address buttons are recognized in many more programming
modes. See the value of `mail-address-mode-list'.
VARIABLES
- Hyperbole is now integrated with the Emacs option customization system,
allowing for interactive editing and permanent setting of many Hyperbole
options. Use {M-x customize-browse RET} and find the Hyperbole group
under Applications. Hyperbole's options are divided into logical
subgroups such as Rolo and Koutliner. See "(emacs)Easy Customization"
for details on the customization system and "(hyperbole)Configuration"
for Hyperbole specifics.
- Renamed any Hyperbole hook variables that had a colon in their names to
use a hyphen instead.
- hsite.el is now included in the Hyperbole package rather than generated.
Use the Hyperbole customization variables to change anything in there
rather than editing the file manually as before.
WINDOW CONFIGURATIONS
- Similarly, the commands from the Win/ menu from Wconfig have been renamed
to begin with hywconfig- and the library is now called hywconfig.el.
===========================================================================
* V5.15
===========================================================================
BUTTONS
- New Implicit Button Type, debbugs-gnu-mode: When on a GNU Debbugs listing
entry in debbugs-gnu-mode, an Action Key press displays the discussion of
the selected issue; an Assist Key press pretty prints the status of the
issue to a window below the listing window. This augments the
debbugs-gnu-query implicit button type from V5.14 which recognizes
bug/issue ids and queries in any buffer.
- Initial Org Mode Support: The new implicit button type, org-mode, follows
Org mode hyperlinks and cycles display views of Org mode outline headings.
When on a heading, the Action Key cycles the view of the subtree at point
and the Assist Key cycles the view of all headings in the buffer.
Suggest other good ideas for Smart Key actions on Org entities and we'll
likely implement them.
- Links to Info Manual Index Items: You can now drag between windows with
the Action Mouse Key depressed to an Info Manual index menu entry to
create an explicit button link to it (or use {C-h h e c} with an action
type of link-to-Info-index-item). Then the button will always take you
to the line in the manual referenced by that index item. This also works
with other Info menu items and cross-references. Implicit buttons that
reference index items work too, like "(hyperbole)C-c C-m"! And when you
are creating the link, full completion of the file name (within
parentheses) and the index item name is provided; just type ? to list
completions after typing a few characters. Since Emacs and most GNU
programs include Info manuals, you now have a simple way to link to and
jump to any marked item within any manual.
Previously, when creating a link to an Info manual node, Hyperbole
would ignore cross-references and menu items and just link directly
to the node rather than anything it referenced. To get that behavior
now, simply link to a place in the node that does not reference another
place.
- Link Button Creation: Hyperbole now shows you what you linked to at
global or explicit link button creation time. Previously, it showed you
only the type of the link. So if you drag across windows from a button
label to an Info index item now, you will know that the link goes to the
index item entry and not to the index node containing the item reference.
- New Implicit Button Type, pathname-line-and-column: A whitespace or quote
delimited existing pathname followed by a :line-num and an optional
:column-num displays the path at line-num and column-num. So
"~/.emacs:10:40" shows your Emacs initialization file at line 10 and
column 40. The column number is optional.
- GNU Info Manual Key Sequences: Previously, Hyperbole recognized key
sequences delimited by curly braces only, {}. Now it recognizes the
quotation marks used in GNU Info manuals as well and can execute them
with an Action Key press within Info buffers.
- Imenu Item Recognition: When the Emacs imenu library is in use and an
identifier menu has been generated for the current buffer, an Action Key
press on an identifier at point jumps to the identifier definition
within the current buffer; an Assist Key press prompts with completion
for an identifier defined within the buffer and then jumps to its
definition.
DOCUMENTATION
- Smart Key Debugging: Added a section, "(hyperbole)Smart Key Debugging",
to the Hyperbole Manual, documenting the usage of the Customize Menu
option, Toggle-Smart-Key-Debug (minibuffer menu Cust/Debug-Toggle,
{C-h h c d}).
KEYS
- Toggle Hyperbole Keys: The new command, {M-x hyperbole-toggle-bindings
RET}, toggles Hyperbole mouse and keyboard keys off and on. This is not
bound to a key because it will make Hyperbole unusable until the keys are
re-established with another toggle. This forces you to know what you are
doing before you utilize this feature.
MENUS
- Minibuffer Keyboard Direct Selection: You have always been able to click
with your mouse on a minibuffer menu item to directly select it. Now
Hyperbole has the keys {TAB} or {M-f} to move to the next menu item and
{Shift-TAB}, {M-TAB} or {M-b} to move to the previous item, with each
cycling back when it reaches the end or beginning of the menu. The
fastest way to select minibuffer menu items from the keyboard remains
typing the first letter (case-insensitive) of the menu item.
- Minibuffer Menu Navigation Changes: A press of {RET} with point at the
end of a menu, quits from the menu. {RET} with point in a menu prefix
(before the '>' character), returns to the top-level Hyperbole menu.
Clicks of the Action Mouse Key do the same thing, so now you can
navigate and quit from menus with just the Action Mouse Key.
===========================================================================
* V5.13 and V5.14
===========================================================================
BUTTONS
- Instant Bug Lookups and Queries: New Gnu Debbugs bug/issue tracking
implicit button type, debbugs-gnu-query, that jumps to the description
and discussion of issues by issue number and displays an issue's status.
This works for the GNU Hyperbole issue tracker as well as many other GNU
projects. All of these button formats may be embedded within any text:
#id-number
bug#id-number, bug# id-number, bug #id-number or bug id-number
bug?attr1=val1&attr2=val2&attr3=val3
bug#id-number?attr1=val1&attr2=val2&attr3=val3
Note that `issue' or `debbugs' may be used in place of `bug'.
See the documentation at the start of "hib-debbugs.el" for more
information.
- During the creation of link-to-Info-node explicit buttons with an
argument of the type (filename)nodename, full completion is offered for
both the filename and the node name; just type ? to list completions
after typing a few characters. You now can drop the .info suffix from
filenames as well, so "(hyperbole)Smart Keys" works fine as a node
reference.
- Implicit links from the output of the UNIX apropos command now work
properly in Emacs 25.
- Implicit pathname matches now handle compressed Emacs Lisp files found
anywhere within the directories of `load-path' and do not try to expand
paths that begin with a ~.
- New variable, `hpath:info-suffix', is a regular expression of Info
filename suffixes which may be ommitted when using parenthesized Info
filenames in links; this allows for compressed Info file matches and Info
pathnames of the form "(Hyperbole)" to work. That displays the top node
of the Hyperbole Manual in the Info browser.
- Pathnames ending in .mp3, .wav or .ogg are played as music files rather
than displayed if your Emacs has support for this. Modify the value of
the variable, `hpath:internal-display-alist' to add more formats.
- New per-window system association list variables determine what if any
file types within Hyperbole hyperlinks are displayed by external programs
outside of Emacs. See the values of and documentation for:
`hpath:external-display-alist-macos', `hpath:external-display-alist-mswindows',
and `hpath:external-display-alist-x'.
- Added support for &, ~, and ^ as identifier characters in Lisp tags and
removed #.
DOCUMENTATION
- DEMO File: Major updates to reflect the latest Hyperbole features. Added
sections on HyControl, Creating and Modifying Explicit Buttons and
Path Suffixes and Variables. Try it out with {C-h h d d}.
- Hyperbole Manual
- Updated all screenshots in the manual; thanks to Mats L.
- In the "(hyperbole)Internal Viewers" section, added a description of
the file formats supported by the default setting of the
`hpath:internal-display-alist' variable.
- Added sections "(hyperbole)Smart Key Modifiers" and
"(hyperbole)Smart Key Modeline".
- Added a "(hyperbole)Glossary" entry for Chord Keyboard.
- In "(hyperbole)Smart Key Thing Selection", added documentation of the
{C-c RET} key for syntactical region marking and the {C-c .} key for
delimited thing jumping between start and end.
- In the Cust/ menu section of "(hyperbole)Menus" which lists all
Hyperbole key bindings, indicated which keys are bound only if not
bound prior to loading Hyperbole.
HYCONTROL
- Frame placement calculations now account for window system decorations
around frame, leading to improved placement offsets around screen edges.
See the documentation for `hycontrol-set-screen-offsets'.
MENUS
- On the Hyperbole menubar menu, the Types submenu which shows
documentation for Hyperbole types has been moved below the Documentation
menu to match the Hyperbole minibuffer menu location. Also added a Types
menu item under the Explicit-Button menu to match the one under the
Implicit-Button menu.
- On the Hyperbole Customize/Change-Key-Bindings menubar menu, renamed
these entries and added Mark-Think-Key. Similar updates done to the
minibuffer menu.
MOUSE AND SMART KEY SUPPORT
- An Action Key press on a Hyperbole minibuffer menu key sequence now
invokes the associated menu action. Try it with {C-h h d g} to see the
Hyperbole glossary. An Assist Key press shows help for the menu item.
- Changed the `assist-key-default-function' which applies in an unrecognized
context to trigger an error by default to match the behavior of the
Action Key. Its prior value, toggle display of or hide the Smart Key
summary, is performed by an Assist Key click in the right of a modeline
or via minibuffer menu with {C-h h d s}.
- Point is now left within the Smart Key summary by default and it is in
help mode so you can page through it with SPC and DEL keys and then quit
from it with {q}.
- A click of the Action Mouse Key within an inactive minibuffer menu
displays the Hyperbole minibuffer menu, allowing you to invoke menu
entries with the mouse. A click of the Assist Key in the same place
displays the buffer, window and frame jump menu just as does a click
within the middle of a modeline since it is easy to miss by a little and
click on one or the other. These behaviors are controlled by the new
variables, `action-key-minibuffer-function' and
`assist-key-minibuffer-function'.
- Distributed Window System Support: Previously, Hyperbole supported mouse
control only on the screen on which it was launched. If you used
emacsclient or other means to create a frame on another screen or outside
of a terminal, that frame would not have Hyperbole mouse support even
though it was under a window system. Now each frame receives mouse
support whenever its window system has mouse support.
- Improved support for using the Action and Assist Mouse Keys as Control-
and Meta- modifier keys, mainly for use with a chord keyboard or to
balance hand use to reduce carpal tunnel stress. Made `hmouse-mod-mode'
a regular minor mode. See "(hyperbole)Smart Key Modifiers" for more
details.
ROLO
- Fixed entry sorting to work with Emacs 25.
===========================================================================
* V5.12
===========================================================================
BUTTONS
- Prevented keyword matches as identifiers in Java, C++, C, Objective-C
and Python.
- Prevented @ annotation matches when matching to Java identifiers/tags.
- In Info documentation browsing mode, added support for index nodes and
for fixed header line and text-property-based breadcrumb header lines
now used in Emacs, so the Action Key can now follow links associated
with all of these entities.
- In compilation buffers, e.g. {M-x make RET}, if an error line has a
relative pathname which Hyperbole cannot resolve, it will prompt
for the directory in which to resolve the path.
DOCUMENTATION
- Added printable hyperbole.pdf version of the Hyperbole Manual.
- DEMO file: Updated horizontal and vertical drag exercises to
correspond to current Hyperbole behavior.
- Added chapter on HyControl, window, frame and buffer control.
- In the Hyperbole Manual Glossary, added Buffer, Frame, HyControl
and Window definitions.
- Added additional Q&A in an appendix.
- Clarified and fixed Smart Key modeline behavior documentation.
- Made example text larger for easier reading.
- Added Screen definition to the Glossary.
EMACS SUPPORT
- Hyperbole now includes the fastest, easiest-to-use Emacs window and frame
management system available; we call it HyControl. If you use a lot of
Emacs windows or frames (typically, window system windows), this is for
you. HyControl lets you interactively adjust the current layout of your
windows and frames down to the pixel-level if desired. You keep
adjusting the location, size and display elements of your windows and
frames until they look as you like and then you simply quit HyControl and
go back to work.
- Expanded Hyperbole menu of buffers by major mode to allow for
`hui-menu-max-list-length' number of buffers, by default, 24.
- Made a right to left horizontal drag from near a right-side window divider
properly shrink the window width under Emacs 25.
KEYS
- The Hyperbole Screen submenu provides access to HyControl as well as the
key binding {C-c \}.
- Removed {C-c C-t} hmouse-toggle-bindings key binding. This
should be used rarely, so force use of {M-x hmouse-toggle-bindings RET).
- Updated "hmouse-mod.el" library for Emacs 25; it allows using the Smart
Mouse Keys as Control and Meta modifiers when desired.
KOUTLINER
- Improved recognition of Klinks, preventing false matches.
- Added missing {C-c C-i}/{C-c TAB} binding mentioned in the EXAMPLE.kotl
file; sets cell attributes.
- {C=t} Transpose characters - Added error checks at the beginning of cells
and end of lines for times when there are not 2 chars to transpose.
ROLO
- Improved {M-s} interactive string searching for rolo match buffer strings.
Made {C-u M-s} to a regexp search for rolo match buffer strings.
- Documented the {l} hyrolo-locate command in the Hyperbole manual.
- The format of the rolo entry date added to new entries is now configurable
via the variable, `hyrolo-date-format'. It uses the formatting
strings listed in the documentation of the function `format-time-string'.
- All rolo find and search commands are now case-insensitive.
- Using a numeric prefix argument with rolo find commands now
properly limits the number of matches to a maximum of that number.
- If the Big Brother Database (BBDB) is loaded before the rolo, its
`bbdb-file' is added to the list of files searched by the rolo.
You can manually added this file to `hyrolo-file-list' as well and
its format will automatically be handled by the rolo.
===========================================================================
* V5.11
===========================================================================
BUTTONS
- Improved support for remote pathname access (outside local
filesystems).
EMACS SUPPORT
- Much faster and better lookup of active Emacs Lisp identifiers
when the Action Key is pressed over one. Face definitions are
also found now. TAGS files are used only if the identifier has
not been loaded within the current Emacs session.
KOUTLINER
- Proper support for isearch temporary display of invisible text
when it contains a search match. {C-s}, interactive search,
expands and contracts text dynamically to show any search
results, just as it does in the regular Emacs outline mode. You
can toggle whether such searches include invisible/hidden text
(the default) or not. Use the
Customize/Toggle-Isearch-Invisible-Text menubar item or the
Cust/Isearch-Invisible minibuffer menu item to toggle this
setting.
MAIL AND NEWS READERS
- New variable, `inhibit-hyperbole-messaging' with default value
of t inhibits Hyperbole's support for explicit buttons within
mail and news buffers. When t, Hyperbole will not alter
messaging mode hooks nor overload functions from these packages,
preventing potential incompatibilities.
If you want to use Hyperbole buttons in mail and news buffers,
use the new Customize/Toggle-Messaging-Explicit-Buttons menubar
item or the minibuffer menu Cust/Msg-Toggle-Ebuts item. These
not only change the variable value but also add or remove the
setup hooks as necessary.
ROLO
- New {o} key binding for an overview of all Rolo matches at all
levels, one line per entry.
- {t} top-level cells command works in all cases now.
- {Shift-TAB} added as an additional key to move backwards one
Rolo match.
- Improved operation of {l} and {M-s C-s} commands that search for
occurrences of match strings and allow extending the search term.
- Support for looking up contacts in the Big Brother Database
(BBDB) file of email addresses, when that package is used.
The functions, hyrolo-grep-bbdb finds regular expression matches
and hyrolo-fgrep-bbdb finds string matches. All regular Rolo
match buffer commands may then be applied. The {e} command for
editing an entry signals an error when applied to the BBDB file,
however.
SMART KEYS
- The Assist Key when pressed in the middle portion of a modeline
now pops up a very useful menu of display-oriented commands.
Jump to buffers categorized by major mode, to windows by buffer
name, or to frames by name. Manage your windows and frames
quickly with this menu as well. Another can't live without
feature. This comes from the new file, hui-jmenu.el.
- Added Python etags support for jumping to Python definitions.
With the separate OO-Browser package, definition location is
much better than just with etags.
See "(hyperbole)Smart Key - Python Source Code" for help.
- The Hyperbole Manual Smart Key Reference appendix now has a
subsection for each context, allowing quick reference of a
particular Smart Key context. Also, added documentation for
delimited thing selection, copying and moving.
- New function, hyperbole-popup-menu, to display the Hyperbole
menubar menu at the mouse point (or the left of the menubar when
running on a dumb terminal). This is useful as a setting
of `action-key-default-function' if you want some undefined
Action Key context to popup this menu in order to use Hyperbole
commands.
===========================================================================
* V5.10
===========================================================================
EMACS SUPPORT
- Hyperbole now downloads, builds and installs as a regular
Emacs package (but from a special archive location while pre-testing).
- Automatic time-zone handling under MS Windows (already existed
for UNIX-like operating systems). Plus support for 3 mouse
buttons under Windows.
IMPLICIT BUTTON TYPES
- Updated the extended find-file commands which handle http (www) and ftp
URLs to support the Tramp library included with newer versions of Emacs.
Use the menu item Hyperbole/Customization/Find-File-Accepts-URLs to
enable or to disable this. See "(hyperbole)Using URLs with Find-File"
for details.
KOUTLINER
- Editing commands that normally delete/replace an active region
now do this in the Koutline. If a region extends beyond one
cell, an error is triggered or if `kotl-mode:shrink-region-flag'
is set to t, the Koutliner automatically shrinks the region to
the first cell within the region and then continues the editing
operation.
- Updated yanking and other editing commands for improved
compatibility with Emacs 25.
- Internal improvements to many tree handling, filling and view
changing commands.
- New Shift-TAB key binding to demote trees (shift them up a
level), for compatibility with other outliners.
MENUS
- The new Find/Locate-Files menu item (minibuffer menu
Find/LocateFiles) prompts for a pattern and displays a list of
all matching pathnames found throughout the file system. On Mac
OS X, this uses Spotlight (the mdfind command); on UNIX, it uses
the `locate' command. Within the result *Locate* buffer, you
can then use the Find/Grep-Files menu item to find matching
lines within only these paths (files and directories).
SMART KEYS
- Action Key now ignores JavaScript keywords when searching for
identifiers to match.
- Commands that interactively prompt for a Koutline cell label now
offer completion and require a match to a visible outline cell.
This helps prevent operating on an invisible cell unintentionally.
THING SELECTION
- Selection of open/close matched tag pairs and jumping between
them now works in web-mode, which supports multiple web
languages within one file (previously only html-mode was
supported). Also, can now select chained identifiers like:
parent.child.subchild in html and web modes with the {C-c
RETURN} thing selection key.
- Can now select comments when at a comment start; try it with
the Action Key.
- Can now select Lisp symbols with colons in them within help
buffers since they often appear there.
VARIABLES
- hyperb:init-hook renamed to hyperbole-init-hook, a more standard name.
See the GNU Hyperbole Manual for its usage.
===========================================================================
* V5.09
===========================================================================
FRAMES
- The Window-Configuration menu (minibuffer Win/ menu) now stores and
restores frame-specific window configurations, allowing each frame to be
dedicated to different types of work or groups of buffers.
INSTALLATION
- Installation is greatly simplified. A single emacs initialization line
of the form:
(require 'hyperbole (expand-file-name "hyperbole" "<HYPERBOLE-DIR>/")
loads and initializes Hyperbole. Please change your site-wide or
personal initialization to this. (No more setting of hyperb:dir and
load-path nor copying of hsite-ex.el to hsite.el is required; Hyperbole
does this for you).
KEYS
- A new Customize Menu option, Toggle-Smart-Key-Debug (minibuffer menu
Cust/Debug-Toggle, {C-h h c d}), displays a message in the minibuffer
every time the Action Key or Assist Key is pressed, showing the context
of the press and its associated action, allowing you to easily see
what is happening whenever you use a Smart Key.
These messages are all prefaced with "(HyDebug)" and are accumulated in
the *Messages* buffer for later viewing.
- Smart Keys work in any completion buffer now, e.g. the ido.el completion
buffer.
- Horizontal and vertical mouse drags within a single window, that do not
begin on a thing delimiter, are now simpler and more consistent. An
Action Key drag splits the window either below (horizontal drag) or
side-by-side (vertical drag). An Assist Key drag deletes the window.
- Hyperbole no longer uses the right mouse button, so it is free for popup menus.
The Assist Mouse Key is always on the Shift-Right mouse button as well as
on a C-u prefix to the Action Mouse Key.
- A new setting, `hmouse-middle-flag', when set to t (true) before Hyperbole
is loaded adds the middle mouse key as an Action Key. InfoDock does this
by default.
- ibuffer-mode, the dired-like menu listing for buffers, is now supported
by the Smart Keys; it behaves similarly to that of Buffer-menu-mode.
- Xref item listing mode is now supported by the Smart Keys; The Action
Key displays an xref file line or just a file containing an xref.
The Assist Key displays the same but leaves point in the listing buffer.
Xref is a built-in Emacs package that displays definitions and
cross-references of identifier strings. It is similar to etags, but
more general.
KOUTLINER
- Now compatible with the latest version of outline.el (using invisible overlays).
- All menus for the Hyperbole auto-numbered outliner, called the Koutliner,
now begin with 'K'. Some used to start with 'O'. To edit the example
Koutline, use {C-h h k e}.
- {C-c C-a} - Show-all, expand all cells nihe current view.
{C-c C-o} - Overview, show only first line of outline cells.
{C-c C-t} - Top-level, hide all cells below level 1 and show
only the first line of each level 1 cell.
By default, these commands no longer affect the display of blank lines
between cells. But if given a prefix argument, they toggle blank
lines display for quick view changes.
- Values of `user-mail-address' or `message-user-fqdn' are now
used to set the creator and modifier names in Koutline cells.
MAIL LISTS
- The menu item that composes mail to the bug-hyperbole mail list now
includes any (HyDebug) messages output when the Hyperbole configuration
option, hkey-debug is enabled (via the Customize Menu or via
{C-h h c d}).
===========================================================================
* V5.08
===========================================================================
DOCUMENTATION
- Added web version of the Hyperbole Manual.
HYPERLINKS
- Action Key presses on Texinfo menu items and @node item references now
display the associated Texinfo node. @code and @var references to Emacs
Lisp identifiers now show the documentation for the identifiers. As
before, cross-references and file includes show the referenced items;
keyboard key sequences invoke their associated bindings.
- Action Key press on an Emacs push button activates the button. An Assist
Key press shows help for the button.
KEYS
- Delimited things, including lists, comments, strings, arrays/vectors,
sets, functions and markup pair tags (e.g. <div> </div>), may now be
selected, copied or moved with the Action and Assist mouse and keyboard
keys whenever point is on the first character of the starting or ending
delimiter. For strings and comments, point must be on the first line.
- New {C-c .} binding that jumps between the start and end delimiters of
delimited things. Try it on matching markup tag pairs in HTML and SGML
modes. If point is not immediately before or after a delimiter, this
generally does nothing.
- New {C-c RET} binding selects bigger and bigger syntactical units within
a buffer with each successive invocation. Double clicks of the left
mouse button do the same thing. Try it, you'll like it.
===========================================================================
* V5.07
===========================================================================
EMACS VERSIONS
- Support for the latest pre-releases of Emacs 25 and new versions of
XEmacs.
HYPERLINKS
- URL handling updated along with customization menus to support most
popular web browsers in use.
- Action Key on a mailto: URI starts composing mail to that address.
- When testing file formats/suffixes for an external viewer in
which to display the file, as a fallback, a MIME system mailcap
file is used to find additional possible viewers. See
"http://www.wikiwand.com/en/Mailcap" for information on mailcap files.
- Jump to JavaScript identifier definitions.
- History, {C-h h h}, now restores full multi-window and multi-frame display
configurations (within a single Emacs session), rather than just returning
to a prior location in a buffer.
- Type {q} in a Hyperbole Help buffer hide that buffer and return to your prior
location.
KEYS
- By default, Hyperbole now removes any mode-specific, local key
bindings that conflict with the global Smart Key bindings
(typically {Meta-Return}). Use the Customize/Toggle-Override-Local-Keys
to disable (or re-enable) this feature.
KOUTLINER
- When running under InfoDock, its Go and Options menus now appear within
the Koutliner menu.
- With a prefix argument, Koutlines are exported to HTML with soft newlines
rather than hard newlines, so text will flow based on browser window size.
This option will remove line-by-line formatting within a cell, however.
MENUS
- New Find menu which can reduce a buffer to just matching or non-matching
lines, run the 'grep' or 'fgrep' utilities on a file directory tree, or
list matching lines in the current buffer or across all buffers with
attached files.
- Renamed Customization menu to Customize.
- New Customize/Change-Key-Bindings menu lets you rebind any Hyperbole
keys for your current emacs session.
-- The End --
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-27 16:43 ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released Robert Weiner
@ 2016-07-28 17:16 ` Charles Philip Chan
2016-07-29 15:36 ` Adam Porter
2016-07-29 17:27 ` Peter Davis
0 siblings, 2 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Charles Philip Chan @ 2016-07-28 17:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Org-mode
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 583 bytes --]
Robert Weiner <rsw@gnu.org> writes:
> GNU Hyperbole (pronounced Ga-new Hi-per-bo-lee), or just Hyperbole, is
> an amazing programmable hypertextual information management system
> implemented as a GNU Emacs package. This is the first public release
> in 2016.
Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
using it. :-)
Charles
--
"Are [Linux users] lemmings collectively jumping off of the cliff of
reliable, well-engineered commercial software?"
(By Matt Welsh)
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-28 17:16 ` Charles Philip Chan
@ 2016-07-29 15:36 ` Adam Porter
2016-07-29 15:54 ` Kaushal Modi
2016-07-29 17:27 ` Peter Davis
1 sibling, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Adam Porter @ 2016-07-29 15:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Charles Philip Chan <cpchan@bell.net> writes:
> Robert Weiner <rsw@gnu.org> writes:
>
>> GNU Hyperbole (pronounced Ga-new Hi-per-bo-lee), or just Hyperbole, is
>> an amazing programmable hypertextual information management system
>> implemented as a GNU Emacs package. This is the first public release
>> in 2016.
>
> Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
> fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
> using it. :-)
Charles, could you explain a little bit how it compares to Org? I read
the thread on /r/emacs and looked at the wiki, but I'm still not sure
how it compares to or complements Org.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-29 15:36 ` Adam Porter
@ 2016-07-29 15:54 ` Kaushal Modi
2016-07-29 16:25 ` aditya siram
2016-07-30 18:04 ` Robert Love
0 siblings, 2 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Kaushal Modi @ 2016-07-29 15:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Adam Porter, emacs-orgmode, cpchan
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Actually it will be even more awesome if you can record a short video/GIF
screencast demonstrating what hyperbole does compared to org mode. Or in
general how you would use hyperbole.
Thanks.
On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 11:52 AM Adam Porter <adam@alphapapa.net> wrote:
> Charles Philip Chan <cpchan@bell.net> writes:
>
> > Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
> > fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
> > using it. :-)
>
> Charles, could you explain a little bit how it compares to Org? I read
> the thread on /r/emacs and looked at the wiki, but I'm still not sure
> how it compares to or complements Org.
>
>
> --
Kaushal Modi
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-29 15:54 ` Kaushal Modi
@ 2016-07-29 16:25 ` aditya siram
2016-07-30 1:01 ` tumashu
2016-07-30 18:04 ` Robert Love
1 sibling, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: aditya siram @ 2016-07-29 16:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Kaushal Modi; +Cc: Adam Porter, cpchan, emacs-orgmode
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2826 bytes --]
I never used Hyperbole back in the day so this is all fresh for me. I am
also an avid org-mode user. The following feedback is based on about 48
hours of usage.
Hyperbole is a suite of tools. One of them is an outliner that overlaps
quite a bit with org-mode. It has some interesting features like being able
to link individual paragraphs as opposed to just headings/sub-headings but
in most cases org-mode is further along.
But there are other tools in Hyperbole that might interest you including
Acme-like string execution. For example if you do M-RET on the word README
it automatically jumps to README without having to go through the
rigamarole or creating a link in org-mode.
One of the nicest things about Hyperbole is that it's available everywhere.
Org-mode is a mode and its features are only available in *.org files. For
instance if you dropped into `eshell` or `ansi-term` and did `ls`, you can
move point to any of the directory's contents, do M-RET (or Shift-Button2)
and jump to that file. And that's just one example. Note that this means
that all Hyperbole functionality is available in *.org files as well. To
me, except for the Hyperbole outliner, that makes complementary not
conflicting. It's Hyperbole *and* org-mode, not Hyperbole vs. org-mode.
Additionally, off the bat, I found it very well documented and for me
that's a proxy for the quality of a package and the maintainer, Robert
Weiner is quite responsive and really seems to want Hyperbole to take off.
There's plenty more functionality that I haven't uncovered yet but due to
ease of installation and quality of documentation digging into it is
actually fun; much more discoverable than org-mode which has become this
giant bag of random directives.
Hyperbole, even though it is old, feels like it is in its second infancy
meaning it is open to change based on community feedback. As a practical
note, once you install it doing C-h h d d will fire up a nice Demo which I
is think is more fun than watching a screencast.
-deech
On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 10:54 AM, Kaushal Modi <kaushal.modi@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Actually it will be even more awesome if you can record a short video/GIF
> screencast demonstrating what hyperbole does compared to org mode. Or in
> general how you would use hyperbole.
>
> Thanks.
>
> On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 11:52 AM Adam Porter <adam@alphapapa.net> wrote:
>
>> Charles Philip Chan <cpchan@bell.net> writes:
>>
>> > Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
>> > fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
>> > using it. :-)
>>
>> Charles, could you explain a little bit how it compares to Org? I read
>> the thread on /r/emacs and looked at the wiki, but I'm still not sure
>> how it compares to or complements Org.
>>
>>
>> --
>
> Kaushal Modi
>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-28 17:16 ` Charles Philip Chan
2016-07-29 15:36 ` Adam Porter
@ 2016-07-29 17:27 ` Peter Davis
2016-07-29 19:12 ` Nick Dokos
1 sibling, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: Peter Davis @ 2016-07-29 17:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
On Thu, Jul 28, 2016, at 01:16 PM, Charles Philip Chan wrote:
> Robert Weiner <rsw@gnu.org> writes:
>
> > GNU Hyperbole (pronounced Ga-new Hi-per-bo-lee), or just Hyperbole, is
> > an amazing programmable hypertextual information management system
> > implemented as a GNU Emacs package. This is the first public release
> > in 2016.
>
> Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
> fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
> using it. :-)
Yes, I remember using Hyperbole years ago, and trying unsuccessfully to
resurrect it several times in recent years. I'm very glad to see it
again!
-pd
--
Peter Davis
www.techcurmudgeon.com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-29 17:27 ` Peter Davis
@ 2016-07-29 19:12 ` Nick Dokos
0 siblings, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Nick Dokos @ 2016-07-29 19:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Peter Davis <pfd@pfdstudio.com> writes:
> On Thu, Jul 28, 2016, at 01:16 PM, Charles Philip Chan wrote:
>> Robert Weiner <rsw@gnu.org> writes:
>>
>> > GNU Hyperbole (pronounced Ga-new Hi-per-bo-lee), or just Hyperbole, is
>> > an amazing programmable hypertextual information management system
>> > implemented as a GNU Emacs package. This is the first public release
>> > in 2016.
>>
>> Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
>> fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
>> using it. :-)
>
> Yes, I remember using Hyperbole years ago, and trying unsuccessfully to
> resurrect it several times in recent years. I'm very glad to see it
> again!
>
Me too: I last used it about 20 years ago I think. It then went dormant
afaik and building the version I had saved became harder with every
subsequent emacs release; finally I abandoned it - and a few years later
stumbled onto org-mode! But it was the first hyperlink system I used
and I have always had a soft spot for it. I just installed it and am
trying it out again. Good to have it back!
--
Nick
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-29 16:25 ` aditya siram
@ 2016-07-30 1:01 ` tumashu
2016-07-30 2:59 ` Kaushal Modi
0 siblings, 1 reply; 10+ messages in thread
From: tumashu @ 2016-07-30 1:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: aditya siram; +Cc: Adam Porter, cpchan, emacs-orgmode, Kaushal Modi
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2882 bytes --]
great comment
在 2016-07-30 00:25:12,"aditya siram" <aditya.siram@gmail.com> 写道:
I never used Hyperbole back in the day so this is all fresh for me. I am also an avid org-mode user. The following feedback is based on about 48 hours of usage.
Hyperbole is a suite of tools. One of them is an outliner that overlaps quite a bit with org-mode. It has some interesting features like being able to link individual paragraphs as opposed to just headings/sub-headings but in most cases org-mode is further along.
But there are other tools in Hyperbole that might interest you including Acme-like string execution. For example if you do M-RET on the word README it automatically jumps to README without having to go through the rigamarole or creating a link in org-mode.
One of the nicest things about Hyperbole is that it's available everywhere. Org-mode is a mode and its features are only available in *.org files. For instance if you dropped into `eshell` or `ansi-term` and did `ls`, you can move point to any of the directory's contents, do M-RET (or Shift-Button2) and jump to that file. And that's just one example. Note that this means that all Hyperbole functionality is available in *.org files as well. To me, except for the Hyperbole outliner, that makes complementary not conflicting. It's Hyperbole *and* org-mode, not Hyperbole vs. org-mode.
Additionally, off the bat, I found it very well documented and for me that's a proxy for the quality of a package and the maintainer, Robert Weiner is quite responsive and really seems to want Hyperbole to take off. There's plenty more functionality that I haven't uncovered yet but due to ease of installation and quality of documentation digging into it is actually fun; much more discoverable than org-mode which has become this giant bag of random directives.
Hyperbole, even though it is old, feels like it is in its second infancy meaning it is open to change based on community feedback. As a practical note, once you install it doing C-h h d d will fire up a nice Demo which I is think is more fun than watching a screencast.
-deech
On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 10:54 AM, Kaushal Modi <kaushal.modi@gmail.com> wrote:
Actually it will be even more awesome if you can record a short video/GIF screencast demonstrating what hyperbole does compared to org mode. Or in general how you would use hyperbole.
Thanks.
On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 11:52 AM Adam Porter <adam@alphapapa.net> wrote:
Charles Philip Chan <cpchan@bell.net> writes:
> Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
> fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
> using it. :-)
Charles, could you explain a little bit how it compares to Org? I read
the thread on /r/emacs and looked at the wiki, but I'm still not sure
how it compares to or complements Org.
--
Kaushal Modi
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-30 1:01 ` tumashu
@ 2016-07-30 2:59 ` Kaushal Modi
0 siblings, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Kaushal Modi @ 2016-07-30 2:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: tumashu, aditya siram; +Cc: Adam Porter, cpchan, emacs-orgmode
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 409 bytes --]
Thanks for the detailed reply, Aditya.
,"aditya siram" <aditya.siram@gmail.com>
>
> Hyperbole, even though it is old, feels like it is in its second infancy
> meaning it is open to change based on community feedback. As a practical
> note, once you install it doing C-h h d d will fire up a nice Demo which I
> is think is more fun than watching a screencast.
>
> -deech
>
> --
Kaushal Modi
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 10+ messages in thread
* Re: ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released
2016-07-29 15:54 ` Kaushal Modi
2016-07-29 16:25 ` aditya siram
@ 2016-07-30 18:04 ` Robert Love
1 sibling, 0 replies; 10+ messages in thread
From: Robert Love @ 2016-07-30 18:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Kaushal Modi; +Cc: Adam Porter, cpchan, emacs-orgmode
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 930 bytes --]
I just looked on YouTube and didn’t find anything.
> On Jul 29, 2016, at 10:54 AM, Kaushal Modi <kaushal.modi@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Actually it will be even more awesome if you can record a short video/GIF screencast demonstrating what hyperbole does compared to org mode. Or in general how you would use hyperbole.
>
> Thanks.
>
> On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 11:52 AM Adam Porter <adam@alphapapa.net <mailto:adam@alphapapa.net>> wrote:
> Charles Philip Chan <cpchan@bell.net <mailto:cpchan@bell.net>> writes:
>
> > Wow, blast from the past. I remember using older versions of Hyperbole
> > fondly and still miss it. Thank you for updating it. I look forward to
> > using it. :-)
>
> Charles, could you explain a little bit how it compares to Org? I read
> the thread on /r/emacs and looked at the wiki, but I'm still not sure
> how it compares to or complements Org.
>
>
> --
> Kaushal Modi
>
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2016-07-27 16:43 ANNOUNCE: GNU Hyperbole 6.0.1 for Emacs 24.4 - 25 is released Robert Weiner
2016-07-28 17:16 ` Charles Philip Chan
2016-07-29 15:36 ` Adam Porter
2016-07-29 15:54 ` Kaushal Modi
2016-07-29 16:25 ` aditya siram
2016-07-30 1:01 ` tumashu
2016-07-30 2:59 ` Kaushal Modi
2016-07-30 18:04 ` Robert Love
2016-07-29 17:27 ` Peter Davis
2016-07-29 19:12 ` Nick Dokos
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