: This is the "gold standard" for power users. You can find robust scripts like Emacs-anywhere or standard AHK templates that remap basic navigation. Pros : Highly customizable; works in almost any app.
: Requires installing AHK and some light scripting knowledge.
For most people, is the best balance of stability and power. It effectively turns Windows into a much more keyboard-friendly environment without the bloat of dedicated "emulators."
: Only gives you the keybindings within the terminal or the Emacs window, not system-wide. Common Hurdles
: If you just want to run "real" Emacs on Windows. Pros : It is Emacs. No emulation required.
: Plug-and-play; offers different levels of "Emacs-ness" (from basic navigation to full command sets).
: This is the "gold standard" for power users. You can find robust scripts like Emacs-anywhere or standard AHK templates that remap basic navigation. Pros : Highly customizable; works in almost any app.
: Requires installing AHK and some light scripting knowledge.
For most people, is the best balance of stability and power. It effectively turns Windows into a much more keyboard-friendly environment without the bloat of dedicated "emulators."
: Only gives you the keybindings within the terminal or the Emacs window, not system-wide. Common Hurdles
: If you just want to run "real" Emacs on Windows. Pros : It is Emacs. No emulation required.
: Plug-and-play; offers different levels of "Emacs-ness" (from basic navigation to full command sets).