Nicholas Clooney

Tagged "dotfiles"

8 entries

thoughts: The dotfiles card image is uncannily real

I keep staring at the new dotfiles project card image, generated by GPT, and getting a little mind-blown. Not only is every bit of text actually real text rather than the usual AI gibberish, the content itself coheres: the Ghostty window on the left shows plausible git aliases, the tmux pane in the middle has a believable folder listing, a git log, and a btop-style stats block, and the Emacs frame on the right has elisp in init.el and YAML in config.yml that kinda parse as real config.

And on top of that, Ghostty, tmux, and Emacs are exactly the tools I actually use, even if I haven't reached for those particular git aliases in a long, long time.

feature: Lightweight Emacs migration and tmux workflow

I shipped v2026.5.1 of dotfiles, which pairs a nicer tmux workflow with the move away from the old Spacemacs setup into a smaller hand-rolled Emacs config. The tmux side gives me a one-keystroke 70/20/10 vertical layout plus a safe top-and-middle pane swap, while PR #2 keeps the core editor ergonomics I care about like Evil, leader keys, Magit, Helm-style tracked file finding, and early theme loading without the extra framework machinery. This is the point where the repo feels easier to understand and own, and I want to do a fuller write-up on the tmux and "Subspacemacs" workflow soon.

blog: My AI-Assisted Terminal Setup: Subspace Emacs and a Tmux Layout Shortcut

I published My AI-Assisted Terminal Setup: Subspace Emacs and a Tmux Layout Shortcut, the fuller write-up that ties together the tmux 70/20/10 layout and the move off Spacemacs into Subspace Emacs. It covers how Claude and Codex split the work between research and implementation, the tmux-as-TDD-harness approach that unblocked the layout binding, and the tmux/tmux#1839 discovery that finally let swap-pane preserve zoom state. This supersedes the two narrower notes from earlier today.

feature: Recursive git-activity

I created git-activity in a631c98 so I can quickly answer "what have I been working on?" It walks a directory tree, finds the Git repos underneath it, and shows the latest log entries from each one in a single pass. It also supports a few filters, which is handy when I only want to review a slice of recent work; for example, from my projects folder I can run:

That recursively scans repos, focuses on feature work, and leaves chores out of the list.