Estudié Biología, trabajo armando equipos de trabajo para mejorar sistemas complejos socio-tecnológicos y hacerlos(nos) más sustentables. :)

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: September 7th, 2021

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  • Maybe you can try to fix your issue by forcing the buffer-undo-list variable to nil for the elisp mode, as follow: (add-hook 'elisp-mode (lambda () (setq-local buffer-undo-list nil)))

    I tried it but still no joy…

    Looking at this issue I noticed 3 things that may help to pinpoint the origin…:

    • I have 2 variables set that affect the scratch buffer in my config (without yours, that it’s the 3rd):
                      (setq initial-major-mode 'org-mode)
                      (setq-default major-mode 'org-mode)
    
    • Before this reply, (setq-default major-mode 'org-mode) was (setq default-major-mode 'org-mode). Both expressions seems indistinguishable in the resulted behavior.
    • The scratch buffer starts in org-roam mode (and read-only mode), which is very strange, but can obviously be related and/or part of the problem. The org-roam section (my config is literate in org-mode) comes before this variables being set.

    What does this info may imply?


  • Hello Sunoc.

    • the buffer is not in read-only, but it always start as so.
    • the keybinding is ok since it works in all the rest of the buffers.
    • Upon calling undo, emacs says “no undo information in this buffer” (searching for this didn’t seem to give relevant information except something from 2006 and then something about specific of a table-spreadsheet that I don’t use).

    From this and @ouigol@beehaw.org (I will relpy after this one) it looks that it may be my configuration, since I’m using vanilla emacs with my own configuration.

    Anyway, thanks a lot for your time! :)




  • I still cannot imagine how can anyone happily burden is own children (and it’s children, and it’s children, and it’s children, and all of our children too, up to many many generations) with is own harmful waste.

    Also, there is the simple fact of neglecting the opportunity cost: given the amount of labor and money that any of those plants imply, would you invest it into more non renewable, fossil based, highly concentrated sources of energies, or cleaner, diversified, decentralized and renewable ones? In other words, we can ask ourselves this simple question: which of these options will make the world better for our children?