Most of console-based utilities prints filename in format
"filename:linenumber". So you may wish to open filename in that format.
This little 'advice' can do that. Just call
emacsclient filename:linenumber
and cursor will be positioned on requested line
Since Helm is another option to Ido, users who want to use it fully
should benefit from the default Prelude setup. If some users don't like,
they can always disable global Helm mode according to the instructions
in the homepage. User can enable Helm everywhere with
prelude-helm-everywhere.
This change also enables Helm version of command history in shell and
eshell. It also adds minibuffer history without overrides any key
binding in minibuffer-local-map.
Since some users prefer using default Prelude commands, a new global
mode is defined: prelude-global-helm-mode. When activate, Helm binds
some global key bindings to its own commands. When deactivate, Helm
removes the bindings and Prelude uses the default bindings.
The current prelude-helm only uses a single command of Helm, which
is a waste given how Helm contains many other commands. When
prelude-helm is activated, users should be able to utilize all of these
useful commands. If a user wants to use Helm, he will want to use all of
its features anyway.
prelude-helm is configured that it is able to be used with this [guide](http://tuhdo.github.io/helm-intro.html).
At least on my Windows 7 machine, `user-emacs-directory` prints `~/.emacs.d`, which is not really useful, since you also then have to realize that the tilde refers to the roaming appdata directory. I think this way of documenting would perhaps be more immediately useful. For probably almost all other platforms the tilde path will work just fine.