Hi! Welcome back to Emacs rocks! It's episode 2 and today I have a real treat for you. Check it out! It's VimGolf! Yay! VimGolf is really cool, I really wish there was one for Emacs. It's a competition and the goal is to transform the starting file into the ending file in as few keystrokes as possible. So, this is challenge number 6 and there is a one to ten in letters and a one to ten in numbers and the goal is to get the one to ten lined up in two columns. So the best score into Vim is 17, is the winning score. So let's see if Emacs might do a little bit better. Ok, I'll run through it one time without commentary and then I'll run through it again and tell you what I'm doing. So pay attention to the keystrokes. Haha! Now wasn't that awesome. Let's see it again in slow motion. Ok, now we are back to the start. This is the first episode where I use macros but it won't be the last! Macros is a powerhorse in Emacs. So I start by defining a macro pressing F3 then jump to the bottom and I delete all. This puts it into the kill ring and I erase the space and then I press Control-9 Control-9 doesn't do anything on it's own, but it makes my next command repeat 9 times. Which is command p for previous line, 9 lines up Control-E, tab, yank, and my macro is finished. So I press F4 to complete my macro and now I can run that macro nine times, Control-9 F4. Done. And that was 12 keystrokes. Let me remind tou, best in Vim, 17. So, to reiterate Emacs rocks!