No editor made, pretty much anywhere,
surpasses our Acme in shape, material or finish.
solid forged of unsigned int pieces of best wrought C, linked at the binary; tag line is made of one piece of code, compiled with -funroll-loops to the the rest of the window column and warranted with a permissive license. text window has sufficient refactoring done to insure stability and prevent SEGFAULTing; has ug, but perfectly written shell: rc; acme is linted and debugged by a special compiler so that there are no functions that return structures or integer and floating numbers in object code not converted to known formats and byte orders; config.h should be perfectly tempered by the user or it will fuck up. mkfiles are straight and true, so you will have no trouble on account of acme returning cryptic compiler errors and not compiling.
ready thyself for thine bodieth utmost horrrifiength challengeth and read more about acme
or find a way to be awesome. it seems there are more than one:
who needs syntax highlighting when this fine piece of work purrs and shows that these fangs got all kinds of shades of visceral strewn around, yet in finite enough of quantities to forbid you from not appreciating its scarcity, elevating it from a mere editor to a sublime Rothko, while emacs sinks in it's kitschy aesthetics, no matter how hard the themes try to salvage that bloated-out-of-proportions Titanic...
-
a centralized
config.h
-header heavily inspired by suckless school of software design philosophy; allowing customization of software specifically prior to its compilation-
autoindent, swapscrollbars, fonts and the
acme2k
colorscheme modifiable by the user, or shared by a community of likeminedacme2k
-enthusiasts, allowing for a personalized and/or collaborative look and feel.- 14 elements to define your very own colors for. simply breathtaking. i do say, wow.
-
the so-called bartflag ( = window focus not following the mouse pointer) removed as a runtime flag and moved to a configurable option in
config.h
. ive also gone ahead and set it to TRUE on default, since mouse accidentally moving and changing the focus from the tag window, it occupying a rather limited area, to the middle of the text and editing the file in question by accident, seemed to be a common complaint online and a general nuisance for me.
-
-
no zero-sum game between the mouse and the keyboard. balancing the options so you are not doomed to pick up the mouse as soon as you've overstepped the boundaries of keybindings
-
arrow keys navigate through text up one letter and down one letter instead of scrolling seemingly indiscriminate amount of lines, making you take your time finding where you were supposed to be at that very moment.
-
ctrl+c
,ctrl+x
,ctrl+v
for snarfing, cutting and pasting selected text;ctrl+z
for undo andctrl+y
for redo. -
home
andend
move the cursor to the start or to the end of the current line respectively as do the original keybindingsctrl+a
andctrl+e
. (originally intended to remove them, and i still might if i find better uses for those shortcuts.) -
delete
does what you'd expect it to
-
-
the end ... ?
acme2k
depends on plan9port
which can be found here on
github or on your local repository. i know
debian has stripped plan9-userpace called 9base
but i wouldn't roll the dice
with this working with only it as a dependency. don't know; haven't a clue,
now's your chance to feel useful and test it out. i mean if you feel like it.
after following the instructions in your $PLAN9
-folder to run ./INSTALL
and
mk
'ing every goddamn plan9-userspace application there happens to be ported,
you can move right on to mangle the tightly-knit web these applications form
with this very github project you've atleast been eyein':
that low contrast base16-ocean soothes your senses with a subtle balance of peace, quiet and solitude to your zen-like coding session, where it is just you, your workflow and fingertips dancing on the keyboard in a polyrhythmic, primitive thumping fashion. truly gaia has blessed you with this editor.
next, you should proceed to replace the plan9port
's defined $PLAN9/src/cmd
with the acme2k
's $GITPATH/src/cmd
.
now you can choose whether you want the highly experimental patched
fontsrv/x11.c
, which overrides the hardcoded dpi for font rendering etc. or
would you rather leave the fontsrv
untouched by a patch, that at worst can
cause stability issues since i haven't had the chance to put it through the same
wear and tear as the plan9port
-devs have to the vanilla version.
So to sum what you could do for example:
git clone https://github.com/karahobny/acme2k.git; cd acme2k
cp -r src/cmd/acme $PLAN9/src/cmd/acme
cp -r src/cmd/fontsrv $PLAN9/src/cmd/fontsrv # optional if you
# were too busy to skim through the preceeding passage,
# you just might be a goddamn millenial
you may need to build from the INSTALL
-file located in the $PLAN9
-root, but
usually its enough to build from your recently replaced acme
-folder, obviously
not before editing the contents of config.h
to your likings, it should be
commented more than enough to explain what every little variable or #define
does.
$GITPATH/colors
are just some example colorschemes i've made, fiddled with
and been juggling between. you can also use
base16 if that's more your speed,
or just as a starting point...
cd $PLAN9/src/cmd/acme; mk install
cd $PLAN9/src/cmd/fontsrv; mk install # optional part for
# if you want the patched fontsrv/x11.c. common sense rly
config.h
includes all the neccesary color and font modifications you just need
to mk install
it after every time you modify it, strongly inspired by suckless
design philosophy of software. feel free to read more about it
here.
you run fontsrv -p .
to list all the available fonts from X11 to fontsrv;
basically its only limited to your installed TrueType-fonts, so if you wish to
use a bitmap font, make sure you specifically have the .ttf
available; and
then use the fonts in a format like this for example:
"/mnt/font/[listed font]/[font size][a(ntialias)/no a(antialias)]/font"
"/mnt/font/Monaco/9a/font",
"/mnt/font/GohuFont/9/font",
in this case the first option would stand for Monaco size 9 antialiased, the
second for GohuFont size 9 aliased, ofc; or you can use the full path to your
plan9 converted .font-file, found in this git repositorys font/
directory.
insert two fonts into config.h
's font-array separating them with a comma. the
first one is treated as a proportional width font and is used everywhere in
acme
, and by extension acme2k
, by default. the second one can be activated
for a specific window by executing Font
from its tag window.
dont be shackled by dark hues and saturated pinks. make Glenda, the Bunny, proud by showing off the team colors aka the Rio Windowing Systems. "little black-on-white makes a little rob pike smile. when? every now and then!", or so ive been told.
colors need to be in the format of 0x*rgb hex color code*FF
without the
prefixed hashtag. i'd suggest just to experiment what all the #defines mean
but to start you with something C_TAGBG
means tag window background
color. C_TXTBG
means text window backgorund color. ...HLBG/FG
means
highlighted text background and foreground color etc. i've taken the liberty to
comment all the color variations and what they affect on config.h's noticeable
comment section.
definetly check out TODO and feel free to chime in what would
you like to see as a feature, add an issue or clone the repo and edit
TODO.md and push it to the upstream, if all you want to do is
add feature ideas. for bug fixes and coding features its better to contact me
at: karahobny at gmail dot com
or branch and send a pull request so i
can check it out, dont worry ill always tip and youll get your name on the
contributors list and you can for all i care, add your name on a comment
preceding the codeblock in question, you know p. much what ever that doesnt harm
the readability of the code, im all about you people having the respect you
deserve for having partaken in such a sweet project.
Also, do check out #acme2k @ freenode to contribute and to take part in this community for us to build something together or to raise issues personally.
yeah no one's really heard of that other one, it was just a fucked up situation where plan9 guys' hands were forced by lawyers to use that for some reason. plan 9 also got gpl'd for some time but that version is meaningless and a joke afaik; up still here in github if it somehow jollies your gollies.
project is licensed as following (if ive understood correctly and this is
allowed), the original unmodified plan9port
being under lucent public
license which specifically disallows any warranty, like
every goddamn license in the whole goddamn universe and allows for me to
sublicense it as i see fit so ive seen fit to specifically license my modest
modifications under mit license, simply because it's
more straightforward a permissive license and nobody really has to second guess
what its trying to allow/disallow a developer and/or consumer to do.
ive yet to have had to think about accepting contributions from other licenses than lucent or mit since this is still in its faltering baby steps, but id still hope if you would think about trying to avoid having a deck of licenses to show instead of actual features in our repository.