Enter the query into the form above. You can look for specific version of a package by using @ symbol like this: gcc@10.
API method:
GET /api/packages?search=hello&page=1&limit=20
where search is your query, page is a page number and limit is a number of items on a single page. Pagination information (such as a number of pages and etc) is returned
in response headers.
If you'd like to join our channel webring send a patch to ~whereiseveryone/toys@lists.sr.ht adding your channel as an entry in channels.scm.
This Emacs package complements the refactoring functionality you'd find in Clojure mode and CIDER.
This package adds functionality to Emacs Ibuffer for grouping buffers by their Projectile root directory.
This is a major mode for managing password-store (pass) keychains. The keychain entries are displayed in a directory-like structure and can be consulted and modified.
This package provides a minor mode that enables syntax-based indentation for SQL mode buffers. Indentation rules are flexible and can be customized to match your personal coding style.
CIDER (Clojure Interactive Development Environment that Rocks) aims to provide an interactive development experience similar to the one you'd get when programming in Emacs Lisp, Common Lisp (with SLIME or Sly), Scheme (with Geiser) and Smalltalk.
CIDER is the successor to the now deprecated combination of using SLIME + swank-clojure for Clojure development.
There are plenty of differences between CIDER and SLIME, but the core ideas are pretty much the same (and SLIME served as the principle inspiration for CIDER).
Emacspeak is a speech interface that allows visually impaired users to interact independently and efficiently with the computer. Audio formatting---a technique pioneered by AsTeR---and full support for W3C's Aural CSS (ACSS) allows Emacspeak to produce rich aural presentations of electronic information. By seamlessly blending all aspects of the Internet such as Web-surfing and messaging, Emacspeak speech-enables local and remote information via a consistent and well-integrated user interface.
subed is an Emacs major mode for editing subtitles while playing the corresponding video with mpv. At the moment, the only supported formats are SubRip (.srt), WebVTT (.vtt), and Advanced SubStation Alpha (.ass).
This package provides a minor mode to automatically warp the mouse pointer to the center of a focused window, as well as a command to warp it to the currently selected window.
Org Street is an extension for Org Mode for turning the names of places into a LOCATION property containing their address. Given some freeform text approximately describing a location, it geocodes it with OpenStreetMap’s Nominatim API to determine a canonical location. If Nominatim returns multiple locations, a list is displayed to choose from.
Org is an Emacs mode for keeping notes, maintaining TODO lists, and project planning with a fast and effective lightweight markup language. It also is an authoring system with unique support for literate programming and reproducible research. If you work with the LaTeX output capabilities of Org-mode, you may want to install the emacs-org-texlive-collection meta-package, which propagates the TexLive components required by the produced .tex file.
This Emacs package implements CSV mode, a major mode for editing records in a generalized CSV (character-separated values) format.
With Magit, you can inspect and modify your Git repositories with Emacs. You can review and commit the changes you have made to the tracked files, for example, and you can browse the history of past changes. There is support for cherry picking, reverting, merging, rebasing, and other common Git operations.
Aids maintenance of Firefox-based packages in Guix by fetching CVEs from Firefox release notes and formatting them for Guix commit message.
EMMS is the Emacs Multimedia System. It is a small front-end which can control one of the supported external players. Thus, it supports whatever formats are supported by your music player. It also supports tagging and playlist management, all behind a clean and light user interface.
Blight allows you to control display brightness from Emacs. It features object-oriented code using EIEIO, a base class implementing a reasonable API which focuses on the set the back light to this percentage functionality, it includes a concrete implementation that uses SysFS to control brightness. Other systems (D-Bus, xbacklight, XELB using XRandR) are easily supportable, giving the same experience across environments.
This package provides various handy commands based on the Emacs completion function completing-read, which allows quickly selecting from a list of candidates.
Vertico provides a minimalistic vertical completion UI, which is based on Emacs' default completion system. By reusing the default system, it achieves full compatibility with built-in Emacs commands and completion tables. Vertico is pretty bare-bone and only provides a minimal set of commands. Additional optional enhancements can be provided externally by complementary packages.
YASnippet is a template system for Emacs. It allows you to type an abbreviation and automatically expand it into function templates.
This package provides a major mode for editing Fluke TL/1 source code. TL/1 is a language used to control Fluke’s 9100 series of testing and troubleshooting mainframes.
This package facilitates editing text from EXWM buffers by generating a temp buffer in which any useful Emacs utilities and modes can be invoked.
Alert is a Growl-workalike for Emacs which uses a common notification interface and multiple, selectable "styles", whose use is fully customizable by the user.
This package provides an Emacs interface to interact with a running session of the Transmission Bittorrent client.
Features:
List, add, start/stop, verify, remove torrents.
Set speed limits, ratio limits, bandwidth priorities, trackers.
Navigate to the corresponding file list, torrent info, peer info contexts.
Toggle downloading and set priorities for individual files.
This package adds enhanced support for Firefox (and forks based on Firefox) under EXWM. Keybindings intentionally mirror other Emacs navigation controls.
Scratch is an extension to Emacs that enables one to create scratch buffers that are in the same mode as the current buffer. This is notably useful when working on code in some language; you may grab code into a scratch buffer, and, by virtue of this extension, do so using the Emacs formatting rules for that language.