More Neat Stuff for your Emacs Copyright (C) 1993, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. See the end of the file for license conditions. This file describes GNU Emacs programs and resources that are maintained by other people. Some of these may become part of the Emacs distribution in the future. Others we unfortunately can't distribute, even though they are free software, because we lack legal papers for copyright purposes. Also included are sites where development versions of some packages distributed with Emacs may be found. You might also look at the Emacs web page . If you use the Windows-32 version of Emacs, see the NTEmacs sites listed in the FAQ. Please submit a bug report if you find that any of the addresses listed here fail. * The `Emacs Lisp List' at has pointers to sources of a large number of packages. * gnu.emacs.sources Packages posted to the gnu.emacs.sources newsgroup (see etc/MAILINGLISTS) might be archived specifically (try a web search engine) or retrievable from general Usenet archive services. * emacswiki.org The Emacs Wiki has an area for storing elisp files . * Emacs tutorials and manuals * Emacs slides and tutorials can be found here: * Maintenance versions of some packages distributed with Emacs You might find bug-fixes or enhancements in these places. * Ada-mode: * Battery and Info Look: * BS: * Calculator: * CC mode: * CPerl: * Ediff and Viper: * Eldoc and Rlogin: * ERC: IRC client: * EShell: * Etags: * Expand: * Gnus: * Ffap: (And some addons for it.) * Hideshow: * Ispell: * MH-E: * Org mode: * PS mode: * PS-print: * Python mode: * QuickURL: * RefTeX: * Speedbar, Checkdoc etc: * SQL: * Tramp: Remote file access via rsh/ssh * Webjump: * Whitespace: * Auxiliary files * (Tex)info files for use with Info-look that don't come from GNU packages: * Scheme: * LaTeX: (or CTAN mirrors) * Perl: (or CPAN mirrors) * Packages and add-ons not bundled with Emacs Various major packages or useful additions aren't distributed as part of Emacs for various reasons, sometimes because their authors haven't made a copyright assignment to the FSF. Some of them may be integrated in the future. You might like to check whether they are packaged for your system. Several are for Debian GNU/Linux in particular. * AUCTeX: An extensible package that supports writing and formatting TeX files (including AMS-TeX, LaTeX, Texinfo, ConTeXt, and docTeX). * BBDB: personal Info Rolodex integrated with mail/news: [You might want to set the coding system of your .bbdb file to emacs-mule, say by adding `("\\.bbdb\\'" . emacs-mule)' to `file-coding-system-alist' for non-ASCII characters.] * Boxquote: * CEDET: Collection of Emacs Development Environment Tools, including EIEIO, Semantic, Speedbar, EDE, and COGRE: * CJK-emacs: Converting MULE-encoded text to TeX: and mirrors of the `CTAN' TeX archives. * Dismal: spreadsheet: * ECB: Emacs Code Browser: * EDB: database: * Ee: categorizing information manager: * EFS: enhanced version of ange-ftp: Version 1.16 is said not to work properly with Emacs 20. * Elib library: From GNU distribution mirrors. (Much of this functionality is now in Emacs.) * EMacro: EMacro is a portable configuration file that configures itself. * Emacs Muse: An authoring and publishing environment for Emacs. * Emacs speaks statistics (ESS): statistical programming within Emacs * Emacspeak -- A Speech Output Subsystem For Emacs: * Emacs-w3m : A simple Emacs interface to w3m, which is a text-mode WWW browser * Emacs Wiki Mode: A wiki-like publishing tool and personal information manager * Gnuserv: Enhanced emacsclient/emacsserver. Also available from this Web page: eiffel-mode.el. * Go in a buffer: Go Text Protocol client: A modified version is also bundled with GNU Go: * hm--html-menus: HTML-specific editing. Can work with PSGML. * Hyperbole: Hyperbole is an open, efficient, programmable information management and hypertext system. * JDEE: Provides a Java development environment for Emacs. * Mule-UCS: Universal enCoding System: Extended coding systems for Mule, specifically for reading and writing UTF-8 encoded Unicode. This probably doesn't have much advantage over the built-in `mule-utf-8' coding system with `utf-translate-cjk' turned on. * Mailcrypt: PGP and GPG support. PGP isn't free software, but GPG, the GNU Privacy Guard, is a free replacement . * Mew: A MIME mail reader for Emacs/XEmacs. * MMM Mode: MMM Mode is an emacs add-on package providing a minor mode that allows Multiple Major Modes to coexist in one buffer. * nXML Mode: New mode for XML: nXML mode is an addon for GNU Emacs, which makes GNU Emacs into a powerful XML editor. * Planner Mode: Planner is an organizer and day planner for Emacs. * Preview LaTeX: embed preview LaTeX images in source buffer. * PSGML: DTD-aware serious SGML/XML editing. * Quack: Quack enhances Emacs support for Scheme. * Remember: A Personal Information Manager (PIM) for Emacs. * Session: Session Management for Emacs. * SLIME: The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs: * Tamago: Chinese/Japanese/Korean input method Emacs Lisp package to provide input methods for CJK characters. It can use these background conversion servers: FreeWnn (jserver, cserver, tserver), Wnn6, SJ3 Ver.2 * Tiny Tools: * VM (View Mail): Alternative mail reader. There is a VM newsgroup: * W3: Web browser. There's a W3 mail list/newsgroup . * Wanderlust: Yet Another Message Interface on Emacsen. Wanderlust is a mail/news reader supporting IMAP4rev1 for emacsen. * WhizzyTex: WhizzyTeX provides a minor mode for Emacs or XEmacs, a (bash) shell-script daemon and some LaTeX macros. * X-Symbol: Quasi-WYSIWYG editing of TeX & al. Local Variables: mode: text mode: view eval: (goto-address) End: This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. arch-tag: c1d4e7c8-db85-44e6-909e-659e2b20fefa