| Well. Basically if I have to write a letter I: - hit a single key on my keyboard (pause to be precise) - hit 'l' followed by few arrow down to choose between italian, french, swedish or english letter template than enter - start type the letter (my sender address autocompleted, I only type firs letter than tab and yasnippet insert the rest correctly) - hit a two key combination (control+c than control+e) or run org-export and quickly answer (with predefined defaults) where to save my file than create and open a nice pdf ready to print, optional scanned signature included. Of course that work anywhere on my desktop, I do not have to open any specific application, choose templates, choose from them, fight to format the text properly, find in complex menu how to insert an image (my signature), go looking for it on disk etc. Of course my letter get properly saved/archived digitally, I can send via mail in other two keystrokes etc. It's normal that sound complicated for you if you never tried it. I see many colleges that remain astonished seeing my demos inside Emacs and can't hardly figure out what happen on my desktop. It's a path to learn something new and effective, but learn an OS, a different system not a simple single-purpose application. |
How many letters do you write a day for it to need to be optimised into single key shortcuts?
My bottleneck is never formatting a letter - it's deciding what to write.
Also: what I actually meant was I didn't recognise C-X as meaning press the control key and then the X key. I've always seen that written as Ctrl + X. Why does Emacs need to do it differently to everyone else?