Emac : Emacs

flymake-rakudo - Another syntax checker for Raku on Emacs

Flymake I've been switching to Emacs packages which are lighter and use the internal Emacs system, instead of creating their own. This time I wanted to try Flymake, the syntax checker that comes with Emacs. At first it wasn't very appealing because I thought it would only show the error on mouse hover! So I tried to see what options I have for displaying the error messages when text cursor moves over them.

An improved flycheck-raku now available on melpa [Emacs]

Recently I forked the flycheck-raku (by @widefox) to the Raku GitHub organization. And did some improvements to it and published it on melpa, so others can easily install and update it. For those who don't know, flycheck is a tool for syntax checking Gnu Emacs buffers. You can install flycheck-raku using use-package: (use-package flychek-raku :ensure t) New features Project detection Previously if you used flycheck-raku on a project, it would show errors on use SomeModule;, even though the module was in the lib directory of the project.

How to type Raku unicode characters in Emacs

Raku programming language uses some unicode characters as operators, quotation marks, etc. In this post I'm going to explain how to type those characters in Emacs using input methods. First, you might want to see a list of those characters and their ASCII equivalents here. There is also a doc for entering unicode characters. You may specifically want to look at XCompose for a system-wide solution. There are at least two input methods you can use to enter the unicode characters used in Raku.