Nicolas Bercher writes:
> Jude DaShiell a écrit :
>> First make sure they'll load after running emacs and hitting meta-x
>> and keying in the file names. Then read the original .el files for
>> instructions. I expect you'll find code in them starting with
>> (require that needs to be inserted in
That's exactly correct.On Fri, 2 Dec 2011, Nicolas Bercher wrote:
> Jude DaShiell a ?crit :
> > First make sure they'll load after running emacs and hitting meta-x and
> > keying in the file names. Then read the original .el files for
> > instructions. I expect you'll find code in them starting
Jude DaShiell a écrit :
First make sure they'll load after running emacs and hitting meta-x and
keying in the file names. Then read the original .el files for
instructions. I expect you'll find code in them starting with (require
that needs to be inserted in your .emacs file to have these loa
First make sure they'll load after running emacs and hitting meta-x and
keying in the file names. Then read the original .el files for
instructions. I expect you'll find code in them starting with (require
that needs to be inserted in your .emacs file to have these load on
start up.
On Fri,
Nicolas Bercher writes:
> Something is driving me crazy as it seems to be so trivial.
>
> I have a bunch of .el files I'd like emacs to load on startup (emacs-22,
> Lenny). I saved them to ~/.emacs.d/elisp/:
>
> $ ls -l ~/.emacs.d/elisp/
> total 8
> -rwxr-xr-x 1 nbercher nbercher 496 déc 2
Something is driving me crazy as it seems to be so trivial.
I have a bunch of .el files I'd like emacs to load on startup (emacs-22,
Lenny). I saved them to ~/.emacs.d/elisp/:
$ ls -l ~/.emacs.d/elisp/
total 8
-rwxr-xr-x 1 nbercher nbercher 496 déc 2 10:23 nb-org-mode.el
-rwxr-xr-x 1 n
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