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* emacs and elisp apps question
@  Jude DaShiell
   ` Mario Lang
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Jude DaShiell @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: blinux-list

I downloaded erc.el among other packages including w3m and got its tar
ball.  So far as I can tell, no w3m.el or w3m.elc file exists so in order
to run that browser with emacspeak I have to go to a shell and run it from
there.  Those lines in my .emacs file for it do nothing.  I don't know how
to prepare erc.el to run since even in the site-lisp directory it beeps
just like w3m does when I try running it from inside of emacspeak and
emacs.  I'd like to find out how to do this so emacspeak can get more
useful.  Rafael, thanks very much for that tip on pinfo.  The main
advantage of pinfo is not necessarily that it will fall back to man pages
but that pinfo does not use or rely on dir files to find its info pages so
even if you can't figure out how to add info pages to the directory you're
still in great shape using pinfo since it searches directories for info
files and operates accordingly.





^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread

* Re: emacs and elisp apps question
   emacs and elisp apps question Jude DaShiell
@  ` Mario Lang
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Mario Lang @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: blinux-list

Jude DaShiell <jdashiel@shellworld.net> writes:

> I downloaded erc.el among other packages including w3m and got its tar
> ball.  So far as I can tell, no w3m.el or w3m.elc file exists so in order
> to run that browser with emacspeak I have to go to a shell and run it from
> there.  Those lines in my .emacs file for it do nothing.

First, you will probably need the w3m.el package too.

> I don't know how to prepare erc.el to run since even in the
> site-lisp directory it beeps just like w3m does when I try running
> it from inside of emacspeak and emacs.

You need to have the elisp extensions you want to use in your load-path.
Try C-h v load-path RET and see what it is set too. Either put
the elisp files in one of those directories (not so pretty), or
add a path to your load-path in .emacs where you place all those files.
A suggestion might be ~/elisp or something. Be sure to create that directory,
and place the elisp files there.  Then, autoload statments or
invoking M-x load-library should allow you to load and startup to extensions.

> I'd like to find out how to do this so emacspeak can get more
> useful.

My suggestion is, learn Emacs.  Emacspeak is a Emacs extension, and in
order to use Emacspeak efficiently, you need to know how to use Emacs.


-- 
CYa,
  Mario




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