Post AlZbvXiupyOGU9Jr3w by interfluidity@zirk.us
 (DIR) More posts by interfluidity@zirk.us
 (DIR) Post #AlZbvXiupyOGU9Jr3w by interfluidity@zirk.us
       2024-09-01T22:31:22Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       it’d be cool if you could configure textareas in a browser could behave like emacs, or vi, or whatever your preference in full-featured, keyboard driven editor.there could be some kind of virtual filesystem you could access; each textarea would be some specially identified *buffer*.there should be autosave into your own specified filesystem, rather than relying in the site or your browser to preserve your work.#emacs #vi #vim
       
 (DIR) Post #AlZeJCX5TXfZcbCB9s by rieyin@zirk.us
       2024-09-01T22:58:03Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @interfluidity sounds like https://ghosttext.fregante.com/
       
 (DIR) Post #AlZesS9bO7laCn1I2q by dozykraut@hessen.social
       2024-09-01T23:04:25Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @interfluidity For starters I'ld be content with textareas having support for readline shortcuts. As a notorious twiddler who needs Ctrl-t like a hundred times a day ...
       
 (DIR) Post #AlZhU4pYkf2MmXiHZI by EdHamilton@fosstodon.org
       2024-09-01T23:33:38Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @interfluidity emacs everywhere maybe. I haven't tried it yet. https://github.com/tecosaur/emacs-everywhere
       
 (DIR) Post #AlZhW3fY2b75l6yWXY by alerque@mastodon.social
       2024-09-01T23:34:00Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @interfluidity See Firenvim ... what you describe is already a reality with more besides since the file system *is* your system and you get your regularly scheduled plugins and rc stuff right there in the textarea.
       
 (DIR) Post #AlZn4CFP9XGzyrqQbo by alerque@mastodon.social
       2024-09-01T23:36:40Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @dozykraut @interfluidity You can get readline bindings in your browser by taking GTK settings. At least in Firefox it respects if you tell GTK you want Emacs, deadline, VIM or custom input area bindings.
       
 (DIR) Post #AlZn4DCFckLQvNNQKe by dozykraut@hessen.social
       2024-09-01T23:51:39Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @alerque Firefox doesn't support Ctrl-t, sadly. @interfluidity
       
 (DIR) Post #AlZn4DuCzJVT7hwWqe by interfluidity@zirk.us
       2024-09-02T00:36:11Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @dozykraut @alerque kewl! i just learned that one, thanks to you!
       
 (DIR) Post #AlaFzzEkTtkt8psmbA by hajovonta@mastodon.online
       2024-09-02T06:00:21Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @interfluidity it would even be better if there were a browser with JS support within Emacs.
       
 (DIR) Post #AlaHN1pZ6TjdnhecvA by interfluidity@zirk.us
       2024-09-02T06:15:45Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @hajovonta https://notroot.online/notes/9xns0l3ez9pg14xo
       
 (DIR) Post #AlaHWFDOi54puyCDqK by hajovonta@mastodon.online
       2024-09-02T06:17:24Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @interfluidity I could never get it to work. Besides, seems good idea at first, but I'm not sure how my Emacs keybindings would work in an embedded Firefox...
       
 (DIR) Post #AlaI5FmAcIGfnD9dJY by slackline@mastodon.social
       2024-09-02T06:23:44Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @interfluidity Maybe try out the #nyxt browserhttps://nyxt.atlas.engineer/