Emacs: Disable line truncation in minibuffer only - emacs

I am using ido mode for file & buffer switching in Emacs 23.
The following options allow the minibuffer to be resized if there is more than one line worth of files in the directory:
(setq resize-mini-windows t) ; grow and shrink as necessary
(setq max-mini-window-height 3) ; grow up to max of 3 lines
However, this only works if line truncation is not enabled by default (globally):
(setq-default truncate-lines t) ; Truncate, do not wrap lines
I like this option for my main editing window, but this also overrides the above function to show more than one line in the minibuffer. The line in the minibuffer is truncated, not wrapped, also.
Is there a way to enable line truncation for the main editing window and only disable it in the minibuffer?

You just need to set the truncate-lines variable to nil for the minibuffer. The easiest way to do that is with the following:
(add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook
(lambda () (setq truncate-lines nil)))

Related

Repeating TABs on subsequent lines in text files (but keeping TABs disabled for code)

I am editing a text file foo.txt using emacs.
I press C-q TAB to insert a TAB character at the beginning of a line and then follow with a few characters.
Once I press ENTER, emacs inserts eight spaces on the following line.
How do I specify in my .emacs that I would like TABs to be repeated on subsequent lines with TABs?
Importantly, I dislike TAB characters in program code, and so I have (setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil) to make sure that TABs are inserted only when I explicitly ask for them.
Emacs inserts SPC chars because you told it to, by setting indent-tabs-mode to nil (my preference too, BTW).
If you want Emacs to indent using TAB chars in a particular mode (buffer), but you want it to use SPC chars in general (i.e., in other modes), then set indent-tabs-mode to t in those modes where you want TABs. Just use setq when you are in the mode, since it is a buffer-local variable. For example:
(add-hook MY-mode-hook (lambda () (setq indent-tabs-mode t)))
The real answer is: No, there is no way to do this by some simple configuration setting in emacs. indent-tabs-mode is either on or off, and indentation will behave according to that.
But, just because this feature is not there, doesn't mean you can't add it!
This is actually not a simple problem from what I found. Whether or not to use tabs or spaces is determined by indent-tabs-mode in C mostly. Assuming that you are running a recent version of emacs, the auto indentation is coming from electric-indent-mode which uses indent-according-to-mode in a post-self-insert-hook to do the indentation.
What I did for this was define a buffer local minor mode, when this mode is active indent-tabs-mode will be temporarily set depending on the first character in the last line while running indent-according-to-mode.
So when smart-electric-indent-tabs-mode is active, and your last line started with the tab, the next line will indent with a tab too, else it will just use whatever indent-tabs-mode would normally be set to.
You could add the following to your config to activate it. The add-hook clause is put in there for your convenience, you can activate it on the fly like a normal minor mode if you'd like.
(define-minor-mode smart-electric-indent-tabs-mode
"When on, indenting will use tabs if the current line does,
else it will indent according to `indent-tabs-mode'."
:init-value nil
:lighter " smart-tabs"
:keymap nil
:global nil)
(defadvice indent-according-to-mode (around maybe-use-tabs activate)
"Follow `smart-electric-indent-tabs-mode'."
(let ((indent-tabs-mode
(or (and smart-electric-indent-tabs-mode
(save-excursion
(save-restriction
(widen)
(beginning-of-line 0)
(looking-at "\t"))))
indent-tabs-mode)))
ad-do-it))
;; if you want, add a text mode hook
(add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'smart-electric-indent-tabs-mode)
This has only been tested to work during electric indentation

Disabling a global mode (whitespace-style/mode) temporarily in a buffer

I have the following in my .emacs.d/init.el file:
;; Highlight lines longer than 100 characters
(setq whitespace-line-column 100)
(setq whitespace-style '(face lines-tail trailing))
(global-whitespace-mode 1)
This basically highlights characters that are exceeding 100 characters in a line. I would like to disable that temporarily in some buffers. I've tried M-x set-variable and to set the style or increasing the line column, but that doesn't take effect. I also tried disabling the global-white-space-mode but no luck.
Any ideas how I can do that?
Both whites-space-mode and global-whitespace-mode are toggles. Bind either or both to keys, for convenience, if you want. Repeat global-whitespace-mode to turn it off everywhere. Or use whitespace-mode (twice) to toggle it off in just the current buffer.

Highlight current line only in line mode (not in char mode)

When working in ansi-term, how can I have emacs only highlight the current line when I am in line mode? (and not in char mode?).
I currently have (global-hl-line-mode t) which activates hl-line-mode in every buffer (which I want). I just want to specifically disable it in char run mode.
You can achieve the effect you want in two steps. First, replace (global-hl-line-mode t) in your .emacs file with the following lines:
(add-hook 'after-change-major-mode-hook
'(lambda () (hl-line-mode (if (equal major-mode 'term-mode) 0 1))))
This basically does the same thing as making hl-line-mode a global minor mode, as it turns on hl-line-mode every time the major mode of a buffer changes. But it doesn't turn on hl-line-mode if the new major mode of a buffer is term-mode. This way, hl-line-mode is disabled by default for ansi-term.
However, you do want to turn it on when you're in line-mode (but not in char run mode). For that, add the following lines as well to your .emacs file:
(defadvice term-line-mode (after enable-hl-line-in-term-line-mode)
(hl-line-mode 1))
(defadvice term-char-mode (after disable-hl-line-in-term-char-mode)
(hl-line-mode 0))
Depending on which version of Emacs you're using, you might experience an odd behavior in the minibuffer with the above code: either the full line or parts of the line might get highlighted every time you use the minibuffer. To fix that, also add the following line to your .emacs file:
(add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook '(lambda () (hl-line-mode 0)))
This approach gives you quite a bit of flexibility over when hl-line-mode should be turned on or off. For instance, if you wanted to have other major modes for which hl-line-mode should be turned off, you could replace the (equal major-mode 'term-mode) portion of the above code with:
(member major-mode '(term-mode other-mode1 other-mode2))
where other-modeN are the names of the major modes for which you want hl-line-mode to be disabled. Of course you're not limited to only two such names.

How to make emacs behave closer to the regular editors?

I'm using Emacs 23.1.1 on Ubuntu with Emacs starter kit. I primarily work in the lua-mode.
Is there a way to stop Emacs being so smart about indentation? I'm used to the dumb editors, and press all the required keys manually.
I want to use two spaces per indent, tabs-to-spaces.
When I press RETURN, the new line indentation must match the previous line.
When I press TAB on the leading whitespace, the line contents must be indented by one indentation unit.
When I press TAB on the beginning of empty line, the cursor must move one indentation unit to the right.
Oh, and I'd like to get soft word wrap on 80th column and trim-trailing-spaces on save as well.
Update:
(Would put this in a comment, but it needs formatting)
If I use Thomas's solution, auto-indent on RETURN is "fixed", but TAB still indents weirdly:
local run = function(...)
x
"x" marks the spot where cursor appears after I type the first line and hit RETURN, TAB.
Emacs has a concept of modes, which means that depending on what type of file you're editing it provides special functionality that is useful for that file. Every buffer has one major mode associated and optionally a number of minor modes.
Indentation is one of the things that is typically mode-dependent. That is, you may have to configure indentation separately for every major-mode, because otherwise when you load a new file, its associated major mode may override your indentation settings. It's possible though to write a function that configures indentation and set up Emacs in a way that the function is invoked whenever a new major-mode is started.
In order to realize the settings you want, you'll need to run a few lines of elisp code. (Unfortunately your description of what should happen when you hit TAB leaves out some details, I've implemented the simplest version I could think of below -- if it's not what you want, that can be changed, of course.)
Put the following code in the file named .emacs in your home directory (~):
(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil) ; use spaces for indentation
(defvar my-indentation-width 2
"The number of spaces I prefer for line indentation.")
(defun my-enter ()
"Inserts a newline character then indents the new line just
like the previous line"
(interactive)
(newline)
(indent-relative-maybe))
(defun my-indent ()
"When point is on leading white-space of a non-empty line, the
line is indented `my-indentation-width' spaces. If point is at
the beginning of an empty line, inserts `my-indentation-width'
spaces."
(interactive)
(insert (make-string my-indentation-width ? )))
(defun my-indentation-setup ()
"Binds RETURN to the function `my-enter' and TAB to call
`my-indent'"
(local-set-key "\r" 'my-enter)
(setq indent-line-function 'my-indent))
(defun delete-trailing-whitespace-and-blank-lines ()
"Deletes all whitespace at the end of a buffer (or, rather, a
buffer's accessible portion, see `Narrowing'), including blank
lines."
(interactive)
(let ((point (point)))
(delete-trailing-whitespace)
(goto-char (point-max))
(delete-blank-lines)
(goto-char (min point (point-max)))))
;; make sure trailing whitespace is removed every time a buffer is saved.
(add-hook 'before-save-hook 'delete-trailing-whitespace-and-blank-lines)
;; globally install my indentation setup
(global-set-key "\r" 'my-enter)
(setq indent-line-function 'my-indent)
;; also override key setting of major-modes, if any
(add-hook 'after-change-major-mode-hook 'my-indentation-setup)
This works for me in Emacs 23, although I may have missed some edge cases. However, these changes are so fundamental that I predict you will run into incompatibilities sooner or later with some major-modes that expect indentation to work they set it up. If you really want to get into Emacs it's worthwhile adapting the habits you inherited from other editors to the way Emacs does things.
For soft word-wrap there is a minor-mode called "longlines" which you can download from here: http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/emacs/download/longlines.el I haven't used it so I can't tell you how well it works.
Fixing TAB and RETURN:
(global-set-key "\t" 'self-insert-command)
(global-set-key "\r" 'newline-and-indent)
Fill column (haven't tried): say ESC x customize-var, enter fill-column, set to 80.

Emacs global configuration of tabs

I'm attempting to switch from Vim to Emacs, but I'm tearing my hair out trying to configure it to treat tabs how I wish. I require:
Inserted "tabs" to be expanded into two spaces. Emacs stubbornly sticks to eight, no matter what I do.
Tabs (i.e. real \t characters) to be represented on screen by two spaces.
Pressing TAB should insert a tab at the cursor rather than indent the entire line. Currently, I press TAB anywhere and Emacs destroys all whitespace at the start of the line; this is the most infuriating thing so far.
My current ~/.emacs reads
(setq standard-indent 2)
(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil)
but I have tried no end of suggested configurations from the web, none of which have done what they said they would. (Does the API constantly change? I'm using GNU Emacs 23.1.1, apparently.)
Emacs has extremely flexible support for handling indentation. Generally the mode that you are in dictates how they work - so if you're working on a C file then the way that pressing tab works will be different than if you're working on a Python file.
So it does depend which mode you're working in, which will limit the answers you get. In most cases I would recommend that you don't fight against it - for me the indentation behaviour is one of the best features of emacs. However, you do need to spend the time to customize it for yourself.
To change the way that tabs are displayed you need to set tab-width to 2. If you're editing Java or C style code then it sounds like you want to turn off all the nice indentation features by these to NIL:
c-tab-always-indent
c-syntactic-indentation
indent-tabs-mode
I suggest you set these through the customization interface. If you use "M-x customize-group RET C" then you can see the various settings for C mode.
If you're editting different types of files then the instructions will be different.
Perhaps emacs is in the wrong mode for your file. You could try doing "M-x fundamental-mode" to see if you prefer the behaviour there.
;; * Inserted "tabs" to be expanded into two spaces. Emacs stubbornly
;; sticks to eight, no matter what I do.
;; * Tabs (i.e. real \t characters) to be represented on screen by two
;; spaces.
(setq-default tab-width 2)
;; * Pressing TAB should insert a tab at the cursor rather than indent
;; the entire line. Currently, I press TAB anywhere and Emacs
;; destroys all whitespace at the start of the line; this is the
;; most infuriating thing so far.
(setq-default indent-tabs-mode t)
(mapcar (lambda (hooksym)
(add-hook hooksym
(lambda ()
(kill-local-variable 'indent-tabs-mode)
(kill-local-variable 'tab-width)
(local-set-key (kbd "TAB") 'self-insert-command))))
'(
c-mode-common-hook
;; add other hook functions here, one for each mode you use :-(
))
;; How to know the name of the hook function? Well ... visit a file
;; in that mode, and then type C-h v major-mode RET. You'll see the
;; mode's name in the *Help* buffer (probably on the second line).
;; Then type (e.g.) C-h f python-mode; you'll see blather about the
;; mode, and (hopefully) somewhere in there you'll see (again e.g.)
;; "This mode runs the hook `python-mode-hook', as the final step
;; during initialization."
This should get you most of what you want. You'll probably have to customize some other programming modes you commonly use.
(defun insert-tab ()
"self-insert-command doesn't seem to work for tab"
(interactive)
(insert "\t"))
(setq indent-line-function 'insert-tab) ;# for many modes
(define-key c-mode-base-map [tab] 'insert-tab) ;# for c/c++/java/etc.
(setq-default tab-width 2)