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emacs-edit-chrome

No more pain of editing text in your browser - use Emacs!

This Chrome extension lets you grab text from Chrome and send it to Eamcs for editing.

Highlights

Edit text in <textarea> and <input> elements: Demo1, Demo2

as well as multiple browser-based editors:

How to use

  1. Install this Chrome extension.
  2. Setup your .emacs (see suggestion below).
  3. Click on a textarea and right-click or press Control-Shift-E to invoke 'Emacs Edit'.
  4. Emacs should popup ... edit your text then press C-x-# to exit emacs.
  5. You should see your text inserted back into the textarea.

.emacs setup

I highly reccommend you use use-package to organize your .emacs and invoke edit-server.

(use-package edit-server
  :if window-system
  :ensure t
  :defer t
  :init
  (add-hook 'after-init-hook 'server-start t)
  (add-hook 'after-init-hook 'edit-server-start t))

Security

Installing a chrome extension can be a big security risk. With that in mind we:

  • Use the minimum possible permissions. See manifest.json. TODO(wdm) Can we use CORS to avoid needing any permissions?
  • Do not run a content script on every webpage, just on the pages where you invoke it.
  • Kepp the code-base small and auditable: background.js and injected.js total less than 300 lines.

Prior work

Inspired by the awesome Edit with Emacs but written from scratch with:

  • No fancy options, no UI is added to the current page.
  • Tiny code base.
  • Bubbles the input event which is required to support React components.
  • No problems with dynamically added textareas.

Known bugs

None. Let me know what you run into!

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Chrome extension for editing any textarea in Emacs

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