In Emacs, How I can invoke the alias with M-x ? For example, I have alias to open the file as in 'alias ff find-file $1'. I like to invoke it as M-x ff RETURN $1. Similarly, I have defined alias for viewing directories, and I like to invoke that with M-x without providing arguments.
For that you should define your alias as being a global Emacs alias rather than one specific to Eshell:
(defalias 'ff 'find-file)
Related
In the bottom of this this Github PR for clojure-emacs, bbatsov says :
#Bill You can also invoke cider-jack-in with a prefix argument and
you'll get prompted for a few things (like the command used to
jack-in).
How do I invoke cider-jack-in with a prefix ? For now I do M-x cider-jack-in. I would like to specify a profile interactively.
In emacs, C-u is used to specify a prefix argument before any command. Different commands treat prefixes differently, but you can generally expect a more customized response.
C-u M-x cider-jack-in
Emacs M-x compile does not see any aliases set in .bashrc. If I use M-x shell then type the alias, it is fine. I tried sourcing .bashrc from /etc/profile, from ~/.profile, ~/bash_env, anything I can think of to no avail.
I am on Emacs 23 and Ubuntu 11. I start emacs using /usr/bin/emacs %F, from a desktop button.
Emacs inherits its environment from the parent process. How are you invoking Emacs - from the command line, or some other way?
What happens if you:
M-x compile RET C-a C-k bash -i -c your_alias RET
Invoking bash as an interactive shell (-i option) should read your .bashrc aliases.
Edit: I think both M-x shell-command and M-x compile execute commands in an inferior shell via call-process. Try the following in your .emacs (or just evaluate):
(setq shell-file-name "bash")
(setq shell-command-switch "-ic")
I notice that after evaluation of the above, .bashrc aliases are picked up for use by both M-x shell-command and M-x compile, i.e
M-x compile RET your_alias RET
should then work.
My environment: Emacs 24.1 (pretest rc1), OSX 10.7.3
Keith Flower's answer works but can result in some slowdowns due to .bashrc being unnecessarily loaded in other places (presumably many many times, my computer is not exactly under-powered but emacs was almost unusable when trying to use autocomplete.el).
An alternative way is to locally modify shell-command-switch only for the functions where it is needed. This can be done using emacs' "advice" feature to create a wrapper around those functions. Here's an example that modifies compile:
;; Define + active modification to compile that locally sets
;; shell-command-switch to "-ic".
(defadvice compile (around use-bashrc activate)
"Load .bashrc in any calls to bash (e.g. so we can use aliases)"
(let ((shell-command-switch "-ic"))
ad-do-it))
You need to write similar "advice" for each function that you want to use .bashrc (e.g. I also needed to define the same advice for recompile), just copy the above and replace compile in the above with another function name.
You may like emac's bash-completion :
https://github.com/szermatt/emacs-bash-completion
You'll be able to use tab completion of your aliases in the compilation minibuffer and in shell-mode.
Enjoy !
(they speak about it here Bash autocompletion in Emacs shell-mode )
I think compilation commands are not interpreted through a shell: they are juste exec'ed by emacs (which means aliases, shell functions and other shell-specific things are not taken into account).
Try to wrap you compilation command into a shell-script which would source the correct environment.
You can do this either with a full-fledged shell-script in the form
#!/bin/bash
source "~/.bashrc"
my_command
or directly in emacs with a compilation command of the form
bash -c "source ~/.bashrc; my_command"
See Is there a way to get my emacs to recognize my bash aliases and custom functions when I run a shell command? for a fix which doesn't run all your .bashrc and doesn't create these error messages:
bash: cannot set terminal process group (-1): Inappropriate ioctl for device
bash: no job control in this shell
I have followed instructions from How can I run Cygwin Bash Shell from within Emacs? this question and I have gone further and added the (setq explicit-bash-args '("--login" "-i")) command, however emacs continues to only display the dos prompt when I type M-x shell. In summery my .emacs file looks like this:
(defun cygwin-shell ()
"Run cygwin bash in shell mode."
(interactive)
(let ((explicit-shell-file-name "C:/cygwin/bin/bash"))
(call-interactively 'shell)))
(setq explicit-bash-args '("--login" "-i"))`
Please be gentle with the answers as I am right at the bottom of the famous vertical emacs learning curve!
If you implemented the answer from that question, note that you have to do M-x cygwin-shell to start bash. If you want to use it for every M-x shell you need to call
(setq explicit-shell-file-name "C:/cygwin/bin/bash")
Since you stated that you are learning, here's a few tips when trying this out.
type C-x C-f ~/.emacs to open your .emacs file in your user path.
Enter your function above at the end
M-x load-file [RET] .emacs: loads the buffer (no need to restart emacs)
C-h a: If you are interested in some specific action, you can look it up
C-h v [RET] variable: can inspect the variable, check the value of explicit-bash-args for instance
And, btw, I'm not sure what the "--login -i" does, but someone stated in a comment that you should have that so "ls" would work. If you have your cygwin bin path in your PATH environment variable, bash will find ls anyway. No need to escape the path variable either, this is handled by bash (do an echo $PATH in bash when you get it working and you'll see).
When in eshell is there a command for opening a file in another buffer?
You can call elisp functions directly. So to open a file, call find-file on the filename. Example:
~ $ ls
myfile
~ $ (find-file "myfile")
Parentheses and quotes are optional, so this works too:
~ $ find-file myfile
In eshell, you don't have to use the entire path when using the find file command. Hitting C-x C-f is the same as typing find-file, and eshell sets the directory to the one you are currently browsing. This is the advantage to me over using ansi-term. Try it out.
find-file basically does it, as ataylor and ryan kung indicated earlier.
$ find-file myfile
but, using eshell itself, you can also can set an even shorter alias:
$ alias ff 'for i in ${eshell-flatten-list $*} {find-file $i}'
(and eshell remembers it permanently). so from now you can just type:
$ ff myfile
thanks to this tutorial
The elisp funct can be directly used in eshell, so you can try:
find-file <filename>
Why use eshell? 'C-x f' and type the location of your file.
I use Ubuntu8.10 and emacs-snapshot. Running shell-mode on emacs and input "ls" shows escape codes:
screenshot http://lh3.ggpht.com/_os_zrveP8Ns/SdMmohKNjmI/AAAAAAAADB4/VlKpr5H_7ZA/s512/screen.png
How can I get the output I expect?
You can use AnsiTerm which does support colors or you can enable AnsiColor for the normal shell:
(autoload 'ansi-color-for-comint-mode-on "ansi-color" nil t)
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook 'ansi-color-for-comint-mode-on)
Furthermore, you may choose another shell: M-x term or M-x eshell. The former provides an interface that is much closer to a real terminal emulator than shell-mode (once you start it, you can get out of the mode with C-c C-j and get in again with C-c C-k). The latter is a shell implementation written in Elisp (you can use the common shell commands as well as evaluating Lisp code).
Expanding on vatine's answer, you can add that inside your .cshrc (.tcshrc/.bashrc) wrapped with a check for the environment variable INSIDE_EMACS.
For example (from my .tcshrc):
if ( $?INSIDE_EMACS ) then
alias l 'ls --color=never'
endif
M-x ansi-color-for-comint-mode-on
The problem is that "l" is trying to colorise the output and emacs isn't having any of it. Try the following:
$ unalias l
$ alias l ls --color=never
I wrapped my alias ls ='ls --color=auto' in ~/.bashrc:
case "$TERM" in
xterm*|rxvt*)
if [ -x /usr/bin/dircolors ]; then
alias ls='ls --color=auto'
...
fi
;;
*)
;;
esac
This disables using color=auto in emacs.