A couple of days ago I found out org-mode capture sun menus can handle additional nested menus. To recap quickly here (see more details in the link), this means that you’d have the main menu for capture templates, which will lead to additional templates menus, and that menu can keep leading to more and more menus. I am not sure how many levels of these templates we can have, but “more than enough” is a good enough answer for me.

As I was writing the post above, I went back to my old blog and reviewed two of my older, Emacs-usage-defining posts, and added them to this blog: Org-mode in files and Submenus in org-mode capture.

Those of you who enjoy reading about the Emacs experience from a user perspective (especially someone who started out without a programming background) might want to give those a read, in the order mentioned above. Beyond explaining these crucial org-mode methods (and in my opinion, crucial to use Emacs in general), these describe the struggle and the learning process of, well, how to Emacs correctly: from realizing an option exists (of course it exists, it’s Emacs), through asking the right questions, to finding the information and implementing the solution.

I’ve spent a couple of hours re-reading and revising these posts, and reached a conclusion that many of you who are reading this over their RSS feed in Emacs would probably agree with. We, Emacs users who blog, have a critical role in the Emacs ecosystem: we provide others with ideas and questions to ask, which can later be directed to official channels, the manual, and brainstorming answers.

As I mentioned a couple of times throughout the lifetime of my blog (this one and the old one): Emacs is not just a program, it’s a lifestyle.