I am searching for adding options in my Emacs's config file, in order to highlight every double space in my files.
I usually use Vim, and the command i would like to use in Emacs is this:
highlight double_space ctermbg=blue
match double_space /\ {2}\|\s+$/
After many research, also on google, i don't find what i want to do.
You can had this line in your config file.
(add-hook 'change-major-mode-hook '(lambda () (highlight-regexp " " 'hi-blue)))
Related
I want the following behavior:
Append the word under cursor into a file(~/vocabulary.txt, for example)
Better still to bind a key for it.
Could anyone show me how to do it?
Should I put those code into .emacs ?
Try the following function:
(defun my-write-to-file ()
"Save word at point to file"
(interactive)
(write-region (concat (thing-at-point 'word) "\n") nil "~/vocabulary.txt" 'append))
When called, this function will save the word at point (the word the cursor is on or the word right before the cursor) to ~/vocabulary.txt.
You can bind it to a key (C-c w in this case, but you can change it to whatever you like) like this:
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c w") 'my-write-to-file)
To use, simply put the function and the keybinding assignment in your .emacs.
#Elethan wrote you a command that does just what you ask for, and bound it to a key.
It might also help to mention some general commands that you can use for this kind of thing. M-x append-to-file appends the region contents to a file, and M-x write-region prepends.
The manual is your friend for things like this. See nodes Misc File Ops and Accumulating Text.
Be aware too that for the two commands just mentioned, as the manual says about append-to-file (it should say it about both):
You should use append-to-file only with files that are not being
visited in Emacs. Using it on a file that you are editing in Emacs
would change the file behind Emacs’s back, which can lead to losing some
of your editing.
Accumulating Text also tells you about commands for adding text to a buffer, including the case of adding to a buffer for a file that you are visiting (as opposed to what the above quote warns you about for append-to-file). These include commands append-to-buffer and prepend-to-buffer.
I have a growing set of org files stored in org-directory. How can I navigate between them, preferably with interactive filtering and completion?
I thought there was a way to get org-mode to produce a list of known org files for quick navigation, but I can't seem to find it. If org-mode does not have this feature, how can I make a simple command that launches something like helm or icicles to find them?
The question is not very clear to me. But if your Org-mode files all have a certain file-name pattern (e.g. *.org) and all are in the same directory (org-directory) then you can use several methods Emacs method to access them:
C-x C-f *.org RETURN in org-directory opens them all (the buffers are visiting them but only the last one is shown).
C-x C-f *.org TAB in org-directory, to show them using completion, then pick whichever one you want (or pick more than one, using a glob pattern, as in #1).
The same as #2, using Icicles or Helm. In Icicles, at least, you can also match using regexps and in other ways.
Open Dired for just those files: C-x d *.org.
There are really any number of ways to do what you've described. But I'm guessing that you have not really described your request/problem/question well enough, and when you do you will get a narrower set of answers.
UPDATE after your comments:
Here's one way: Open Dired on all of your Org files in and under org-directory.
(defun foo ()
"Open Dired for (only) the Org files in and under `org-directory`."
(interactive)
(cd org-directory)
(dired "*.org" "-lRF"))
Test it with M-x foo. Put this in your init file:
(foo)
And here's another way: M-x bar or bind bar to a key.
(defun bar ()
"Open an Org file in or under `org-directory`."
(interactive)
(let ((default-directory org-directory)
(icicle-file-match-regexp ".*\\.org"))
(icicle-locate-file-of-content)))
I have a package that does just that: plain-org-wiki.
It's nothing too elaborate: I just dump all of my 45 org files into a single directory and get completion for them.
How about org-iswitchb, which is provided by org already?
Switch between Org buffers.
With one prefix argument, restrict available buffers to files.
With two prefix arguments, restrict available buffers to agenda files.
Add this to your startup file after org is loaded:
(global-set-key "\C-cb" 'org-iswitchb)
My favorite solution to this is helm-mode which is activated with the helm package from MELPA. Here's a demo:
It really makes for a great environment for searching ones files quickly. In addition, one can enable fuzzy completion! Here's a minimal configuration (after installing the helm package):
(require 'helm-config)
(helm-mode 1)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-f") 'helm-find-files)
You can also run grep on the files if you'd like to search their content. Take a look at this amazing guide if you'd like to learn more.
I recently began to use helm-mode in Emacs. While I like the listing of possible file names matching whatever I typed in find-file or write-file, I really like to be able to use SPC key for the minibuffer-complete-word function. Many times files will be saved as File1 / File2 / etc. The minibuffer-complete-word function will then auto-complete all the way to File and give me the choice to type the number, which is really handy but can not be done with helm-mode.
I tried to add the following to my init.el file:
(add-hook 'helm-mode-hook
(lambda ()
;; (local-set-key (kdb "SPC") 'minibuffer-complete-word)
(local-set-key "SPC" 'minibuffer-complete-word)))
It does not work, either with SPC or (kdb "SPC"). Would some guru show me the way to do it?
I put the following in my .emacs file:
(require 'dired-x)
(add-hook 'dired-load-hook '(lambda () (require 'dired-x)))
(setq dired-omit-files-p t)
(setq dired-omit-files
(concat dired-omit-files "\\|^\\..+$\\|-t\\.tex$\\|-t\\.pdf$"))
But C-x d still shows me .pdf and .tex files. Did I get the syntax wrong in that last line?
Bonus question: Is there a way to get Dired to hide hidden directories, like .git folders?
A simple and very general solution which doesn't rely on any extras is to do C-u s to change the ls flags and immediately refresh (that is, C-u s takes care of refreshing also, so there is very little typing involved). Usually you will want to remove -a to hide dotfiles. But you can do everything you're already able to do in the shell console, which is far more than what a simple toggle mode could offer (at the cost of some extra keypressings). And there is a history of previous flags available, so "toggling" is pretty fast too.
Your regexp will match *-t.tex files, not *.tex ones.
With recent version of Emacs, it should be sufficient to add the following section to ~/.emacs to filter what you want:
(require 'dired-x)
(setq-default dired-omit-files-p t) ; this is buffer-local variable
(setq dired-omit-files
(concat dired-omit-files "\\|^\\..+$\\|\\.pdf$\\|\\.tex$"))
Update: by default, dired-omit-files regexp filters out special directories . and ... If you don't want this behavior, you can just override defaults (instead of inheriting them with concat):
(setq dired-omit-files "^\\.[^.]\\|\\.pdf$\\|\\.tex$")
The regexp ^\\.[^.] will match any string of length 2+ starting with a dot where second character is any character except the dot itself. It's not perfect (will not match filenames like "..foo"), but should be ok most of the time.
Is there a substitute in emacs for the vi "gf" command?
meaning try to open the file which is under the cursor right now
if a real file name is in fact there.
Thanks
You want the find-file-at-point function (which is also aliased to ffap). It's not bound to a key by default, but you can use
M-x ffap
Or, you can put in your .emacs file:
(ffap-bindings)
This will replace many of the normal find-file key bindings (like C-x C-f) with ffap-based versions. See the commentary in ffap.el for details.
Thanks, it works quite well but somehow the vi (gf) version is
still somewhat smarter. I think it looks at some path variable for search paths.
I made something which is needlessly complicated but works for me (only in linux).
It uses the "locate" command to search for the path under the cursor.
I guess it could be made smarter by searching the relative path to the current file first.
sorry for my bad elisp skills...It can probably be achieved in a much nicer way.
put in your .emacs, then use with M-x goto-file
(defun shell-command-to-string (command)
"Execute shell command COMMAND and return its output as a string."
(with-output-to-string
(with-current-buffer standard-output
(call-process shell-file-name nil t nil shell-command-switch command))))
(defun goto-file ()
"open file under cursor"
(interactive)
(find-file (shell-command-to-string (concat "locate " (current-word) "|head -c -1" )) ))