Honestly you don't need to know lisp unless you plan on writing your own modes (which I'm sure you could do with Perlmacs). Usually you're just setting various values, and loading a few modes.

--
perl -pew "s/\b;([mnst])/'$1/g"


In reply to Re: Re: Re: Taking the emacs plunge by belg4mit
in thread Taking the emacs plunge by drewbie

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