Let me use this comment to apologize for some of the videos...
I am very bad at learning things from videos. I usually have to take notes of what are the positions in a video that contain things that I want to learn, and then watch those segments many, many times... I've tried to record videos that I would like to watch, and in most cases this means: videos with a lot of information, that can be watched with little attention, that have indexes to let people find quickly what are the parts that they want to watch again, and that have "textual companions"... practically all the videos have tutorials or webpages associated to them, and there the instructions are - hopefully - easy to follow.
Most people (I will explain this soon!) _can_ learn all the main features of eev very quickly by just following the first sections of the main tutorial - this one:
...but I have the impression that that tutorial only works well for people who think in a certain way - I call them "non-users", and I explained that term in a video called "Org for Non-Users". My page about that video is here:
That video doesn't have subtitles and is 16:36 long, and very few people nowadays have the patience to watch something as long as that. So it's better to go to this page instead,
and read the transcription of another video, that is called "Why eev has a weird elisp tutorial and how to use it".
So, to be honest, most "non-users" can learn all the main features of eev very quickly by just following the first sections of the main tutorial of eev, but unfortunately these "non-users" are very few!...
Roughly, the people who can use Org or Hyperbole without getting incredibly annoyed by the parts of the code that are hard to understand are "users", and these people usually hate eev. The "non-users" are the people who can't "use" Org and Hyperbole because they always try to tinker with the source, and both Org and Hyperbole have tons of low-level functions that are hard to understand. The "non-users" usually agree with the design decisions behind eev, and the "users" usually think that eev is totally wrong.
I am very bad at learning things from videos. I usually have to take notes of what are the positions in a video that contain things that I want to learn, and then watch those segments many, many times... I've tried to record videos that I would like to watch, and in most cases this means: videos with a lot of information, that can be watched with little attention, that have indexes to let people find quickly what are the parts that they want to watch again, and that have "textual companions"... practically all the videos have tutorials or webpages associated to them, and there the instructions are - hopefully - easy to follow.
The indexes are like this:
http://angg.twu.net/.emacs.videos.html#eev2019
There is a (fast-paced!) listing of the main "killer features" of eev in this part of my presentation at the EmacsConf2020:
(find-eev2020video "37:45" "3. Killer features")
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOAqBc42Gg8#t=37m45s
Most people (I will explain this soon!) _can_ learn all the main features of eev very quickly by just following the first sections of the main tutorial - this one:
http://angg.twu.net/eev-intros/find-eev-quick-intro.html
...but I have the impression that that tutorial only works well for people who think in a certain way - I call them "non-users", and I explained that term in a video called "Org for Non-Users". My page about that video is here:
http://angg.twu.net/2021-org-for-non-users.html
That video doesn't have subtitles and is 16:36 long, and very few people nowadays have the patience to watch something as long as that. So it's better to go to this page instead,
http://angg.twu.net/find-elisp-intro.html
and read the transcription of another video, that is called "Why eev has a weird elisp tutorial and how to use it".
So, to be honest, most "non-users" can learn all the main features of eev very quickly by just following the first sections of the main tutorial of eev, but unfortunately these "non-users" are very few!...
Roughly, the people who can use Org or Hyperbole without getting incredibly annoyed by the parts of the code that are hard to understand are "users", and these people usually hate eev. The "non-users" are the people who can't "use" Org and Hyperbole because they always try to tinker with the source, and both Org and Hyperbole have tons of low-level functions that are hard to understand. The "non-users" usually agree with the design decisions behind eev, and the "users" usually think that eev is totally wrong.