- cross-posted to:
- emacs
- cross-posted to:
- emacs
Featuring a significantly faster (~8x) JSON parser, native compilation enabled by default, and the official release of the Android port.
Abridged Announcement:
Version 30.1 of Emacs, the extensible text editor, should now be available from your nearest GNU mirror:
https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/emacs/emacs-30.1.tar.xz
https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/emacs/emacs-30.1.tar.gz
For a summary of changes in Emacs 30, see the etc/NEWS file in the tarball; you can view it from Emacs by typing ‘C-h n’, or by clicking Help->Emacs News from the menu bar.
You can also browse NEWS online using this URL:
https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs.git/tree/etc/NEWS?h=emacs-30
Windows binaries can be found at https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/emacs/windows/emacs-30
Cool small features in Emacs 30 that I really like:
- If you have ever tried to create a custom modeline, you may have discovered that right-aligning elements was a massive pain. Emacs 30 adds a new modeline element
mode-line-format-right-align
which makes all subsequent elements inmode-line-format
right-aligned. - When Emacs prompts you about recovering an auto-save file, you can now press
=
to show a diff between the buffer and auto-save. No more guessing whether you had done anything important. E
in dired opens a file with the default program for that file type (via xdg-open or OS equivalent).
- If you have ever tried to create a custom modeline, you may have discovered that right-aligning elements was a massive pain. Emacs 30 adds a new modeline element
One small thing I liked in the new version is the grep-use-headings user option, if you set it to t, then grep buffer lists the search results with headings, one per file, instead of repeating the filename every single time.