diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'drafts/posts/smoothing-over-more-markdown-pain-points.md')
| -rw-r--r-- | drafts/posts/smoothing-over-more-markdown-pain-points.md | 12 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/drafts/posts/smoothing-over-more-markdown-pain-points.md b/drafts/posts/smoothing-over-more-markdown-pain-points.md index ab87edb..ac853be 100644 --- a/drafts/posts/smoothing-over-more-markdown-pain-points.md +++ b/drafts/posts/smoothing-over-more-markdown-pain-points.md @@ -12,15 +12,6 @@ generating a table of contents for a Markdown file. +++ -# Table of Contents - -+ [I Couldn't Keep It Together](#i-couldn't-keep-it-together) -+ [Elisp For The Win](#elisp-for-the-win) -+ [Yet Another Yasnippet Testimonial](#yet-another-yasnippet-testimonial) -+ [Now I Can Keep It Together!](#now-i-can-keep-it-together!) - - -<a id="i-couldn't-keep-it-together"></a> # I Couldn't Keep It Together As I go about editing these blogs as Markdown buffers inside Emacs, @@ -35,7 +26,6 @@ on—is a pain. And so I came up with a way to sync the two, using Emacs Lisp. Emacs Lisp, or Elisp for short, is the Emacs editor's extension language: the language you use to write Emacs plugins. -<a id="elisp-for-the-win"></a> # Elisp For The Win [Having written](https://brandonirizarry.xyz/blog/writing_my_blog_with_eleventy/#introduction) about my zany Elisp-based Java build system made me recall those times: I could once again rise to the challenge, and @@ -58,7 +48,6 @@ manage locally. I store it remotely, and install it as an *official* package, much like how Go packages work. In this way, I can even share my work with the community. -<a id="yet-another-yasnippet-testimonial"></a> # Yet Another Yasnippet Testimonial I also decided to go the extra mile and use a [Yasnippet](Yasnippet) snippet @@ -70,7 +59,6 @@ to set up her `ox-hugo` front matter. In fact, this is what turned me on to the idea of Yasnippet as a useful tool in general; that is, it isn't just a lazy man's way of inserting a for-loop into source code. -<a id="now-i-can-keep-it-together!"></a> # Now I Can Keep It Together! I now use table-of-contents regeneration frequently: writing the |
