Emacs config utilizing prelude as a base
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  1. # Emacs Prelude
  2. ## Prelude
  3. Emacs is probably the best text editor in the world. However, the
  4. process of coming up with a useful Emacs configuration is long and
  5. difficult. It's this process that separates you from truly taking
  6. advantage of Emacs's power. I like to refer to this process as the
  7. **Prelude**. The **Emacs Prelude** has the goal to ease the initial
  8. Emacs setup process and to provide you with a much more powerful and
  9. productive experience than that you get out of the box. By using **Emacs
  10. Prelude** you're basically getting a "Get me out of the Prelude, I
  11. just want to use Emacs" card.
  12. Emacs Prelude is compatible **ONLY with GNU Emacs 24**. While Emacs 24
  13. is not yet officially released it's a rock solid piece of software
  14. more than suitable for everyday work. There is no good excuse not to
  15. use Emacs 24!
  16. Emacs Prelude is not the only reusable Emacs config out there - the
  17. Emacs Starter Kit is fairly popular and there is the Emacs Dev Kit
  18. that I used to maintain. I've decided to abandon the Emacs Dev Kit for
  19. the Emacs Prelude for two reasons - the unfortunate choice a name (too
  20. similar to Emacs Starter Kit) and the totally new philosophy I have in
  21. store for the Prelude (easy to update, easy to personalize, easy to
  22. extend, highly modular, highly comprehensible).
  23. ## Fast Forward
  24. Assuming you're using an Unix-like OS (*BSD, GNU/Linux, OS X, Solaris,
  25. etc), you already have Emacs 24 installed, as well as git & curl you
  26. can skip the whole manual and just type in your favorite shell the
  27. following command:
  28. ``
  29. ## Getting Emacs 24
  30. Obviously to use the Emacs Prelude you have to install Emacs 24
  31. first. Here's a few tips on doing so:
  32. ### OS X
  33. Obtaining Emacs 24 on OS X is really simple. There are two popular
  34. ways to do it. The first is to simply download a pretest (or a nightly
  35. build) from [Emacs for OSX](http://emacsformacosx.com). My personal
  36. recommendation would be to get the latest pretest (which is ironically
  37. the first pretest as well) from
  38. [here](http://emacsformacosx.com/emacs-builds/Emacs-pretest-24.0.90-universal-10.6.7.dmg).
  39. That was really easy, right?
  40. The second easy way to obtain Emacs 24 is via
  41. [homebrew](http://mxcl.github.com/homebrew/). Just type the following
  42. incantation in your shell and you're done:
  43. ```
  44. $ brew install emacs --cocoa --use-git-head --HEAD
  45. $ cp -r /usr/local/Cellar/emacs/HEAD/Emacs.app /Applications/
  46. ```
  47. The second step is optional, but it's recommended if you like to start
  48. Emacs from the launchpad or from Spotlight. Personally I prefer to
  49. start Emacs in daemon mode (`emacs --daemon`), so that I could share a
  50. single Emacs instance between several Emacs clients (`emacsclient
  51. -c/t`).
  52. That's all folk! You may now proceed to the configuration section.
  53. ### Linux
  54. Given that Linux is more or less the home os of Emacs it presents us
  55. with the most installation options. Of course, we can build Emacs from
  56. [source](https://github.com/emacsmirror/emacs) on every distribution
  57. out there, but I rarely bother to do so. Using the distribution's
  58. package manager is a better idea for many reasons - you don't need to
  59. install a build chain and lots of dev libraries, you get updated
  60. versions when they are released and you get automated dependency
  61. manager, just to name a few.
  62. That said, few distributions include in their primary repositories
  63. builds of Emacs 24. Luckily there are some unofficial repos that come
  64. to the rescue.
  65. Debian/Ubuntu users should look no further than the amazing
  66. [emacs-snapshot APT repo](http://emacs.naquadah.org/). You'll find
  67. installation instructions there for all the relevant Debian and Ubuntu
  68. versions out there. High quality, highly recommended builds!
  69. Gentoo users have even less to do, since Emacs 24 can be obtained via
  70. the emacs-vcs package in portage, as noted in the official
  71. [Emacs on Gentoo page](http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/lisp/emacs/emacs.xml).
  72. Unfortunately I wasn't able to find prebuilt Emacs 24 packages for any
  73. of the RPM distros (Fedora, SUSE, Mandriva, etc). Since, I'm Debian
  74. user I have to admit that I didn't look that far, but the source
  75. installation is not particularly hard and is always an option.
  76. ### Windows
  77. There are several ways to obtain precompiled Emacs 24 binaries if
  78. you're a Windows users. The most popular are
  79. [EmacsW32](http://ourcomments.org/cgi-bin/emacsw32-dl-latest.pl),
  80. [Emacs for Windows](http://code.google.com/p/emacs-for-windows/) and
  81. of course the official
  82. [Emacs Windows builds](http://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/emacs/windows/). I've
  83. ,personally, never used any builds other than the official ones. The
  84. unofficial builds usually include installers and various patches that
  85. might be of use to some users.
  86. Since I rarely use Windows I cannot give you any more advice on the
  87. choice of a binary vendor.
  88. ## Enhanced programming experience
  89. The following list will be expanded greatly in the future.
  90. ### Additional programming languages support
  91. * [Clojure](https://github.com/technomancy/clojure-mode)
  92. * [CoffeeScript](https://github.com/defunkt/coffee-mode)
  93. * [Erlang](http://www.erlang.org/doc/apps/tools/erlang_mode_chapter.html)
  94. * [Groovy](http://groovy.codehaus.org/Emacs+Groovy+Mode)
  95. * [Haskell](http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Haskell_mode_for_Emacs)
  96. ### Additional markup languages support
  97. * Markdown
  98. * Sass
  99. * Haml
  100. * Yaml
  101. * LaTeX
  102. ### Enhanced configuration
  103. * C
  104. * Clojure
  105. * CoffeeScript
  106. * Common Lisp
  107. * ERC
  108. * JavaScript
  109. * Python
  110. * Ruby
  111. * Scheme
  112. * XML
  113. ## Enhanced productivity
  114. * [Projectile](https://github.com/bbatsov/projectile)
  115. * yasnippet
  116. ## Bundled packages
  117. * auctex (LaTeX editing)
  118. * clojure-mode
  119. * coffee-mode
  120. * deft (note taking)
  121. * gist (snippet sharing on github.com)
  122. * groovy-mode
  123. * haml-mode
  124. * haskell-mode
  125. * magit (enhanced git integration)
  126. * markdown-mode
  127. * paredit
  128. * projectile (project management mode)
  129. * python.el (improved Python mode)
  130. * sass-mode
  131. * scss-mode
  132. * yaml-mode
  133. * yari (ri frontend)
  134. * yasnippet
  135. ## Installation
  136. ### Automated
  137. You can install Emacs via the command line with either `curl` or `wget`.
  138. If you're using `curl` type the following command:
  139. `curl -L https://github.com/bbatsov/emacs-prelude/raw/master/utils/installer.sh | sh`
  140. If you're using `wget` type:
  141. `wget --no-check-certificate https://github.com/bbatsov/emacs-prelude/raw/master/utils/installer.sh -O - | sh`
  142. ### Manual
  143. ```bash
  144. $ git clone git://github.com/bbatsov/emacs-prelude.git path/to/local/repo
  145. $ ln -s path/to/local/repo ~/.emacs.d
  146. ```
  147. You'd do well to replace `~/.emacs.d` with the value of
  148. `user-emacs-directory` for your OS. You can check the value by doing
  149. `C-h v user-emacs-directory` inside Emacs.
  150. You might have to install the `make` and `makeinfo` packages if you
  151. don't have them already, since the build of some packages obtained via
  152. `el-get` might require them.
  153. ## Running
  154. Nothing fancy here. Just start Emacs as usual. Personally I run Emacs
  155. in daemon mode:
  156. `$ emacs --daemon`
  157. Afterwards I connect to the server with either a terminal or a GUI
  158. client like this:
  159. ```bash
  160. $ emacsclient -t
  161. $ emacsclient -c
  162. ```
  163. You'd probably do well to put a few aliases in your `.zshrc` (or
  164. `.bashrc`):
  165. ```bash
  166. alias e=emacsclient -t
  167. alias ec=emacsclient -c
  168. alias vim=emacsclient -t
  169. alias vi=emacsclient -t
  170. ```
  171. The last two aliases are helpful if you're used to editing files from
  172. the command line using `vi(m)`.
  173. ## Color Themes
  174. Emacs 24 ships with a new theming facility that effectively renders
  175. the old color-theme package obsolete. Emacs 24 provides a dozen of
  176. built-in themes you can use out-of-the-box by invoking the `M-x
  177. load-theme` command. Emacs Prelude adds two more popular themes to the
  178. mix - zenburn and solarized (I'm the maintainer of the Emacs ports
  179. included).
  180. Zenburn is the default color theme in Prelude, but you can change it
  181. at your discretion. Why Zenburn? I (and lots of hackers around the
  182. world) find it pretty neat for some reason. Personally I find the
  183. default theme pretty tiresome for the eyes, that's why I took that
  184. "controversial" decision to replace it. You can, of course, easily go
  185. back to the default (or select another theme entirely).
  186. To disable Zenburn just put in your personal config the following
  187. line:
  188. ```elisp
  189. (disable-theme 'zenburn)
  190. ```
  191. Or you can use another theme altogether by adding something like:
  192. ```elisp
  193. (enable-theme 'solarized-dark t)
  194. ```
  195. ## Personalizing
  196. If you'd like to change some of the setting in Prelude (or simply add
  197. more) the proper way to do so would be to create Emacs Lisp files
  198. under the **personal** directory in `prelude-dir`. They will be loaded
  199. automatically be Prelude on startup.
  200. Avoid modifying the Prelude config itself - this will make it hard for
  201. you to receive automatic updates in the future.
  202. ## Caveats & Pitfalls
  203. ### No arrow navigation in editor buffers
  204. This is not a bug - it's a feature! I firmly believe that the one true
  205. way to use Emacs is by using it the way it was intended to be used (as
  206. far as navigation is concerned at least). That's why I've disabled all
  207. movement commands with arrows - to prevent you from being tempted to
  208. use them.
  209. If you'd still like to use the arrow keys just invoke `M-x
  210. prelude-restore-arrow-keys` to enable them for the duration of your
  211. current Emacs session or add `(prelude-restore-arrow-keys)` to your
  212. personal Emacs customization to enable them permanently.
  213. ### Windows compatibility
  214. While everything in Prelude should work fine in Windows I test it only
  215. with Linux & OSX so there are Windows related problems from time to
  216. time. This situation will probably improve over time.
  217. ## Known issues
  218. Check out the project's [issue list](https://github.com/bbatsov/emacs-prelude/issues?sort=created&direction=desc&state=open) for that. :-)
  219. ## Contributors
  220. Here's a [list](https://github.com/bbatsov/emacs-prelude/contributors) of all the people who have contributed to the
  221. development of Emacs Prelude.
  222. ## Bugs & Improvements
  223. Bug reports and suggestions for improvements are always
  224. welcome. github pull requests are even better! :-)
  225. I'd like to include a nice variety of Emacs 24 themes into Prelude -
  226. so if you've developed (or simply found) one - give me a shout and
  227. I'll take a look at it.
  228. Cheers,
  229. Bozhidar