Charles Choi: Announcing Anju

The recent post “You don’t not need the mouse” by noa ks speaks to a sentiment that I’ve had for some time. Using the mouse in Emacs can be a good, daresay delightful, experience. Unfortunately though, Emacs has antiquated default settings that presume we’re all still using a 90’s style 3-button workstation mouse. In addition, the overreliance on reusing menu keymaps for both the main and context menus results in poor user experience. I feel strongly that context menus populated this way feel more like an inventory than a thoughtful selection of commands relevant to context.

Thankfully, Emacs offers the mechanisms to sculpt mouse interactions to contemporary (circa 2026) expectations. Over the past three years, I’ve taken advantage of them to implement the following features:

  • Mode Line

    • Right mouse click on blank space to pop-up a window management menu
    • Left mouse click on buffer name to pop-up a customizable list of buffers
    • Double click on blank space to toggle current window to maximize or return to prior window configuration
  • Context Menu

    • Context-aware commands for selected text (use-region-p)
    • Context-aware commands for Org and Dired mode
  • Main Menu

    • Add Bookmarks menu
    • Reorganize Help menu

Several months ago, I decided these mouse interaction changes should be generalized into a package that others could use. So began the Anju project.

Today I’m happy to announce that Anju v1.0 is now available on MELPA.

Learn more details about Anju in its User Guide.

As Anju is new, I’m always open to constructive feedback on it. Let me know what you think. Work on Anju is ongoing with the plan to keep adding improvements to it over time, in particular with supporting more context menus for different modes.

-1:-- Announcing Anju (Post Charles Choi)--L0--C0--2026-03-30T15:45:00.000Z

Irreal: Lisp Machines!

Anyone who’s been around Irreal for a while knows of my fascination with Lisp Machines. Part of my love or Emacs is that it’s (sort of) a reimagining of the Lisp Machines. Sadly, I never had a chance to work on an actual Lisp Machine but my fascination and love for them continues.

The idea of the Lisp machine is that although it had pretty much standard hardware components, it had specialized microcode that optimized it for running Lisp. For me, the real win was the software more than the hardware. That software still exists but is encumbered so it’s not available without a steep payment or a bit of piracy. That means that for those who, like me, love the idea of the Lisp Machine, the closest we’re going to get is Emacs.

Ketrainis over at Asianometry has an excellent video that recounts the history of the Lisp machines from their birth to their demise. They were hundreds—perhaps thousands—of times slower than today’s cheap laptop but they were built by and for hackers and everything was user customizable just as with Emacs. Even the microcode could be reprogrammed. Joe Marshall has a great post that describes his reprogramming the Lisp Machne microcode to break DES.

This customizability was a huge benefit that every Emacs user will identify with. If the software didn’t support what you needed it to do, you could simply change it—even at the microcode level—to get the behavior you needed.

Ketrainis’ video is 45 minutes, 21 seconds longs so you’ll definitely need to schedule some time but if you have any interest in Lisp Machines, it’s worth your while.

-1:-- Lisp Machines! (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-30T14:13:41.000Z

Sacha Chua: 2026-03-30 Emacs news

It's not too late to write about mistakes and misconceptions as part of the Emacs Carnival for March and not too early to think about the theme of "Newbies/Starter Kits" which Cena will be hosting for April. Who knows, maybe those ideas can become part of the newcomers presets. It could be fun to explore something like notes for Emacs beginners and see where you end up.

Also, I'm looking forward to seeing if these tips for reloading Emacs Lisp code can help me avoid little bugs from leftover code.

Enjoy!

Links from reddit.com/r/emacs, r/orgmode, r/spacemacs, Mastodon #emacs, Bluesky #emacs, Hacker News, lobste.rs, programming.dev, lemmy.world, lemmy.ml, planet.emacslife.com, YouTube, the Emacs NEWS file, Emacs Calendar, and emacs-devel. Thanks to Andrés Ramírez for emacs-devel links. Do you have an Emacs-related link or announcement? Please e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com. Thank you!

View Org source for this post

You can e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com.

-1:-- 2026-03-30 Emacs news (Post Sacha Chua)--L0--C0--2026-03-30T13:57:50.000Z

Chris Maiorana: Let the commits tell the story

Pull up git log --oneline on a project—or open the Magit log with l l from the status buffer and you might see two slightly different stories.

Either you’ll see this:

f31e4a2 WIP
c8b29f1 some minor edits
9aa55d3 chugging through
8f72cc0 some tweaks
3d19c44 some more tweaking

Or you’ll see something like this:

f31e4a2 Finished the confrontation scene w/ Megan
c8b29f1 Fleshed out Ethan's backstory in chapter two
9aa55d3 Bar fight scene, in
8f72cc0 Further developed Ethan's voice
3d19c44 Initial commit, project structure and outline

Both sets of commits represent the same amount of work. The only difference is the two minutes it took to write a real commit message instead of a placeholder.

There’s been a lot of discussion in recent years about what to name your branches, which can be anything you want. However, has anyone taken a hard look at some of the hard-coded git terminology, like the word “commit”? In my Git For Writers handbook, I compared commits to “save states” or “snapshots.” I’d always felt the word “commit” sounded too permanent and fixed, but that’s not the case at all.

The word commit has a richer meaning than at first appears. Derived from a Latin root meaning to entrust, it’s the same as committing something to memory, or entering a transaction into a ledger, more like a notation than a final verdict. That’s exactly what you’re doing when you commit your work in git: entrusting a session or chunk of work to the record. Nothing is declared finished or locked in, but you are merely saying: this is what I did today or this is where I was when I stopped today.

Your commit history is a manuscript about your manuscript

Every commit is like a moment in the life of your project. When you string those moments together with clear, meaningful messages, something useful emerges. You can look back and see not just what you wrote, but how you wrote it.

Think of all the information you might glean from a well-documented commit log.

  • When did the project pick up speed?
  • Was there a lull, and at what point?
  • What have you been battling with recently?
  • What are you avoiding?
  • Which sections were more difficult?
  • Was there a lot backtracking?
  • When did the current change direction?

The journey is not visible in the finished project itself, which is fine; the reader need not know how you got there. But as the writer, you ought to know how it happened.

What a well-told commit history looks like

Here is an example commit log for a short story project, read from oldest to newest.

a1f3309 Initial commit, project structure and notes
b22e117 Opened the story, established the narrator's tone
cc49852 Drafted the first scene, setting and introduction
d78f441 Pushed through the second scene, conflict introduced
e830192 A turn, starting to click
f91b004 Rough draft complete
g04a215 First revision pass, tightened the opening
h17d331 Cut the second paragraph of scene one entirely
i2a8c62 Addressed group critique notes, softened the ending
j30f577 Final proofread pass
k498d00 Submitted to Mudflap Review

You may also consider tagging the final commit with something like “first_submission,” or “version1.”

Reading that log tells you the story about the story. You can see where you found the piece (“starting to click”). You can see the revision arc. You can see when external feedback came in and what changed. You even notated when it was submitted, which might be unnecessary, but that would depend on your chosen level of depth.

The commit message is a creative act itself

The moment right after a writing session is a great time to consider what you accomplished. The session is fresh in your mind. You know exactly what happened. And if you’re unsure, you can look at the unstaged changes.

Something I really like about Magit is how can easily split and stage individual hunks. This can help you group changes, or exclude certain edits, under one specific commit.

Instead of typing “did some stuff” and moving on, take a few seconds and answer the question: what actually happened in this session?

You may consider:

  • Did you finally solve a problem that had been blocking you?
  • Did you write a scene you’re genuinely proud of?
  • Did you make an ugly but necessary structural cut?
  • Did you break through and hit a flow state you hadn’t felt in weeks?

Create a decent commit message about it.

Here are some examples:

  • Solved the third-act problem, moved the confrontation earlier
  • Cut 800 words from chapter four, much tighter now
  • Rewrote the opening line, finally have something I like

For years, I wrote pretty limp commit messages, like “Some minor editing” and “more minor editing,” etc. Looking back, this tells you almost nothing about your process. You’d have to look at individual diffs to actually see what happened.

A good commit message costs almost nothing to write but can really help elucidate the dizzying twists and turns of a long writing project, and can also help keep you on track when you get lost in the weeds.

Commit data tells a second story

Beyond the messages, the data inside each commit tells you something about what kind of work you were doing.

Run this command to see the number of lines changed in each commit:

git log --oneline --stat

See where your patterns lie.

In the early drafting phase, you may see more insertions. In the revision phase, you may see the ratio shift as more deletions appear.

If you’re seeing a revision pattern when you should be in full drafting mode, that’s useful data. It might mean you’re editing too early, or that’s just your style and not a big deal. The numbers and graphs can help make your otherwise invisible habits visible.

A few principles for writing good commit messages

Commit at natural stopping points. Every paragraph is perhaps too frequently. But once a week is perhaps too much. Commit when you feel good about what you did on a section or specific area. Think about that metaphor of entering a record into the ledger.

In a previous post on this topic, I suggested that doing a commit every 250 words changed was a pretty good metric. This is highly subjective. If your case, it might be closer to 500 or 1000 words changed. But I’d say 250 is still a good low end. You probably wouldn’t want to commit to fewer words, unless perhaps you solved a critical problem or hit a milestone and want to note that in the history. It’s up to you.

Use the word-diff for a review of what you just did. This is one of the most valuable git master-level techniques I’ve employed over the years. Before committing, take a moment to review your changes at the word level—what you deleted and what you added:

git diff --word-diff HEAD~1

In Magit, press d r from the status buffer. Magit’s diff view highlights added and removed words, which gives you the same at-a-glance picture of what changed.

With this information, you can write a stellar commit message.

Write the message now, don’t wait.

Be honest in the message. If the session was hard, say so. If you had the best session in months, notate that. Your future self will appreciate it.

Use notes if you need more details. Commit messages are best kept to one line, but notes can give you more space to ramble on.

Use tags for major milestones. A commit message records the daily work. A tag records the landmark.

git tag -a rough_draft -m "Rough draft finished, 62,000 words"

When you look back on the project, tags let you jump directly to the moments that mattered most.


Basically, let your commits tell the story. I think you’ll get a lot of value out of this.

If you have any comments or questions about this workflow, or if you have some similar strategies, be sure to leave me a comment below.

The post Let the commits tell the story appeared first on Chris Maiorana.

-1:-- Let the commits tell the story (Post Chris Maiorana)--L0--C0--2026-03-30T11:00:51.000Z

Christian Tietze: Emacs Mistakes and Misconceptions That Held Me Back in 2019

It took me a decade to try Emacs again, for reasons totally unrelated to computer programming (task management!), and a lot of effort by my pal Sascha Fast. In hindsight, I realize I had to learn a couple of things first.

  • Emacs is clumsy and old. I didn’t know that a GUI Emacs version existed, could display images and scroll somewhat smoothly, coming from an IT department with SUN terminals where we used Emacs on the command-line to edit some .c source files. By modern standards, it’s lean and snappy and can do interesting things using your OS’s window manager for multi-frame workflows (like displaying a ‘Speedbar’ for symbol navigation). In 2026, Emacs will learn to efficiently draw at 60+ FPS to a canvas, multiple in parallel even, to display movies and play video games. I’m not joking!
  • Text is not enough. Text, I realized eventually, is plenty! The customizable Org Agenda got me hooked: filter through tasks, display a magic ‘UI’ that fits my needs, amazing. That’s all possible because Emacs deals with (not necessarily file-backed) buffers all the way down. With directory listings, server management, and using Emacs to complement and complete computing all around, the game has changed. Instead of TUI, I read for … EUI?
  • I’ll only use this for to-do’s. I absolutely didn’t. 7 years (oh god) later I’m still discovering new excused to use Emacs for new things. Starting with task management, I also made this my Writeroom-like writing workspace, used it for copy-editing books and innumerable blog posts in various projects, tweaked and learned to love a custom key binding mechanism, moved light scripting over, then more and more programming and web development tasks. Email, chat, eventually LLM chat interfaces and Agentic Engineering; everything is being swallowed by the Universal Paperclip machinery that is this weird Lisp interpreter.
  • I will copy and paste config snippets most of the time. I used StackOverflow, Sacha Chua’s blog, Xah Lee’s blog and Elisp reference as stepping stones. I still grab stuff from other people’s configurations and test-drive them. But I also found a strange joy in writing Lisp, and got into reading Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs and finally understood the mechanics and beauty of the composition so much better. In a way, it helped me think more clearly about functions, composition, and what makes good software.

I didn’t sign up for all that happened at first. But I got sucked in, and as I mentioned in passing so many times, Emacs is an isle of computing freedom in an environment of ever tighter sandboxes, locking-down and dumbing down computers, making the operating system UI ugly as sin – it’s not great to be in love with computers unless you find your way onto a capable Linux machine. Or, like me, who’s stuck on a Mac for work, use Emacs to maintain their sanity. (That’s probably not a line any longer-term Emacs user ever said.)


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-1:-- Emacs Mistakes and Misconceptions That Held Me Back in 2019 (Post Christian Tietze)--L0--C0--2026-03-30T05:44:01.000Z

Emacs Redux: Creating Emacs Color Themes, Revisited

Creating Emacs color themes is a topic I hadn’t thought much about in recent years. My first theme (Zenburn) has been in maintenance mode for ages, and Solarized mostly runs itself at this point. But working on my ports of Tokyo (Night) Themes and Catppuccin (Batppuccin) made me re-examine the whole topic with fresh eyes. The biggest shift I’ve noticed is that multi-variant themes (light/dark/high-contrast from a shared codebase) have become the norm rather than the exception, and that pattern naturally leads to reusable theming infrastructure.

The task has always been simultaneously easy and hard. Easy because deftheme and custom-theme-set-faces are well-documented and do exactly what you’d expect. Hard because the real challenge was never the mechanics – it’s knowing which faces to theme and keeping your color choices consistent across hundreds of them.

Note: In Emacs, a face is a named set of visual attributes – foreground color, background, bold, italic, underline, etc. – that controls how a piece of text looks. Themes work by setting faces to match a color palette. See also the Elisp manual’s section on custom themes for the full API.

The Classic Approach

The traditional way to create an Emacs theme is to write a deftheme form, then set faces one by one with custom-theme-set-faces:

(deftheme my-cool-theme "A cool theme.")

(custom-theme-set-faces
 'my-cool-theme
 ;; The `t` means "all display types" -- you can also specify different
 ;; colors for different displays (GUI vs 256-color terminal, etc.)
 '(default ((t (:foreground "#c0caf5" :background "#1a1b26"))))
 '(font-lock-keyword-face ((t (:foreground "#bb9af7"))))
 '(font-lock-string-face ((t (:foreground "#9ece6a"))))
 ;; ... 200+ more faces
 )

(provide-theme 'my-cool-theme)

This works fine and gives you total control. Many excellent themes are built exactly this way. In practice, a lot of new themes start their life as copies of existing themes – mostly to avoid the leg-work of discovering which faces to define. You grab a well-maintained theme, swap the colors, and you’re halfway there.

That said, the approach has a couple of pain points:

  • You need to know what faces exist. Emacs has dozens of built-in faces, and every popular package adds its own. Miss a few and your theme looks polished in some buffers but broken in others. list-faces-display is your friend here, but it only shows faces that are currently loaded.
  • Consistency is on you. With hundreds of face definitions, it’s easy to use slightly different shades for things that should look the same, or to pick a color that clashes with your palette. Nothing enforces coherence – you have to do that yourself.
  • Maintaining multiple variants is tedious. Want a light and dark version? You’re duplicating most of the face definitions with different colors.1

One more gotcha: some packages use variables instead of faces for their colors (e.g., hl-todo-keyword-faces, ansi-color-names-vector). You can set those with custom-theme-set-variables, but you have to know they exist first. It’s easy to think you’ve themed everything via faces and then discover a package that hard-codes colors in a defcustom.

How big of a problem the face tracking is depends on your scope. If you only care about built-in Emacs faces, it’s pretty manageable – that’s what most of the bundled themes do (check wombat, deeper-blue, or tango – they define faces almost exclusively for packages that ship with Emacs and don’t touch third-party packages at all). But if you want your theme to look good in magit, corfu, vertico, transient, and a dozen other popular packages, you’re signing up for ongoing maintenance. A new version of magit adds a face and suddenly your theme has gaps you didn’t know about.

I still do things this way for Tokyo Themes and Batppuccin, but the more themes I maintain the more I wonder if that’s overkill.

Every Multi-Variant Theme Is a Mini Framework

Here’s something worth pointing out: any theme that ships multiple variants is already a framework of sorts, whether it calls itself one or not. The moment you factor out the palette from the face definitions so that multiple variants can share the same code, you’ve built the core of a theming engine.

Take Tokyo Themes as an example. There are four variants (night, storm, moon, day), but the face definitions live in a single shared file (tokyo-themes.el). Each variant is a thin wrapper – just a deftheme, a palette alist, and a call to the shared tokyo--apply-theme function:

(require 'tokyo-themes)
(deftheme tokyo-night "A clean dark theme inspired by Tokyo city lights.")
(tokyo--apply-theme 'tokyo-night tokyo-night-colors-alist)
(provide-theme 'tokyo-night)

That’s the entire theme file. The palette is defined elsewhere, and the face logic is shared – which is exactly how you solve the variant duplication problem mentioned earlier. In theory, anyone could define a new palette alist and call tokyo--apply-theme to create a fifth variant. The infrastructure is already there – it’s just not explicitly marketed as a “framework.”

This is exactly how the theming features of packages like Solarized and Modus evolved. They started as regular themes, grew variants, factored out the shared code, and eventually exposed that machinery to users.

Meta-Themes

Some theme packages went a step further and turned their internal infrastructure into an explicit theming API.

Solarized

solarized-emacs started as a straight port of Ethan Schoonover’s Solarized palette, but over time it grew the ability to create entirely new themes from custom palettes. You can use solarized-create-theme-file-with-palette to generate a new theme by supplying just 10 colors (2 base + 8 accent) – it derives all the intermediate shades and maps them to the full set of faces:

(solarized-create-theme-file-with-palette 'dark 'my-solarized-dark
  '("#002b36" "#fdf6e3"                         ;; base colors
    "#b58900" "#cb4b16" "#dc322f" "#d33682"     ;; accents
    "#6c71c4" "#268bd2" "#2aa198" "#859900"))

This is how Solarized’s own variants (dark, light, gruvbox, zenburn, etc.) are built internally. I’ll admit, though, that I always found it a bit weird to ship themes like Gruvbox and Zenburn under the Solarized umbrella. If you install solarized-emacs and find a solarized-gruvbox-dark theme in the list, the natural reaction is “wait, what does Gruvbox have to do with Solarized?” The answer is “nothing, really – they just share the theming engine.” That makes perfect sense once you understand the architecture, but I think it’s confusing for newcomers. It was part of the reason I was never super excited about this direction for solarized-emacs.

Modus Themes

The modus-themes take a different approach. Rather than generating new theme files, they offer deep runtime customization through palette overrides:

(setq modus-themes-common-palette-overrides
      '((bg-main "#1a1b26")
        (fg-main "#c0caf5")
        (keyword magenta-warmer)))

You can override any named color in the palette without touching the theme source. The result feels like a different theme, but it’s still Modus under the hood with all its accessibility guarantees. The overrides apply to whichever Modus variant you load, and modus-themes-toggle switches between variants while keeping your overrides intact. Protesilaos’s ef-themes share the same architecture.

Theming Frameworks

If you want to create something brand new rather than customize an existing theme family, there are a couple of frameworks designed for this.

Autothemer

autothemer provides a macro that replaces the verbose custom-theme-set-faces boilerplate with a cleaner, palette-driven approach:

(autothemer-deftheme
 my-theme "A theme using autothemer."
 ;; Display classes: 24-bit GUI, 256-color terminal, 16-color terminal
 ((((class color) (min-colors 16777216)) ((class color) (min-colors 256)) t)
  (my-bg    "#1a1b26" "black"   "black")
  (my-fg    "#c0caf5" "white"   "white")
  (my-red   "#f7768e" "red"     "red")
  (my-green "#9ece6a" "green"   "green"))

 ;; Face specs -- just reference palette names, no display class noise
 ((default         (:foreground my-fg :background my-bg))
  (font-lock-keyword-face (:foreground my-red))
  (font-lock-string-face  (:foreground my-green))))

You define your palette once as named colors with fallback values for different display capabilities (GUI frames and terminals support different color depths, so themes need appropriate fallbacks for each). Then you reference those names in face specs without worrying about display classes again. Autothemer also provides some nice extras like SVG palette previews and helpers for discovering unthemed faces.

Base16 / Tinted Theming

base16-emacs is part of the larger Tinted Theming ecosystem. The idea is that you define a scheme as 16 colors in a YAML file, and a builder generates themes for Emacs (and every other editor/terminal) from a shared template. You don’t write Elisp at all – you write YAML and run a build step.

This is great if you want one palette to rule all your tools, but you give up fine-grained control over individual Emacs faces. The generated themes cover a good set of faces, but they might not handle every niche package you use.

From Scratch vs. Framework: Pros and Cons

  From Scratch Meta-Theme / Framework
Control Total – every face is yours Constrained by what the framework exposes
Consistency You enforce it manually The framework helps (palette-driven)
Coverage You add faces as you discover them Inherited from the base theme/template
Maintenance You track upstream face changes Shifted to the meta-theme maintainers
Multiple variants Duplicate or factor out yourself Built-in support
Learning curve Just deftheme Framework-specific API

When to Use What

I guess relatively few people end up creating theme packages, but here’s a bit of general advice for them.

If you want total control over every face and you’re willing to put in the maintenance work, roll your own. This makes sense for themes with a strong design vision where you want to make deliberate choices about every element. It’s more work, but nothing stands between you and the result you want.

If you mostly like an existing theme but want different colors, customizing a meta-theme (Modus, Solarized, ef-themes) is a good bet. You get battle-tested face coverage for free, and the palette override approach means you can tweak things without forking. Keep in mind, though, that the face coverage problem doesn’t disappear – you’re just shifting it to the meta-theme maintainers. How comprehensive and up-to-date things stay depends entirely on how diligent they are.

If you’re creating something new but don’t want to deal with the boilerplate, use a framework. Autothemer is the best fit if you want to stay in Elisp and have fine control. Base16/Tinted Theming is the pick if you want one palette definition across all your tools.

Parting Thoughts

I’m still a “classic” – I like rolling out my themes from scratch. There’s something satisfying about hand-picking the color for every face. But I won’t pretend it doesn’t get tedious, especially when you maintain several themes across multiple variants. Every time a package adds new faces, that’s more work for me.

If I were starting fresh today, I’d seriously consider Autothemer or building on top of a meta-theme (extracted from my existing theme packages). The time you save on maintenance is time you can spend on what actually matters – making your theme look good.

On the topic of maintenance – one area where AI tools can actually help is extracting the relevant faces from a list of packages you want to support. Instead of loading each package, running list-faces-display, and eyeballing what’s new, you can ask an LLM to scan the source and give you the face definitions. It’s also handy for periodically syncing your theme against the latest versions of those packages to catch newly added faces. Not glamorous work, but exactly the kind of tedium that AI is good at.

That’s all I have for you today. Keep hacking!

  1. Later on you’ll see that’s a pretty easy problem to address. 

-1:-- Creating Emacs Color Themes, Revisited (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-30T05:25:00.000Z

Irreal: Paredit Keybinding Conflicts

There are, I suppose, a few Lisp programmers using Emacs who resist paredit but most of the rest of us have long since succumbed to its charms. It can be a bit difficult to get used to but once you do, it’s a tool you don’t want to live without.

There is a problem though. Since Paredit’s introduction 20 years ago, Emacs has added new default keybindings some of which conflict with the existing Paredit keybindings. I can remember having to remap some of Paredit’s keybindings to avoid this.

Bozhidar Batsov has a nice post that discusses these conflicts and how to deal with them. My use of Paredit is mostly restricted to a small subset of its commands so I haven’t experienced the full impact of these conflicts. Even for those commands I do use—like slurp and barf—the conflict doesn’t bother me because I never use the arrow keys to move the cursor.

If you use more of the Paredit commands, take a look at Batsov’s post for his suggestions for resolving them. Or, you could switch to Fuco1’s smartparens, which avoids these conflicts while providing the same functionality and extending it to other file types.

One thing for sure, if you use paredit-splice-sexp you’ll want to resolve its conflict because Emacs uses Meta+s as the search map prefix and that is too useful to forego.

In any event if you’re a Paredit or Smartparens user, you should definitely take a look at Batsov’s post.

-1:-- Paredit Keybinding Conflicts (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-29T14:14:09.000Z

Sacha Chua: Emacs Carnival March 2026: Mistakes and learning to reach out

Mostly-similar versions follow: I started with French, translated it to English, and then tweaked some details. Thanks to Philip Kaludercic for hosting this month's carnival!

In English

The theme for this month's Emacs Carnival is Mistakes and Misconceptions. It’s difficult to pinpoint one thing that is clearly a mistake, but there are certainly things I could do more effectively.

My configuration is very large because I assume my little modifications are only useful to me. They feel too specific, too idiosyncratic. I think people who create libraries or even packages used by lots of other people are awesome. I don't know if I could quite do that myself, though! Even submitting patches upstream and participating in the ensuing discussions sometimes requires more persistence than I have.

The advantage of keeping my changes in my config is that even if I'm unsure, I can try something out, develop a rough prototype, and change my mind if necessary. When I publish them in a library or a package, I feel like I have to polish my ideas. It's hard to stick to just one idea long enough to refine it.

My favorite situation is when I write about my attempt in a post, and it inspires someone else to implement their own version (or even a new library or package). On the other hand, if I learn to share my code, I can help more people, and I can also learn from more people and more conversations.

Many of my modifications are short and easy to copy from my posts, but there are a few collections that depend on other functions, making them difficult to copy. These functions are scattered across several posts on my blog. For example, my functions for learning a language (I'm learning French at the moment) and for controlling Emacs by voice are becoming quite complex. The functions are also exported to my configuration, but the Emacs Lisp file is difficult to navigate if someone wants to copy them. I can extract the code into a file now that Org Mode can tangle to multiple files, but if I spend a little time replacing the "my-" prefix with a library prefix and move them to a repository, people could clone it and download updates. Even if no one uses it, the act of polishing and documenting it will probably be useful to me one day.

So, it's possible that this is a mistake I often make in Emacs: thinking my functions are too idiosyncratic and too rough, so I leave them in my config. If I dedicate time to extracting the code into a library, I might benefit in the long run. I know lots of people are interested in using Emacs for language learning or by voice. There have been so many other libraries and workflows over the years, so I'm sure people are out there. I want to practice learning more with others. To start, I can make sure interested people can follow my progress through RSS feeds or Mastodon, I can respond when people send me messages, and I can collect contact info and send them a message when I post about the subject.

I can write more if I reread the changes in my configuration each week, or if I reread my complete configuration for sections which I haven't yet written about. If I participate in virtual meetups or even livestream, I can find out what interests other people. If I submit patches and create tasks in my Org Mode inbox to track the discussions, I can practice refining my work.

Prot has lowered his coaching prices to €10 /hour. He's quite prolific when it comes to package development, so he can probably help me figure out how to get stuff out of my config and into a form that other people might be able to use. I've been enjoying learning with my French tutor. It might be worth experimenting with spending some money and time to improve my Emacs skills as well. Sure, it's totally just for fun, but I think it's valuable to practice learning with the help of others instead of stumbling around on my own.

There's always more to learn, which is wonderful. So this is not really a mistake, just something that could be good to work on. Onward and upward!

Check out Emacs Carnival March 2026: Mistakes and Misconceptions to see other people's takes on the topic.

En français

Le thème du Carnaval d'Emacs ce mois-ci est « les erreurs et les idées reçues ». C'est difficile d'identifier une chose qui soit clairement une erreur, mais il y a certainement des choses que je ne fais pas efficacement.

Ma configuration est très volumineuse car je pense que mes petites modifications ne sont utiles que pour moi. Elles sont trop spécifiques, trop particulières. J'apprécie ceux qui créent des bibliothèques ou même des paquets que beaucoup d'autres utilisent, mais de mon côté, je ne me sens pas capable de le faire pour l'instant. Même soumettre des correctifs en amont et participer à la discussion qui s'ensuit parfois demande plus de persévérance que je n'en ai.

L'avantage de garder mes modifications dans ma configuration est que, même si je ne suis pas sûre, je peux essayer quelque chose, développer un prototype préliminaire, et changer d'avis si nécessaire. Quand je les publie dans une bibliothèque ou un paquet, j'ai l'impression que je dois peaufiner mes idées. C'est difficile de s'en tenir à une seule idée assez longtemps.

Ma situation préférée est quand je partage mes essais sur mon blog, et qu'ils inspirent une autre personne qui implémentera sa propre version, voire une nouvelle bibliothèque ou un nouveau paquet.

En revanche, si j'apprends à partager mon code, je peux aider plus de personnes, et je peux aussi apprendre de plus de personnes et de plus de conversations.

Beaucoup de mes modifications sont brèves et faciles à copier de mes articles, mais il y a quelques collections qui dépendent d'autres fonctions, ce qui les rend difficiles à copier. Les fonctions sont dispersées dans plusieurs articles sur mon blog. Par exemple, mes fonctions pour apprendre une langue (particulièrement le français) et pour contrôler Emacs par commande vocale deviennent plutôt complexes. Elles sont aussi exportées vers ma configuration, mais le fichier Emacs Lisp est difficile à parcourir si on veut les copier. Je peux extraire le code dans un fichier maintenant que Org Mode peut le tangler vers plusieurs fichiers, mais si je consacre un peu de temps à remplacer le préfixe « my- » par celui de la bibliothèque et à le pousser sur le dépôt, les gens pourraient le cloner et récupérer les mises à jour. Même si personne ne l'utilise, le fait de les peaufiner et de le documenter me sera utile un jour.

Donc il est possible que ce soit une erreur que je commets souvent dans Emacs : je pense que mes fonctions sont trop idiosyncratiques et trop brutes, je les laisse donc dans ma configuration. Mais si je consacre du temps à extraire le code vers une bibliothèque, j'en bénéficierai peut-être à long terme. Je sais que beaucoup de gens sont intéressés par l'utilisation d'Emacs pour apprendre une langue ou pour la commande vocale. Il y a eu de nombreuses autres bibliothèques et flux de travail au fil des ans, donc je suis sûre qu'il y a du monde. Je veux m'entraîner à apprendre auprès de plus de personnes. Pour commencer, je peux m'assurer que les gens intéressés peuvent suivre mon progrès via les flux RSS ou sur Mastodon, je peux répondre quand on m'envoie des messages, et je peux recueillir les coordonnées et leur envoyer un message lorsque je publie un article à ce sujet.

Je peux écrire davantage si je relis les modifications dans ma configuration chaque semaine, ou si je relis ma configuration entière pour les sections dont je n'ai pas encore parlé. Si je participe à des réunions virtuelles ou même si je diffuse en direct, je vais voir ce qui intéresse les autres. Si je soumets des correctifs et crée des tâches dans ma boîte de réception Org Mode pour suivre les discussions, je m'entraîne à affiner mon travail.

Prot a baissé ses tarifs de coaching à 10 euros de l'heure. Il est très prolifique en matière de développement de paquets. J'apprends bien avec mon tuteur en français, donc cela vaut peut-être la peine de consacrer de l'argent et du temps à améliorer mes compétences sur Emacs. Certes, c'est juste pour le plaisir, mais c'est aussi important pour moi de m'entraîner à apprendre avec l'aide des autres au lieu de trébucher toute seule.

J'ai toujours plus de choses à apprendre, ce qui est merveilleux. Ce n'est pas vraiment une erreur, mais plutôt un point à améliorer. En avant !

Consultez Emacs Carnival March 2026: Mistakes and Misconceptions pour d'autres perspectives sur le sujet.

View Org source for this post

You can e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com.

-1:-- Emacs Carnival March 2026: Mistakes and learning to reach out (Post Sacha Chua)--L0--C0--2026-03-29T12:50:22.000Z

Emacs Redux: Automatic Light/Dark Theme Switching

Most theme families these days ship both light and dark variants. For example, Tokyo Themes has tokyo-day (light) alongside tokyo-night, tokyo-storm, and tokyo-moon (all dark). Batppuccin has batppuccin-latte (light) and batppuccin-mocha, batppuccin-macchiato, batppuccin-frappe (dark). But switching between them manually gets old fast. Here are a few ways to automate it.

Following the OS Appearance (macOS + Emacs Plus)

If you’re using Emacs Plus on macOS (which many Mac users do), you get the hook ns-system-appearance-change-functions. This is not part of core Emacs – it’s a patch that Emacs Plus applies on top of the NS build. The hook fires whenever macOS switches between light and dark mode, passing the symbol light or dark as an argument. All you need is:

(defun my-apply-theme (appearance)
  "Load theme based on APPEARANCE (light or dark)."
  (mapc #'disable-theme custom-enabled-themes)
  (pcase appearance
    ('light (load-theme 'tokyo-day t))
    ('dark (load-theme 'tokyo-night t))))

(add-hook 'ns-system-appearance-change-functions #'my-apply-theme)

That’s it. When you flip the system appearance (or the OS does it automatically based on time of day), Emacs follows along. The mapc line disables any currently active themes first – without it, load-theme stacks the new theme on top of the old one, which can cause weird color bleed between the two.

This approach is nice because it keeps Emacs in sync with every other app on your system. If you’re on macOS with Emacs Plus, this is probably the simplest option.

Note: This only works with Emacs Plus’s patched NS build. If you’re using a vanilla Emacs build, or you’re on Linux/Windows, read on.

Following the OS Appearance (Cross-Platform)

If you want OS appearance tracking without writing the hook yourself, or you need it on a platform other than macOS, check out auto-dark. It detects OS-level dark/light mode changes on macOS, Linux (via D-Bus/GNOME), Windows, and even Android (Termux):

(use-package auto-dark
  :ensure t
  :config
  (setq auto-dark-themes '((batppuccin-mocha) (batppuccin-latte)))
  (auto-dark-mode))

The value is a list of two lists – dark theme(s) first, light theme(s) second. The extra nesting is there because you can stack multiple themes per mode (e.g., a base theme plus an overlay). For a single theme per mode, the format above is all you need. auto-dark polls the system appearance every few seconds and switches accordingly. It also provides auto-dark-dark-mode-hook and auto-dark-light-mode-hook if you want to run extra code on each switch.

Time-Based Switching with circadian.el

If you want theme switching based on time of day regardless of your OS, take a look at circadian.el. It can switch themes at fixed times or based on your local sunrise/sunset:

(use-package circadian
  :ensure t
  :config
  (setq circadian-themes '((:sunrise . batppuccin-latte)
                            (:sunset  . batppuccin-mocha)))
  (circadian-setup))

You can also use fixed hours if you prefer:

(setq circadian-themes '(("8:00"  . batppuccin-latte)
                          ("20:00" . batppuccin-mocha)))

For sunrise/sunset to work, set calendar-latitude and calendar-longitude in your config. circadian.el uses Emacs’s built-in solar calculations, so no external services are needed.1

Rolling Your Own with run-at-time

If you don’t want an extra dependency, you can do something basic with run-at-time:

(defun my-set-theme-for-time ()
  "Switch theme based on current hour."
  (let ((hour (string-to-number (format-time-string "%H"))))
    (mapc #'disable-theme custom-enabled-themes)
    (if (<= 8 hour 19)
        (load-theme 'tokyo-day t)
      (load-theme 'tokyo-night t))))

;; Run now and repeat every hour
(run-at-time t 3600 #'my-set-theme-for-time)

It’s crude compared to circadian.el, but it works and you can tweak the schedule however you like.

Which One Should You Pick?

  • macOS with Emacs Plus and want zero dependencies? The ns-system-appearance-change-functions hook is all you need.
  • Want OS tracking on Linux/Windows too? auto-dark has you covered.
  • Prefer time-based switching? circadian.el is the polished option; the DIY run-at-time approach works if you want to keep things minimal.

What about me? Well, I’m on macOS these days and I do enable the auto-switch between light/dark mode there. So, normally I’d pick the first option, but there’s a small catch - I really dislike light themes for programming and I’m using only dark variants day and night, so I don’t really need theme auto-switching in Emacs.

Note: One thing to keep in mind: if you’re using any of these, remove any static load-theme call from your init file – let the auto-switching mechanism handle theme loading, otherwise the two will fight on startup.

As usual, there’s no shortage of ways to solve this in Emacs. Are you doing auto-switching of themes yourself? Which is your favorite approach?

That’s all I have for you today. Keep hacking!

  1. Am I the only one impressed by the fact that the calendar package can calculate things like sunrise and sunset? 

-1:-- Automatic Light/Dark Theme Switching (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-29T08:30:00.000Z

James Dyer: Simply Annotate 0.9.8: Threaded Conversations on Your Code

I have been busy improving my annotation package! Simply Annotate, the latest release is 0.9.8 and I have put in a bunch of new features, so it felt like a good time to step back and show what the package actually does at this point, because honestly, quite a lot has changed since I last wrote about it.

There are annotation packages out there already, annotate.el being the most established. And they are good! But I kept running into the same friction: I wanted threaded conversations directly on my code, I wanted multiple display styles I could combine, and I wanted the whole thing to be a single file with no dependencies that I could drop onto an air-gapped machine and just use (yup, that again!)

So I built my own!, this is Emacs, after all.

At its core, simply-annotate lets you attach persistent notes to any text file (or Info manual, or dired buffer) without modifying the original content. Annotations are stored in a simple s-expression database at ~/.emacs.d/simply-annotations.el. The entire package is a single elisp file, requires Emacs 28.1+, and has zero external dependencies.

Basic setup is two lines:

(use-package simply-annotate
 :bind-keymap ("C-c a" . simply-annotate-command-map)
 :hook (find-file-hook . simply-annotate-mode))

Or if you prefer require:

(require 'simply-annotate)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c a") simply-annotate-command-map)
(add-hook 'find-file-hook #'simply-annotate-mode)

Open a file, select some text, press C-c a j, and you have your first annotation. M-n and M-p step through them.

I am always fiddling around with styles, themes, backgrounds e.t.c, so I thought I would build this tinkering enthusiasm into this package. Simply-annotate has five display styles, and you can layer them together:

  • Highlight – classic background colour on the annotated region
  • Tint – a subtle background derived from your current theme, lightened by a configurable amount. Adapts automatically when you switch themes
  • Fringe – a small triangle indicator in the fringe, minimal and unobtrusive
  • Fringe-bracket – a vertical bracket spanning the full annotated region in the fringe, with a proper top cap, continuous vertical bar, and bottom cap
  • Subtle – overline and underline bracketing the region, barely visible but there when you need it

You can combine them, so (tint fringe-bracket) gives you a gentle background wash with a clear fringe bracket showing exactly where the annotation spans. Cycle through styles with C-c a '.

Toggle inline display with C-c a / and annotation content appears as box-drawn blocks directly in your buffer:

 some annotated code here
┌─ ✎ [OPEN/NORMAL] ──────────────
│ This function needs refactoring.
│ The nested conditionals are hard
│ to follow.
└─────────────────────────────────

New in 0.9.8 is the inline pointer, that little connecting the box to the annotated text. It is indented to the exact column where the annotation starts, so you always know what the comment refers to.

The fun bit is that the pointer is just a string, and it supports multiline. So you can customise it to whatever shape you like:

;; Simple arrow (default)
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-after "▴")
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-above "▾")

;; Heavy L-bracket (my current favourite)
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-after "┃\n┗━▶")
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-above "┏━▶\n┃")

;; Speech bubble tail
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-after " ╰┐")
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-above " ╰┐")

;; Decorative diamond
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-after "◆")
(setq simply-annotate-inline-pointer-above "◆")

There is a full list of copy-paste options in the Commentary section of the elisp file. Set to nil to disable the pointer entirely.

So I think this is where simply-annotate really differs from other annotation packages. Every annotation is a thread. You can reply to it with C-c a r, and replies can be nested under any comment in the thread, not just the root. It prompts with a hierarchical completing-read menu showing the comment tree.

Each thread has:

  • Status – open, in-progress, resolved, closed (C-c a s)
  • Priority – low, normal, high, critical (C-c a p)
  • Tags – freeform hashtags for organisation (C-c a t)
  • Author tracking – configurable per-team, per-file, or single-user

The comment tree renders with box-drawing characters so the hierarchy is always clear:

┌— ® [OPEN/NORMAL] —
| james dyer (03/29 08:27)
| This is the original comment
| L james dyer (03/29 08:27)
| | here is a reply to this comment
| | L james dyer (@3/29 08:27)
| | and a reply within a reply!!
| L james dyer (03/29 08:28)
| Here is another reply to the original comment
└────────────────────

For team collaboration:

(setq simply-annotate-author-list '("Alice" "Bob" "Charlie"))
(setq simply-annotate-prompt-for-author 'threads-only)
(setq simply-annotate-remember-author-per-file t)

Annotations exist at three levels: file (whole-file overview), defun (function or block description), and line (individual elements). There is also an all pseudo-level that shows everything at once, which is the default.

Cycle levels with C-c a ] and C-c a [. The header-line shows counts per level (FILE:2 | DEFUN:5 | LINE:3) with the active level in bold, so you always know where you are, my idea here is to lean towards a coding annotation tool to help teach code or help to remember what has been implemented, so the levels start at a broad file overview and enables you to switch instantly to a more granular level.

The org-mode listing (C-c a l) gives you a foldable, navigable overview of all annotations in the current file, grouped by level. Press n and p to step through headings, RET to jump to source.

New in 0.9.6, the tabular listing (C-c a T) opens a fast, sortable table using tabulated-list-mode (a feature in Emacs I am starting to leverage more). Columns for Level, Line, Status, Priority, Comments, Tags, Author, and the first line of the comment. Click column headers to sort. This is brilliant for getting a quick birds-eye view of all the open items in a file.

For the global view, simply-annotate-show-all gathers annotations from every file in the database into a single org-mode buffer.

Enable simply-annotate-dired-mode and dired buffers show fringe indicators next to files that have annotations. You can see at a glance which files have notes attached:

(add-hook 'dired-mode-hook #'simply-annotate-dired-mode)

Info manuals are also fully supported. Annotations are tracked per-node, and the listing and jump-to-file commands navigate to Info nodes seamlessly.

Press C-c a e and you can edit the raw s-expression data structure of any annotation. Every field is there: thread ID, status, priority, tags, comments with their IDs, parent-IDs, timestamps, and text. C-c C-c to save. This is the escape hatch for when the UI does not quite cover what you need.

Rather than writing paragraphs about how simply-annotate compares to other packages, I have put together a feature matrix in the README. The short version: if you want threaded conversations, multiple combinable display styles, annotation levels, a smart context-aware command, and zero dependencies in a single file, this is the package for you. If you need PDF annotation, go with org-noter or org-remark, they are excellent at that.

(use-package simply-annotate
 :bind-keymap ("C-c a" . simply-annotate-command-map)
 :hook (find-file-hook . simply-annotate-mode))

(with-eval-after-load 'simply-annotate
 (add-hook 'dired-mode-hook #'simply-annotate-dired-mode))

The package is available on GitHub on melpa at simply-annotate or https://github.com/captainflasmr/simply-annotate. There is also an Info manual if you run M-x info and search for simply-annotate.

-1:-- Simply Annotate 0.9.8: Threaded Conversations on Your Code (Post James Dyer)--L0--C0--2026-03-29T08:08:00.000Z

Bozhidar Batsov: Batppuccin: My Take on Catppuccin for Emacs

I promised I’d take a break from building Tree-sitter major modes, and I meant it. So what better way to relax than to build… color themes? Yeah, I know. My idea of chilling is weird, but I genuinely enjoy working on random Emacs packages. Most of the time at least…

Some Background

For a very long time my go-to Emacs themes were Zenburn and Solarized – both of which I maintain popular Emacs ports for. Zenburn was actually one of my very first open source projects (created way back in 2010, when Emacs 24 was brand new). It served me well for years.

But at some point I got bored. You know the feeling – you’ve been staring at the same color palette for so long that you stop seeing it. My experiments with other editors (Helix, Zed, VS Code) introduced me to Tokyo Night and Catppuccin, and they’ve been my daily drivers since then.

Eventually, I ended up creating my own Emacs ports of both. I’ve already published emacs-tokyo-themes, and I’ll write more about that one down the road. Today is all about Catppuccin. (and by this I totally mean Batppuccin!)

Why Another Catppuccin Port?

There’s already an official Catppuccin theme for Emacs, and it works. So why build another one? A few reasons.

The official port registers a single catppuccin theme and switches between flavors (Mocha, Macchiato, Frappe, Latte) via a global variable and a reload function. This is unusual by Emacs standards and breaks the normal load-theme workflow – theme-switching packages like circadian.el need custom glue code to work with it. It also loads color definitions from an external file in a way that fails when Emacs hasn’t marked the theme as safe yet, which means some users can’t load the theme at all.

Beyond the architecture, there are style guide issues. font-lock-variable-name-face is set to the default text color, making variables invisible. All outline-* levels use the same blue, so org-mode headings are flat. org-block forces green on all unstyled code. Several faces still ship with #ff00ff magenta placeholder colors. And there’s no support for popular packages like vertico, marginalia, transient, flycheck, or cider.

I think some of this comes from the official port trying to match the structure of the Neovim version, which makes sense for their cross-editor tooling but doesn’t sit well with how Emacs does things.1

Meet Batppuccin

Batppuccin is my opinionated take on Catppuccin for Emacs. The name is a play on my last name (Batsov) + Catppuccin.2 I guess you can think of this as @bbatsov’s Catppuccin… or perhaps Batman’s Catppuccin?

The key differences from the official port:

Four proper themes. batppuccin-mocha, batppuccin-macchiato, batppuccin-frappe, and batppuccin-latte are all separate themes that work with load-theme out of the box. No special reload dance needed.

Faithful to the style guide. Mauve for keywords, green for strings, blue for functions, peach for constants, sky for operators, yellow for types, overlay2 for comments, rosewater for the cursor. The rainbow heading cycle (red, peach, yellow, green, sapphire, lavender) makes org-mode and outline headings actually distinguishable.

Broad face coverage. Built-in Emacs faces plus magit, vertico, corfu, marginalia, embark, orderless, consult, transient, flycheck, cider, company, doom-modeline, treemacs, web-mode, and more. No placeholder colors.

Clean architecture. Shared infrastructure in batppuccin-themes.el, thin wrapper files for each flavor, color override mechanism, configurable heading scaling. The same pattern I use in zenburn-emacs and emacs-tokyo-night-theme.

I didn’t really re-invent anything here - I just created a theme in a way I’m comfortable with.

I’m not going to bother with screenshots here – it looks like Catppuccin, because it is Catppuccin. There are small visual differences if you know where to look (headings, variables, a few face tweaks), but most people wouldn’t notice them side by side. If you’ve seen Catppuccin, you know what to expect.

Installation

The easiest way to install it right now:

1
2
3
4
(use-package batppuccin-mocha-theme
  :vc (:url "https://github.com/bbatsov/batppuccin-emacs" :rev :newest)
  :config
  (load-theme 'batppuccin-mocha t))

Replace mocha with macchiato, frappe, or latte for the other flavors. You can also switch interactively with M-x batppuccin-select.

There Can Never Be Enough Theme Ports

I remember when Solarized was the hot new thing and there were something like five competing Emacs ports of it. People had strong opinions about which one got the colors right, which one had better org-mode support, which one worked with their favorite completion framework. And that was fine! Different ports serve different needs and different tastes.

The same applies here. The official Catppuccin port is perfectly usable for a lot of people. Batppuccin is for people who want something more idiomatic to Emacs, with broader face coverage and stricter adherence to the upstream style guide. Both can coexist happily.

I’ve said many times that for me the best aspect of Emacs is that you can tweak it infinitely to make it your own, so as far as I’m concerned having a theme that you’re the only user of is perfectly fine. That being said, I hope a few of you will appreciate my take on Catppuccin as well.

Wrapping Up

This is an early release and there’s plenty of room for improvement. I’m sure there are faces I’ve missed, colors that could be tweaked, and packages that deserve better support. If you try it out and something looks off, please open an issue or send a PR.

I’m also curious – what are your favorite Emacs themes these days? Still rocking Zenburn? Converted to modus-themes? Something else entirely? I’d love to hear about it.

That’s all from me, folks! Keep hacking!

  1. The official port uses Catppuccin’s Whiskers template tool to generate the Elisp from a .tera template, which is cool for keeping ports in sync across editors but means the generated code doesn’t follow Emacs conventions. ↩︎

  2. Naming is hard, but it should also be fun! Also – I’m a huge fan of Batman. ↩︎

-1:-- Batppuccin: My Take on Catppuccin for Emacs (Post Bozhidar Batsov)--L0--C0--2026-03-29T07:00:00.000Z

Irreal: Restarting Running Elisp Code

One of Lisp’s features that seem like magic to those of us brought up with C-like languages is the ability to change the code of a running process, reload it, and continue running with the new code. The amazing thing is that the process is not restarted. It simply continues running but with the new code.

Emacers do this all the time, often without realizing what they’re doing. They make a change, to their init.el, say, evaluate it, and continue executing their current Emacs instance. Sometimes, this is simply changing a parameter value but you can also change a function definition in the same way.

If you’re new to Emacs you may wonder how this magical spell is invoked even though you’ve done it several times. It’s simply a matter of evaluating the new code and continuing. Except when it isn’t. There are some edge cases that can trip you up. In Lisp it’s devar values. Emacs adds defface and defcustom. The values defined by these commands are not changed by a code update. This is on purpose. The idea is that you don’t want to mess with a user’s, say, custom values when you change the code.

Bozhidar Batsov has a nice post that discusses all this with particular attention on how to deal with devar and the other edge cases. For example, I always thought the the way to change devar variables was to evaluate a setq of the variable with the new value but you can also simple invoke eval-defun (Ctrl+Meta+x) to the devar to update the value. This also works for defcustom and defface.

The other nice thing I didn’t know about is the restart-emacs command that restarts Emacs and—with desktop-save-mode​—reloads everything, including the new defvar etc. values. Take a look at Batsov’s post for more details.

-1:-- Restarting Running Elisp Code (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-28T15:08:43.000Z

Bozhidar Batsov: fsharp-ts-mode: A Modern Emacs Mode for F#

I’m pretty much done with the focused development push on neocaml – it’s reached a point where I’m genuinely happy using it daily and the remaining work is mostly incremental polish. So naturally, instead of taking a break I decided it was time to start another project that’s been living in the back of my head for a while: a proper Tree-sitter-based F# mode for Emacs.

Meet fsharp-ts-mode.

Why F#?

I’ve written before about my fondness for the ML family of languages, and while OCaml gets most of my attention, last year I developed a soft spot for F#. In some ways I like it even a bit more than OCaml – the tooling is excellent, the .NET ecosystem is massive, and computation expressions are one of the most elegant abstractions I’ve seen in any language. F# manages to feel both practical and beautiful, which is a rare combination.

The problem is that Emacs has never been particularly popular with F# programmers – or .NET programmers in general. The existing fsharp-mode works, but it’s showing its age: regex-based highlighting, SMIE indentation with quirks, and some legacy code dating back to the caml-mode days. I needed a good F# mode for Emacs, and that’s enough of a reason to build one in my book.

The Name

I’ll be honest – I spent quite a bit of time trying to come up with a clever name.1 Some candidates that didn’t make the cut:

  • fsharpe-mode (fsharp(evolved/enhanced)-mode)
  • Fa Dièse (French for F sharp – because after spending time with OCaml you start thinking in French, apparently)
  • fluoride (a play on Ionide, the popular F# IDE extension)

In the end none of my fun ideas stuck, so I went with the boring-but-obvious fsharp-ts-mode. Sometimes the straightforward choice is the right one. At least nobody will have trouble finding it.2

Built on neocaml’s Foundation

I modeled fsharp-ts-mode directly after neocaml, and the two packages share a lot of structural similarities – which shouldn’t be surprising given how much OCaml and F# have in common. The same architecture (base mode + language-specific derived modes), the same approach to font-locking (shared + grammar-specific rules), the same REPL integration pattern (comint with tree-sitter input highlighting), the same build system interaction pattern (minor mode wrapping CLI commands).

This also meant I could get the basics in place really quickly. Having already solved problems like trailing comment indentation, forward-sexp hybrid navigation, and imenu with qualified names in neocaml, porting those solutions to F# was mostly mechanical.

What’s in 0.1.0

The initial release covers all the essentials:

  • Syntax highlighting via Tree-sitter with 4 customizable levels, supporting .fs, .fsx, and .fsi files
  • Indentation via Tree-sitter indent rules
  • Imenu with fully-qualified names (e.g., MyModule.myFunc)
  • Navigationbeginning-of-defun, end-of-defun, forward-sexp
  • F# Interactive (REPL) integration with tree-sitter highlighting for input
  • dotnet CLI integration – build, test, run, clean, format, restore, with watch mode support
  • .NET API documentation lookup at point (C-c C-d)
  • Eglot integration for FsAutoComplete
  • Compilation error parsing for dotnet build output
  • Shift region left/right, auto-detect indent offset, prettify symbols, outline mode, and more

Migrating from fsharp-mode

If you’re currently using fsharp-mode, switching is straightforward:

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(use-package fsharp-ts-mode
  :vc (:url "https://github.com/bbatsov/fsharp-ts-mode" :rev :newest))

The main thing fsharp-ts-mode doesn’t have yet is automatic LSP server installation (the eglot-fsharp package does this for fsharp-mode). You’ll need to install FsAutoComplete yourself:

$ dotnet tool install -g fsautocomplete

After that, (add-hook 'fsharp-ts-mode-hook #'eglot-ensure) is all you need.

See the migration guide in the README for a detailed comparison.

Lessons Learned

Working with the ionide/tree-sitter-fsharp grammar surfaced some interesting challenges compared to the OCaml grammar:

F#’s indentation-sensitive syntax is tricky

Unlike OCaml, where indentation is purely cosmetic, F# uses significant whitespace (the “offside rule”). The tree-sitter grammar needs correct indentation to parse correctly, which creates a chicken-and-egg problem: you need a correct parse tree to indent, but you need correct indentation to parse. For example, if you paste this unindented block:

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let f x =
if x > 0 then
x + 1
else
0

The parser can’t tell that if is the body of f or that x + 1 belongs to the then branch – it produces ERROR nodes everywhere, and indent-region has nothing useful to work with. But if you’re typing the code line by line, the parser always has enough context from preceding lines to indent the current line correctly. This is a fundamental limitation of any indentation-sensitive grammar.

The two grammars are more different than you’d expect

OCaml’s tree-sitter-ocaml-interface grammar inherits from the base grammar, so you can share queries freely. F#’s fsharp and fsharp_signature grammars are independent with different node types and field names for equivalent concepts. For instance, a let binding is function_or_value_defn in the .fs grammar but value_definition in the .fsi grammar. Type names use a type_name: field in one grammar but not the other. Even some keyword tokens (of, open, type) that work fine as query matches in fsharp fail at runtime in fsharp_signature.

This forced me to split font-lock rules into shared and grammar-specific sets – more code, more testing, more edge cases.

Script files are weird

F# script (.fsx) files without a module declaration can mix let bindings with bare expressions like printfn. The grammar doesn’t expect a declaration after a bare expression at the top level, so it chains everything into nested application_expression nodes:

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let x = 1
printfn "%d" x    // bare expression
let y = 2         // grammar nests this under the printfn node

Each subsequent let ends up one level deeper, causing progressive indentation. I worked around this with a heuristic that detects declarations whose ancestor chain leads back to file through these misparented nodes and forces them to column 0. Shebangs (#!/usr/bin/env dotnet fsi) required a different trick – excluding the first line from the parser’s range entirely via treesit-parser-set-included-ranges.

I’ve filed issues upstream for the grammar pain points – hopefully they’ll improve over time.

Current Status

Let me be upfront: this is a 0.1.0 release and it’s probably quite buggy. I’ve tested it against a reasonable set of F# code, but there are certainly indentation edge cases, font-lock gaps, and interactions I haven’t encountered yet. If you try it and something looks wrong, please open an issueM-x fsharp-ts-mode-bug-report-info will collect the environment details for you.

The package can currently be installed only from GitHub (via package-vc-install or manually). I’ve filed a PR with MELPA and I hope it will get merged soon.

Wrapping Up

I really need to take a break from building Tree-sitter major modes at this point. Between clojure-ts-mode, neocaml, asciidoc-mode, and now fsharp-ts-mode, I’ve spent a lot of time staring at tree-sitter node types and indent rules.3 It’s been fun, but I think I’ve earned a vacation from treesit-font-lock-rules.

I really wanted to do something nice for the (admittedly small) F#-on-Emacs community, and a modern major mode seemed like the most meaningful contribution I could make. I hope some of you find it useful!

That’s all from me, folks! Keep hacking!

  1. Way more time than I needed to actually implement the mode. ↩︎

  2. Many people pointed out they thought neocaml was some package for neovim. Go figure why! ↩︎

  3. I’ve also been helping a bit with erlang-ts-mode recently. ↩︎

-1:-- fsharp-ts-mode: A Modern Emacs Mode for F# (Post Bozhidar Batsov)--L0--C0--2026-03-27T15:00:00.000Z

Emacs Redux: Paredit’s Keybinding Conflicts

Today’s topic came up while I was going over the list of open Prelude issues after doing the recent 2.0 release.

Paredit and smartparens are structural editing packages that keep your parentheses balanced and let you manipulate s-expressions as units – essential tools for anyone writing Lisp. Paredit has been around since 2005 and its keybindings have become muscle memory for a generation of Lisp programmers (yours truly included). Smartparens inherits the same keymap when used with sp-use-paredit-bindings.

The problem is that some of those keybindings conflict with standard Emacs key prefixes that didn’t exist when paredit was written – or that have grown more important over time.

The Commands and Their Conflicts

Before getting to solutions, let’s look at each problematic command – what it does, where paredit puts it, and what it shadows.

Splice – M-s

paredit-splice-sexp (or sp-splice-sexp in smartparens) removes the enclosing delimiters around point, “splicing” the contents into the parent expression:

;; before (point on "b"):
(a (b c) d)

;; after splice:
(a b c d)

The conflict: Emacs uses M-s as the search-map prefix (since Emacs 23). Paredit’s splice binding shadows M-s o (occur), M-s . (isearch-forward-symbol-at-point), and any M-s-prefixed bindings from packages like consult (consult-line, consult-ripgrep, etc.). If you use a completion framework like Vertico + Consult, this one really hurts.

Convolute – M-?

paredit-convolute-sexp (or sp-convolute-sexp) swaps the nesting of two enclosing forms. Specifically, it takes the head of the outer form and moves it inside the inner one:

;; before (point on "c"):
(a (b c d))

;; after convolute -- "a" moved from outer to inner:
(b (a c d))

The conflict: Emacs uses M-? for xref-find-references (since Emacs 25). If you use LSP (Eglot or lsp-mode), paredit’s convolute binding shadows “find all references” – one of the most useful LSP features.

Slurp – C-<right>

paredit-forward-slurp-sexp (or sp-forward-slurp-sexp) expands the current sexp forward by pulling the next sibling inside the closing delimiter:

;; before:
(a b) c

;; after slurp -- "c" pulled inside:
(a b c)

Barf – C-<left>

paredit-forward-barf-sexp (or sp-forward-barf-sexp) is the opposite – it pushes the last element out past the closing delimiter:

;; before:
(a b c)

;; after barf -- "c" pushed out:
(a b) c

The conflict for both: C-<right> and C-<left> override right-word and left-word. Fine if you’re in a Lisp buffer and know what you’re doing, but surprising if you expected word-level movement.

Splice-killing-backward – M-<up>

paredit-splice-sexp-killing-backward splices (removes delimiters) and also kills everything before point within the sexp:

;; before (point on "c"):
(a b c d)

;; after splice-killing-backward -- "a b" killed, parens removed:
c d

Splice-killing-forward – M-<down>

paredit-splice-sexp-killing-forward does the same but kills everything after point:

;; before (point on "b"):
(a b c d)

;; after splice-killing-forward -- "c d" killed, parens removed:
a b

The conflict for both: M-<up> and M-<down> clash with org-metaup/org-metadown in Org mode, paragraph movement in some configs, and window manager shortcuts on some Linux desktops.

What to Do About It

The good news is that both Matus Goljer (a.k.a. Fuco1, the smartparens author) and Magnar Sveen (a.k.a. Magnars, the author of expand-region, multiple-cursors and many other popular packages) have solved these conflicts in their own configs. Their approaches are worth borrowing.

The examples below use smartparens. For paredit, replace smartparens-mode-map with paredit-mode-map and sp-* commands with their paredit-* equivalents.

Splice (M-s)

Matus’s approach is to rebind to M-D (meta-shift-d). The mnemonic is nice – M-d kills a word, M-D “kills the delimiters.” This is probably the most widely copied alternative:

(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "M-s") nil)
(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "M-D") #'sp-splice-sexp)

Magnar’s approach is to rebind to s-s (super-s). Clean if you’re on macOS where Super is the Command key:

(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "M-s") nil)
(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "s-s") #'sp-splice-sexp)

You can use both – M-D everywhere, s-s as a macOS bonus.

Convolute (M-?)

Convolute-sexp is one of paredit’s more obscure commands. If you use LSP or xref regularly, freeing M-? for xref-find-references is a net win:

(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "M-?") nil)

If you actually use convolute-sexp, rebind it to something under a less contested prefix.

Slurp/barf (C-<arrow>)

Magnar moves these to Super:

(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "C-<right>") nil)
(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "C-<left>") nil)
(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "s-<right>") #'sp-forward-slurp-sexp)
(define-key smartparens-mode-map (kbd "s-<left>") #'sp-forward-barf-sexp)

Matus keeps the C-<arrow> bindings (accepting the conflict). This one’s really a matter of taste – if word-level movement with C-<arrow> matters to you, move them. If you’re a Lisp programmer who slurps more than they word-move, keep them.

Splice-killing (M-<up> / M-<down>)

Matus uses C-M-<backspace> and C-M-<delete>. Magnar uses s-<up> and s-<down>. Both work well.

The Smartparens Alternative

If you’re using smartparens (rather than paredit), there’s actually a simpler option – just use smartparens’ own default keybinding set instead of the paredit compatibility bindings. Set sp-base-key-bindings to 'sp (or just don’t set it at all) and call sp-use-smartparens-bindings instead of sp-use-paredit-bindings.

The default smartparens bindings already avoid most of the conflicts above:

Command Paredit binding Smartparens binding
splice M-s M-D
convolute M-? (unbound)
slurp C-<right> C-<right>
barf C-<left> C-<left>
splice-killing-backward M-<up> C-M-<backspace>
splice-killing-forward M-<down> C-M-<delete>

The two big wins are splice moving to M-D (freeing search-map) and convolute not being bound at all (freeing xref-find-references). The slurp/barf conflict with word movement remains, but that’s a trade-off most Lisp programmers are happy to make.

What about me?

I don’t use most of the commands shadowed by Paredit, so I didn’t even think about the conflicts much before today. Given that I’m a macOS user these days I like Magnar’s approach to solving the conflicts. But I’m also sooo used to pressing M-s… Decisions, decisions…

I definitely think everyone should free up M-?, given the default is quite important command. For me this was never much of a problem in the past (until the LSP era) as I’ve always used Projectile’s wrappers around xref commands – projectile-find-references (s-p ? or C-c p ?) instead of xref-find-references, and projectile-find-tag (s-p j or C-c p j) instead of xref-find-definitions. Projectile scopes these to the current project automatically, which is what I usually want anyway.

I don’t really care about any commands with arrows in them, as I’m using an HHKB keyboard and it’s not really fun to press arrows on it…

The Bottom Line

Paredit’s defaults made perfect sense in 2005. Twenty years later, Emacs has grown search-map, xref, and a whole ecosystem of packages that expect those keys to be available. If you’ve been living with these conflicts out of habit, take five minutes to rebind – your future self will thank you.

That’s all I have for you today. Keep hacking!

-1:-- Paredit’s Keybinding Conflicts (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-27T08:00:00.000Z

Irreal: Some New Packages

Over at Bicycle For Your Mind, macosxguru reports that despite his good intentions to stop tweaking his configuration and absorb what he already had installed, he found that there were so many excellent new packages that he had to add them.

I can confirm that the packages he lists are, indeed, brand new and just released. There were so many of them last week that I couldn’t write about them all. Here, for the record, are the new packages that he’s just installed. Take a look at macosxguru’s post for more details.

Kirigami
A sort of general fold and unfold package that works everywhere. I almost wrote about this last week but ran out of time.
Visible-mark
Make the marks visible. Which marks and their appearance is configurable.
Javelin
Quick bookmarks for Emacs.
OPML to Org
Converts OPML files to Org files.
Appine
App in Emacs. This is a very interesting package that allows the embedding of macOS views such as WebKit, in Emacs. I didn’t get a chance to write about this but I definitely want to research it more. It looks like it could be very useful.
Buffer-guardian
I did write about this in conjuction with super-save. It automates the automatic saving of buffers when various events like loss of focus or timer expiry happen.
Isearch-lazy-count
A package that numbers the targets for isearch.
Markdown-table-wrap
Wrap Markdown tables to a fixed character width.
Surround.el
I wrote about and installed this package. It deals with adding and deleting surrounding delimiter pairs and more. I really like this package.

All of these packages are worth looking into if you have a need for their functionality.

-1:-- Some New Packages (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-26T14:29:11.000Z

Emacs Redux: Emacs Prelude: Redux

Programmers know the benefits of everything and the tradeoffs of nothing.

– Rich Hickey

Earlier today I wrote about Emacs Redux turning 13. That felt like the perfect occasion to also ship something I’ve been working towards for a while – Emacs Prelude 2.0.

A Long Time Coming

The last tagged Prelude release (1.1) happened all the way back in February 2021. Five years without a release might sound alarming, but I’d argue it’s a feature, not a bug. Prelude has always aimed to be a foundation – simple, stable, easy to understand. I never wanted users to dread pulling upstream because everything moved under their feet. If you look at some of the more “sophisticated” Emacs distributions out there, the constant churn and complexity can be genuinely overwhelming. That’s not the experience I want for Prelude users.

That said, five years is a long time in Emacs land. Emacs 29 landed with built-in tree-sitter, Eglot, and use-package. A bunch of third-party packages that Prelude depended on became obsolete or unmaintained. It was time for a proper update.

What’s New

Prelude 2.0 is all about modernizing the distribution for the Emacs 29+ era.

Emacs 29.1 is now the minimum version

This was the big enabling change. Emacs 29 brought so many things that Prelude previously had to install or polyfill – use-package, display-line-numbers-mode, isearch-lazy-count, use-short-answers, tree-sitter, Eglot – that bumping the minimum version let me drop a ton of compatibility code and third-party dependencies in one go. Packages like nlinum, anzu, and epl are gone entirely, replaced by their built-in equivalents.

Tree-sitter support

Language modules now automatically use tree-sitter modes (e.g., python-ts-mode instead of python-mode) when a grammar is available, with graceful fallback to classic modes when it isn’t. This means better syntax highlighting and structural editing with zero configuration – just install the grammar and you’re done. Prelude currently supports tree-sitter remapping for C/C++, Go, Python, JavaScript, TypeScript (including TSX), Ruby, Elixir, Shell, YAML, and CSS. Some modules like prelude-ocaml (which uses neocaml) are tree-sitter-only by design.

Built-in LSP via Eglot

Most language modules now come with LSP support out of the box, using Eglot as the default client. No extra packages to install, no configuration to write – just make sure you have the right language server on your $PATH and Prelude handles the rest. Eglot keybindings live under the C-c C-l prefix (rename, code actions, format, organize imports), consistent with what lsp-mode users are used to. If you prefer lsp-mode, set prelude-lsp-client to 'lsp-mode in your personal config and Prelude will use it across all language modules instead.

Modernized language modules

Python, JavaScript, TypeScript, OCaml, Go, and others have been updated to use modern tooling. anaconda-mode is replaced by LSP, js2-mode by js-ts-mode, tide by typescript-ts-mode, tuareg by neocaml, alchemist and go-projectile are gone (both unmaintained for years). The goal was to bring every language module up to 2026 standards while keeping them short and focused – most are still under 50 lines.

Faster startup

I still stand by my older take that Emacs startup time doesn’t really matter – you start Emacs once and it runs for days (or weeks, or months). But when the fruit hangs this low, why not pick it? Interactive packages are now loaded lazily via use-package :defer, and redundant require calls have been eliminated throughout. The old defadvice calls have been replaced with modern define-advice / advice-add, and a fair amount of dead code has been cleaned up across the board. Nothing dramatic, but it all adds up to a noticeably snappier startup for those who care about such things.

There’s a detailed changelog if you want the full picture, and a migration guide in the README to help with the upgrade.

The Docs Got a Facelift

The documentation site has been updated and now uses the Material for MkDocs theme, which is a lot nicer to read and navigate than the old ReadTheDocs default. The content has been refreshed too, with all modules now properly documented.

What’s Next

There’s more I’d like to do. For instance, I haven’t yet pushed to convert everything to use use-package idiomatically – some modules still use the old with-eval-after-load / add-hook style. I’d also like to explore deeper integration with project.el and perhaps revisit the module system itself. But everything is in good shape overall, and I’d rather ship incremental improvements than hold back a release for perfection.

Starter Kits in the Age of AI

A fair question to ask in 2026 is whether Emacs distributions even matter anymore. With tools like Claude Code, you can just ask an AI to set up Emacs however you like – generate an init.el from scratch, configure LSP, pick a completion framework, wire up keybindings. Why bother with a starter kit?

I think there are a few reasons Prelude (and projects like it) still matter.

First, AI coding agents are only as good as the code they’ve been trained on. And right now, the Emacs ecosystem has a serious “popularity inertia” problem – agents will almost always suggest the older, more established package over a newer alternative, even when the newer one is clearly better. Ask an AI to set up OCaml in Emacs and you’ll get tuareg + merlin every time, not neocaml + ocaml-eglot. Ask for a completion framework and you’ll get ivy or helm, not vertico + marginalia. The training data reflects the past, not the present. Well-maintained distributions that track the state of the art serve as a corrective – both for humans browsing GitHub and for the models trained on it.

Second, there’s real value in curation. An AI can generate a config, but it can’t tell you which packages play well together, which ones are unmaintained, or which defaults will bite you six months from now. That kind of judgment comes from experience, and it’s exactly what a good starter kit encodes.

And third, simplicity still wins. A generated config you don’t understand is worse than a short, readable one you do. Prelude’s modules are deliberately small and straightforward – they’re meant to be read, forked, and modified. I’d rather give someone 20 lines of well-chosen defaults than a 200-line AI-generated config full of cargo-culted settings.

I wrote more about this topic in Emacs and Vim in the Age of AI if you’re curious.

Prelude and Emacs Redux

Emacs Prelude holds a special place in my heart. It was one of my first open-source projects – I started it back in 2011, two years before this blog even existed. When I launched Emacs Redux in 2013, many of my early posts were essentially showcasing features and ideas from Prelude. The two projects grew up together, and in many ways Prelude was the proving ground for the tips and workflows that ended up here. It’s fitting that they celebrate together today.

The Return of the Prelude

Simplicity is a great virtue but it requires hard work to achieve it and education to appreciate it. And to make matters worse: complexity sells better.

– Edsger W. Dijkstra

I’ve always believed that slow, deliberate change beats constant reinvention. It’s not glamorous, it doesn’t generate hype, but it builds something you can actually rely on. Prelude doesn’t try to be everything to everyone – it tries to be a solid, understandable starting point that respects your time and attention.

And here’s a fun bit of trivia to close on: 2026 happens to be the year Honda brings back the Prelude. Very few people know this, but I was actually considering buying a (pretty old) Honda Prelude around the time I created Emacs Prelude back in 2011 – that’s where the name came from! I never did buy the car, but the Emacs distribution turned out to be a much better investment.1 And now, 15 years later, both Preludes are making a comeback. Sometimes things just come full circle.

That’s all I have for you today. Keep hacking!

  1. More trivia for you - I did end up buying a BMW E39 in 2010 instead of the Prelude. I still own it and it just turned 26 earlier this month! 

-1:-- Emacs Prelude: Redux (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-26T11:50:00.000Z

Yesterday morning, I imported an old-blog post of mine, which discusses org-id and UUIDs in org-mode. It’s a bit of a deep dive into how org-mode works. I find that I don’t do those as much anymore - probably because I mostly use Emacs “as is” with a few packages I use day to day, and my workflow has been pretty much the same (capture templates not included) for the last two years or so.

-1:--  (Post TAONAW - Emacs and Org Mode)--L0--C0--2026-03-26T11:22:10.000Z

Emacs Redux: Happy 13th Birthday, Emacs Redux!

13 is my lucky number, so I’m not going to worry about it.1

– Taylor Swift

Exactly 13 years ago today I published the first Emacs Redux post and kicked off what has become one of the longest running projects in my life. Time flies!

Some Numbers

Over the past 13 years I’ve written 228 articles here. That’s not a lot by some standards, but I’m pretty happy with the consistency. There hasn’t been a single year without at least one post – although 2017 came dangerously close with just 2 articles (written on the 31st of December). Here’s the full breakdown:

Year Posts
2013 68
2014 27
2015 9
2016 11
2017 2
2018 6
2019 6
2020 23
2021 20
2022 8
2023 9
2024 5
2025 16
2026 18

2013 was the clear winner – I was on fire after launching the blog, writing almost 70 posts in a single year. I doubt I’ll ever match that pace again, but you never know.

The Octopress Dark Ages

One thing that almost killed my blogging was Octopress. When I started Emacs Redux it was the hot blogging platform for programmers, but over time it became a real pain to work with. At some point just getting the site to build locally felt like a chore, and that friction killed my motivation to write. I wrote about the migration back in 2018, and looking at it now I can’t help but smile at this bit:

I realized recently that it has been over 10 years since my first blog post. […] One thing never really changed, though - the quality of my writing. It was always abysmally bad…

I also noted there that 2018 marked the blog’s 5th birthday, and that I had failed to keep up the pace I originally set for myself. Some things don’t change! But the migration to a plain Jekyll setup with no extra layers on top made a real difference – that’s still what I’m using today, and it gets out of my way completely. The lesson? Keep your publishing toolchain as simple as possible.

The Editor Landscape

Lots of things have changed in the editor world over the past 13 years, but my love for Emacs remains as strong as ever.

Last year I had a lot of fun rediscovering Vim and wrote a whole series of “How to Vim” articles on batsov.com. I’ve also spent some time with Helix, Zed, and even VS Code (mostly for F# development). Playing with all of these only reinforced my conviction that Emacs is the One True Editor – or at the very least, the right (most fun) editor for me. There’s nothing quite like it!

Recent Activity

Some of you might have noticed that Emacs Redux has been more active than usual over the past few months. Two reasons for that:

  • I’ve been having a lot of fun working on neocaml, and new projects always generate a steady stream of interesting findings worth sharing. I’ve made it a rule of mine to turn those into blog posts instead of letting them fade from memory.2
  • I wanted to celebrate this birthday in style, so I promised myself to push a bit harder on the blogging front until today. No promises for the rest of the year, though!

Thank You

A big thank you to everyone who has been reading Emacs Redux over the past 13 years. And to all the people who have supported my Emacs open-source projects – whether by contributing code, filing issues, writing docs, donations, or just spreading the word – you have my gratitude. None of this would be as rewarding without you!

Looking Ahead

The best way to predict the future is to invent it.

– Alan Kay

We live in a world that’s changing fast, and the future is always uncertain even in the best of times. But I hope that Emacs (and Emacs Redux) will be alive, well and relevant for many years to come!

In Emacs we trust! Keep hacking!

  1. Same here I guess, given I was born on the 13th. 

  2. I’ve also been gradually updating most of my Emacs packages, especially those that didn’t get much love in the last couple of years. 

-1:-- Happy 13th Birthday, Emacs Redux! (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-26T08:30:00.000Z

Einar Mostad: Use python shell from virtual environment if there is one in Emacs

About a week ago, I made a function to use python from a virtual environment if there existed a directory called venv within the project the file is inside. The point is to get access to the packages within that virtual environment when using the python shell to evaluate code from a file. Today, I had a look at that function again. I thought it would be really nice if I could find the python executable within a virtual environment no matter what the virtual environment directory is called.

I looked around a bit and found a built in function in Emacs to search based on a regular expression within a directory recursively (within subdirectories) that solved the problem. I am not very experienced with Emacs Lisp, so this is a function I haven't met before.

(defun emo-python-virtualenv ()
  "Sets the python shell to python from a virtual environment if one exists."
  (when (project-current)
    (let ((pythonpath
           (nth 0 (directory-files-recursively
                   (nth 2 (project-current))
                   (if (eq system-type 'gnu/linux) "python$" "python.exe$")))))
      (when (file-exists-p pythonpath)
        (setq-local python-shell-interpreter pythonpath)))))

As mentioned last time I wrote about this, I also need to run this function whenever I open a python file to set the correct path to the python shell for that file. This is done by adding the function to the python-mode hook like this:

(add-hook 'python-mode-hook 'emo-python-virtualenv))

With this in place, whenever I open a python shell with C-c C-p from a python file, I get a python shell from within the virtual environment of that file's project, or I get the system python if there isn't a virtual environment within the project the file is part of.

-1:-- Use python shell from virtual environment if there is one in Emacs (Post Einar Mostad)--L0--C0--2026-03-25T22:12:00.000Z

Irreal: Moving From Obsidian To Emacs

Curtis McHale runs an online book club where readers share their posts on the current book. He’s been using Longform in Obsidian but it kept corrupting his data organization so he decided to move to Emacs. His site requires Markdown but he decided to go all in on Org mode so he needed a way to convert his old Markdown posts to Org and then to export his Org files to Markdown.

Migrating from Markdown to Org was easily handled by Pandoc. When exporting from Org to Markdown there were a couple of problems. The easiest problem was smart quotes: " and ' are mapped to the HTML entities &ldquote;, &rdquote;, &lsquote;, and &rsquote;, which is not what McHale wanted. He fixed that by simply turning off with-smart-quotes.

The slightly harder problem was footnotes. The Org exporter handles them correctly but presents them as a Top Level heading, which doesn’t work for him because he has each post for a book as a separate subtree in the book’s Org file. He fixed that with a bit of post-processing that mapped # Footnotes to #### Footnotes.

His post has a video that shows him stepping through all this if you prefer a visual presentation. He uses Doom Emacs so that may be a bit disorienting to those who are used to vanilla Emacs.

In any event, it’s a nice post that shows how Emacs can easily handle tasks that you were using more complicated apps like Obsidian to do.

-1:-- Moving From Obsidian To Emacs (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-25T15:07:04.000Z

Emacs Redux: Reloading Emacs Lisp Code

While working on erlang-ts-mode recently, someone asked me how I reload the mode’s code while developing it. I realized that while the answer is obvious to me after years of Emacs Lisp hacking, it’s not obvious at all to people who are just getting started with Emacs Lisp development. So here’s a short practical guide.

The Problem

Most Emacs users learn early on that you can evaluate Emacs Lisp with commands like eval-buffer (M-x eval-buffer), eval-defun (C-M-x), and eval-expression (M-:). These work great for most code – but they have a blind spot: defvar and defcustom.

By design, defvar only sets a variable if it’s not already bound. This means that if you change the default value of a defvar in your source and then run eval-buffer, the old value sticks around. The same applies to defcustom. Here’s a quick example:

(defvar my-mode-default-indent 2)  ;; eval-buffer sets this to 2

;; Now change it to 4 in source:
(defvar my-mode-default-indent 4)  ;; eval-buffer does NOTHING -- still 2

This is intentional – loading a library shouldn’t clobber user customizations. But when you’re developing a package, it’s a real pain. You change a default, re-evaluate, and wonder why nothing happened.

The same issue applies to faces defined with defface – re-evaluating the definition won’t update an already-defined face.

The Approaches

Here are all the approaches I know of, roughly ordered from lightest to heaviest.

1. eval-defun on Individual Forms

Here’s something that surprises many people: eval-defun (C-M-x) does handle defvar, defcustom, and defface specially. When you place point inside a defvar form and hit C-M-x, it unconditionally sets the variable to the new value, ignoring the “only if unbound” semantics.

This is different from eval-buffer and eval-region, which respect the normal defvar behavior.

So if you’ve only changed a few forms, C-M-x on each one is the fastest approach. It’s what I use most of the time during development.

2. setq via eval-expression

If you just need to reset one variable quickly, hit M-: and type:

(setq my-mode-default-indent 4)

Quick and dirty, but it works. This won’t re-evaluate any other code, so it’s only useful for tweaking individual values.

3. load-file

M-x load-file lets you load an .el file from disk. The difference from require is that require skips loading entirely if the feature is already in the features list, while load-file always reads and evaluates the file. That said, it still respects defvar semantics, so already-bound variables won’t be updated – you’d need eval-defun or unload-feature for that.

Where load-file really helps is when you want to reload a file that isn’t the one you’re currently editing – e.g., a dependency within your package, or a file that doesn’t have a provide form.

4. unload-feature + require

This is the “clean reload” approach:

(unload-feature 'my-mode t)  ;; the t means "force, even if other things depend on it"
(require 'my-mode)

unload-feature removes everything the feature defined – variables, functions, hooks, etc. Then require loads it fresh. This is the closest thing to a clean slate without restarting Emacs.

A few caveats:

  • unload-feature can be disruptive. If the feature added hooks or advice, unloading should clean those up, but edge cases exist.
  • It only works for features that were loaded via provide/require. If you loaded a file with load-file, there’s no feature to unload.
  • Some complex packages don’t survive unload-feature cleanly. For most packages (like a typical major mode), it works well.

You can bind this to a key for quick access during development:

(defun my-reload-feature (feature)
  "Unload and reload FEATURE."
  (interactive
   (list (intern (completing-read "Reload feature: "
                                  features nil t))))
  (unload-feature feature t)
  (require feature))

5. Restart Emacs

The nuclear option. When nothing else works or when you’ve made lots of changes and don’t trust the runtime state, just restart. With desktop-save-mode or a session manager, this is less painful than it sounds.

If you use Emacs in daemon mode, M-x restart-emacs (from the restart-emacs package) or the built-in restart-emacs (Emacs 29+) makes this quick.

Don’t Forget to Re-activate the Mode

One thing that trips people up: after reloading the code (via any of the above methods), you also need to re-activate the mode in existing buffers. Just run M-x my-mode – this re-runs the mode function and re-applies keymaps, hooks, font-lock settings, etc. Without this step, existing buffers will still be running the old code.

For minor modes, toggle off and on: M-x my-minor-mode twice.

My Workflow

For what it’s worth, here’s what my typical mode development workflow looks like:

  1. Edit the source file.
  2. C-M-x on the specific forms I changed.
  3. Switch to a test buffer and re-activate the mode with M-x my-mode.
  4. If things are weird, unload-feature + require for a clean reload.
  5. Restart Emacs only when I’ve changed something fundamental (like autoloads or package metadata).

Most of the time, steps 1-3 are all I need.

Wrapping Up

The thing to remember is that defvar/defcustom/defface are intentionally designed not to override existing values, and most evaluation commands respect this. Once you know that eval-defun is the exception (it does force the update) and that unload-feature gives you a clean slate, reloading code during development is pretty simple.

That’s all I have for you today. Keep hacking!

-1:-- Reloading Emacs Lisp Code (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-25T08:30:00.000Z

Bozhidar Batsov: Neocaml 0.6: Opam, Dune, and More

When I released neocaml 0.1 last month, I thought I was more or less done with the (main) features for the foreseeable future. The original scope was deliberately small — a couple of Tree-sitter-powered OCaml major modes (for .ml and .mli), a REPL integration, and not much else. I was quite happy with how things turned out and figured the next steps would be mostly polish and bug fixes.

Versions 0.2-0.5 brought polish and bug fixes, but fundamentally the feature set stayed the same. I was even more convinced a grand 1.0 release was just around the corner.

I was wrong.

Of course, OCaml files don’t exist in isolation. They live alongside Opam files that describe packages and Dune files that configure builds. And as I was poking around the Tree-sitter ecosystem, I discovered that there were already grammars for both Opam and Dune files. Given how simple both formats are (Opam is mostly key-value pairs, Dune is s-expressions), adding support for them turned out to be fairly straightforward.

So here we are with neocaml 0.6, which is quite a bit bigger than I expected originally.

Note: One thing worth mentioning — all the new modes are completely isolated from the core OCaml modes. They’re separate files with no hard dependency on neocaml-mode, loaded only when you open the relevant file types. I didn’t want to force them upon anyone — for me it’s convenient to get Opam and Dune support out-of-the-box (given how ubiquitous they are in the OCaml ecosystem), but I totally get it if someone doesn’t care about this.

Let me walk you through what’s new.

neocaml-opam-mode

The new neocaml-opam-mode activates automatically for .opam and opam files. It provides:

  • Tree-sitter-based font-lock (field names, strings, operators, version constraints, filter expressions, etc.)
  • Indentation (lists, sections, option braces)
  • Imenu for navigating variables and sections
  • A flymake backend that runs opam lint on the current buffer, giving you inline diagnostics for missing fields, deprecated constructs, and syntax errors

The flymake backend registers automatically when opam is found in your PATH, but you need to enable flymake-mode yourself:

1
(add-hook 'neocaml-opam-mode-hook #'flymake-mode)

Flycheck users get opam lint support out of the box via Flycheck’s built-in opam checker — no extra configuration needed.

This bridges some of the gap with Tuareg, which also bundles an Opam major mode (tuareg-opam-mode). The Tree-sitter-based approach gives us more accurate highlighting, and the flymake integration is a nice bonus on top.

neocaml-dune-mode

neocaml-dune-mode handles dune, dune-project, and dune-workspace files — all three use the same s-expression syntax and share a single Tree-sitter grammar. You get:

  • Font-lock for stanza names, field names, action keywords, strings, module names, library names, operators, and brackets
  • Indentation with 1-space offset
  • Imenu for stanza navigation
  • Defun navigation and which-func support

This removes the need to install the separate dune package (the standalone dune-mode maintained by the Dune developers) from MELPA. If you prefer to keep using it, that’s fine too — neocaml’s README has instructions for overriding the auto-mode-alist entries.

neocaml-dune-interaction-mode

Beyond editing Dune files, I wanted a simple way to run Dune commands from any neocaml buffer. neocaml-dune-interaction-mode is a minor mode that provides keybindings (under C-c C-d) and a “Dune” menu for common operations:

Keybinding Command
C-c C-d b Build
C-c C-d t Test
C-c C-d c Clean
C-c C-d p Promote
C-c C-d f Format
C-c C-d u Launch utop with project libraries
C-c C-d r Run an executable
C-c C-d d Run any Dune command
C-c C-d . Find the nearest dune file

All commands run via Emacs’s compile, so you get error navigation, clickable source locations, and the full compilation-mode interface for free. With a prefix argument (C-u), build, test, and fmt run in watch mode (--watch), automatically rebuilding when files change.

The utop command is special — it launches through neocaml-repl, so you get the full REPL integration (send region, send definition, etc.) with your project’s libraries preloaded.

This mode is completely independent from neocaml-dune-mode — it doesn’t care which major mode you’re using. You can enable it in OCaml buffers like this:

1
(add-hook 'neocaml-base-mode-hook #'neocaml-dune-interaction-mode)

Rough Edges

Both the Opam and Dune Tree-sitter grammars are relatively young and will need some more work for optimal results. I’ve been filing issues and contributing patches upstream to improve them — for instance, the Dune grammar currently flattens field-value pairs in a way that makes indentation less precise than it could be, and neither grammar supports variable interpolation (%{...}) yet. These are very solvable problems and I expect the grammars to improve over time.

What’s Next?

At this point I think I’m (finally!) out of ideas for new functionality. This time I mean it! Neocaml now covers pretty much everything I ever wanted, especially when paired with the awesome ocaml-eglot.

Down the road there might be support for OCamllex (.mll) or Menhir (.mly) files, but only if adding them doesn’t bring significant complexity — both are mixed languages with embedded OCaml code, which makes them fundamentally harder to support well than the simple Opam and Dune formats.

I hope OCaml programmers will find the new functionality useful. If you’re using neocaml, I’d love to hear how it’s working for you — bug reports, feature requests, and general feedback are all welcome on GitHub. You can find the full list of changes in the changelog.

As usual — update from MELPA, kick the tires, and let me know what you think.

That’s all I have for you today! Keep hacking!

-1:-- Neocaml 0.6: Opam, Dune, and More (Post Bozhidar Batsov)--L0--C0--2026-03-25T08:00:00.000Z

Irreal: OrgFolio

Chris Maiorana takes a lot of notes. He’s a writer after all. Once he’s taken those notes, he wants an easy and convenient way of viewing them. These days that usually means viewing them as a Web page.

Org mode, of course, has all the machinery in place to do this essentially automatically but Maiorana has some problems with it. He has multiple notebooks and finds it a pain to set up the ox-publish scaffolding for each one.

But this is Emacs so, of course, it’s easy to automate the process. Maiorana did that by writing a simple script, he calls OrgFolio, that

  1. Deletes the existing Web content
  2. Builds the scaffolding to export the Org files and exports them
  3. Copies any static content, such as CSS files
  4. Spins up a local Web server to show the content

All of this is kicked off from the command line with a call to Emacs in batch mode. It’s easy and has no overhead. It does require building everything from scratch,. which could be a problem for a large set of notes. That’s one of the reasons that Maiorana keeps a separate notebook for each topic.

I take copious notes about everything but they’re mainly for me so I see no need to export them to HTML. I’m perfectly happy to see them in plain text, just as I wrote them. That said, I do write them—complete with Org markup— as if they were going to be exported.

Still, if you take a lot of notes and would like to consume them as a Web page on your own private Web site, take a look at Maiorana’s post. His Elisp script is easy to read and modify if you want to adjust it for your own needs.

-1:-- OrgFolio (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-24T14:06:16.000Z

Curtis McHale: Goodbye Longform Hello Emacs

I want to love the Obsidian Long Form plugin, I even hoped it was a Scrivener replacement but it's failed me again and for the last time. Opening my project to write for the book club I found that it again forgot the order of all my files. I've reorganised them a number of times, but I'm not even bothering this time.

Emacs can be a full writing studio but I'm not abandoning Obsidian, I am going to take my monthly book club writing and move it into emacs.

Migrating .md to .org

First I need to migrate individual posts from Markdown to org files. Yes I know that Emacs has a markdown mode, but after a bit of research I decided to stick with org and let Emacs do it's thing. That means I need to migrate my existing writing into org using pandoc. I can do that with the script below.

pandoc -f markdown -t org input.md -o output.org

This gives me a file called output.org and converts my footnotes to an org compatible syntax. I can then copy the generated content into the new file for each book.

My plan is to keep each book in its own .org file and have each weekly post inside a subtree (heading). I can then export each subtree to markdown as needed for posting on my site.

Fixing Footnotes

My book club posts use footnotes heavily, so I needed them to survive the export back to Markdown intact. The built-in org markdown exporter (ox-md) does include footnotes, but with two problems.

First, the footnotes section gets a top-level # Footnotes heading regardless of where it sits in your document hierarchy. This means we have an h1 in the document which isn't what I want. Second, smart quotes and apostrophes get encoded as HTML entities — &rsquo; instead of ', &ldquo; instead of ". Again, not what I want.

Both are fixable in the export function. The smart quotes issue is handled by passing :with-smart-quotes nil to the exporter. The heading level is fixed with a post-processing step that replaces # Footnotes with #### Footnotes before the output lands in the buffer.

(after! org
  (defun my/org-export-subtree-to-md ()
    (interactive)
    (let* ((md (org-export-as 'md t nil nil '(:with-toc nil :section-numbers nil :with-smart-quotes nil)))
           (md (replace-regexp-in-string "^# Footnotes$" "#### Footnotes" md)))
      (with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create "*Org MD Export*")
        (erase-buffer)
        (insert md)
        (goto-char (point-min))
        (pop-to-buffer (current-buffer)))))

  (map! :map org-mode-map
        :localleader
        "M" #'my/org-export-subtree-to-md))

The footnote links themselves render as HTML anchor tags (<sup><a href...>) rather than Markdown footnote syntax ([^1]). That's a limitation of ox-md, but it works fine in practice since most static site generators accept inline HTML.

Exporting to Markdown

Once the footnotes issues are sorted, the export workflow is straightforward. With my cursor inside the subtree I want to export, I press \ M and a *Org MD Export* buffer opens with the Markdown output ready to copy. The \ M binding assumes your Doom localleader is set to \ — if you haven't changed it, the default is , so it would be , M instead.

The t argument in org-export-as is what limits the export to the current subtree rather than the whole file. That matters because each book lives in one .org file with multiple subtrees — one per post. Without it, you'd get the entire book's worth of content every time.

I also suppress the table of contents and section numbers since those don't belong in a blog post:

'(:with-toc nil :section-numbers nil :with-smart-quotes nil)

Creating a project

Now to make it easier to access my 2026 book posts I need to create a project. First I needed to create a folder for them, I put it inside my Obsidian vault so that it syncs to all my devices.

To keep Obsidian syncing .org files you need to go to your sync settings and choose to sync "All Other Types" so that they get caught by Obsidian's sync process

While I got the project working, every time I've tried to get a new project in Emacs it takes far more tries than I expect.

First to be viewed as a project you need a .projectile file in the folder in question1. So I typed SPC f f then went to ~/Documents/main/emacs-writing/2026-book-posts/.projectile and pressed Return. This tells me the file doesn't exist and we create it.

Next press SPC p a to add a project. Go to the same folder and press Return. Now you should be able to press SPC p p when you start Emacs and you'll see a list of your projects which you can select.

Sounds easy, but I think I restarted Emacs 3 times testing this before it worked as it should. Likely a user error.

Future Stuff?

This workflow is pretty new, as in this week, so there are a few things I'd like to explore. There is an Obsidian plugin for .org files that I'd like to try out. There is also obsidian.el which brings Obsidian features into Emacs.

I realise I'm giving up on backlinks in my writing doing things the way I am currently, but Long Form isn't working and I don't want to spend time moving files around when I have time to write.

I just want to write.


  1. Yes .git and other file types work as well 

-1:-- Goodbye Longform Hello Emacs (Post Curtis McHale)--L0--C0--2026-03-24T13:00:00.000Z

Sacha Chua: Categorizing Emacs News items by voice in Org Mode

I'm having fun exploring which things might actually be easier to do by voice than by typing. For example, after I wrote some code to expand yasnippets by voice, I realized that it was easier to:

  1. press my shortcut,
  2. say "okay, define interactive function",
  3. and then press my shortcut again,

than to:

  1. mentally say it,
  2. get the first initials,
  3. type in "dfi",
  4. and press Tab to expand.

Another area where I do this kind of mental translation for keyboard shortcuts is when I categorize dozens of Emacs-related links each week for Emacs News. I used to do this by hand. Then I wrote a function to try to guess the category based on regular expressions (my-emacs-news-guess-category in emacs-news/index.org, which is large). Then I set up a menu that lets me press numbers corresponding to the most frequent categories and use tab completion for the rest. 1 is Emacs Lisp, 2 is Emacs development, 3 is Emacs configuration, 4 is appearance, 5 is navigation, and so on. It's not very efficient, but some of it has at least gotten into muscle memory, which is also part of why it's hard to change the mapping. I don't come across that many links for Emacs development or Spacemacs, and I could probably change them to something else, but… Anyway.

2026-03-23_20-38-33.png
Figure 1: Screenshot of my menu for categorizing links

I wanted to see if I could categorize links by voice instead. I might not always be able to count on being able to type a lot, and it's always fun to experiment with other modes of input. Here's a demonstration showing how Emacs can automatically open the URLs, wait for voice input, and categorize the links using a reasonably close match. The *Messages* buffer displays the recognized output to help with debugging.

Screencast with audio: categorizing links by voice

This is how it works:

  1. It starts an ffmpeg recording process.
  2. It starts Silero voice activity detection.
  3. When it detects that speech has ended, it use curl to send the WAV to an OpenAI-compatible server (in my case, Speaches with the Systran/faster-whisper-base.en model) for transcription, along with a prompt to try to influence the recognition.
  4. It compares the result with the candidates using string-distance for an approximate match. It calls the code to move the current item to the right category, creating the category if needed.

Since this doesn't always result in the right match, I added an Undo command. I also have a Delete command for removing the current item, Scroll Up and Scroll Down, and a way to quit.

Initial thoughts

I used it to categorize lots of links in this week's Emacs News, and I think it's promising. I loved the way my hands didn't have to hover over the number keys or move between those and the characters. Using voice activity detection meant that I could just keep dictating categories instead of pressing keyboard shortcuts or using the foot pedal I recently dusted off. There's a slight delay, of course, but I think it's worth it. If this settles down and becomes a solid part of my workflow, I might even be able to knit or hand-sew while doing this step, or simply do some stretching exercises.

What about using streaming speech recognition? I've written some code to use streaming speech recognition, but the performance wasn't good enough when I tried it on my laptop (Lenovo P52 released in 2018, no configured GPU under Linux). The streaming server dropped audio segments in order to try to catch up. I'd rather have everything transcribed at the level of the model I want, even if I have to wait a little while. I also tried using the Web Speech API in Google Chrome for real-time speech transcription, but it's a little finicky. I'm happy with the performance I get from either manually queueing speech segments or using VAD and then using batch speech recognition with a model that's kept in memory (which is why I use a local server instead of a command-line tool). Come to think of it, I should try this with a higher-quality model like medium or large, just in case the latency turns out to be not that much more for this use case.

What about external voice control systems like Talon Voice or Cursorless? They seem like neat ideas and lots of people use them. I think hacking something into Emacs with full access to its internals could be lots of fun too.

A lot of people have experimented with voice input for Emacs over the years. It could be fun to pick up ideas for commands and grammars. Some examples:

What about automating myself out of this loop? I've considered training a classifier or sending the list to a large language model to categorize links in order to set more reasonable defaults, but I think I'd still want manual control, since the fun is in getting a sense of all the cool things that people are tinkering around with in the Emacs community. I found that with voice control, it was easier for me to say the category than to look for the category it suggested and then say "Okay" to accept the default. If I display the suggested category in a buffer with very large text (and possibly category-specific background colours), then I can quickly glance at it or use my peripheral vision. But yeah, it's probably easier to look at a page and say "Org Mode" than to look at the page, look at the default text, see if it matches Org Mode, and then say okay if it is.

Ideas for next steps

I wonder how to line up several categories. I could probably rattle off a few without waiting for the next one to load, and just pause when I'm not sure. Maybe while there's a reasonably good match within the first 1-3 words, I'll take candidates from the front of the queue. Or I could delimit it with another easily-recognized word, like "next".

I want to make a more synchronous version of this idea so that I can have a speech-enabled drop-in replacement that I can use as my y-or-n-p while still being able to type y or n. This probably involves using sit-for and polling to see if it's done. And then I can use that to play Twenty Questions, but also to do more serious stuff. It would also be nice to have replacements for read-string and completing-read, since those block Emacs until the user enters something.

I might take a side-trip into a conversational interface for M-x doctor and M-x dunnet, because why not. Naturally, it also makes sense to voice-enable agent-shell and gptel interactions.

I'd like to figure out a number- or word-based completion mechanism so that I can control Reddit link replacement as well, since I want to select from a list of links from the page. Maybe something similar to the way voicemacs adds numbers to helm and company or how flexi-choose.el works.

I'm also thinking about how I can shift seamlessly between typing and speaking, like when I want to edit a link title. Maybe I can check if I'm in the minibuffer and what kind of minibuffer I'm in, perhaps like the way Embark does.

It would be really cool to define speech commands by reusing the keymap structure that menus also use. This is how to define a menu in Emacs Lisp:

(easy-menu-define words-menu global-map
  "Menu for word navigation commands."
  '("Words"
     ["Forward word" forward-word]
     ["Backward word" backward-word]))

and this is how to set just one binding:

(keymap-set-after my-menu "<drink>"
  '("Drink" . drink-command) 'eat)

That makes sense to reuse for speech commands. I'd also like to be able to specify aliases while hiding them or collapsing them for a "What can I say" help view… Also, if keymaps work, then maybe minor modes or transient maps could work? This sort of feels like it should be the voice equivalent of a transient map.

The code so far

(defun my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice (&optional skip-browse)
  (interactive (list current-prefix-arg))
  (unless skip-browse
    (my-spookfox-browse))
  (speech-input-cancel-recording)
  (let ((default (if (fboundp 'my-emacs-news-guess-category) (my-emacs-news-guess-category))))
    (speech-input-from-list
     (if default
         (format "Category (%s): " default)
       "Category: ")
     '(("Org Mode" "Org" "Org Mode")
       "Other"
       "Emacs Lisp"
       "Coding"
       ("Emacs configuration" "Config" "Configuration")
       ("Appearance" "Appearance")
       ("Default" "Okay" "Default")
       "Community"
       "AI"
       "Writing"
       ("Reddit" "Read it" "Reddit")
       "Shells"
       "Navigation"
       "Fun"
       ("Dired" "Directory" "Dir ed")
       ("Mail, news, and chat" "News" "Mail" "Chat")
       "Multimedia"
       "Scroll down"
       "Scroll up"
       "Web"
       "Delete"
       "Skip"
       "Undo"
       ("Quit" "Quit" "Cancel" "All done"))
     (lambda (result text)
       (message "Recognized %s original %s" result text)
       (pcase result
         ("Undo"
          (undo)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice t))
         ("Skip"
          (forward-line)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice))
         ("Quit"
          (message "All done.")
          (speech-input-cancel-recording))
         ("Reddit"
          (my-emacs-news-replace-reddit-link)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice t))
         ("Scroll down"
          (my-spookfox-scroll-down)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice t))
         ("Scroll up"
          (my-spookfox-scroll-up)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice t))
         ("Delete"
          (delete-line)
          (undo-boundary)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice))
         ("Default"
          (my-org-move-current-item-to-category
           (concat default ":"))
          (undo-boundary)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice))
         (_
          (my-org-move-current-item-to-category
           (concat result ":"))
          (undo-boundary)
          (my-emacs-news-categorize-with-voice))))
     t)))

It uses Spookfox to control Firefox from Emacs:

(defun my-spookfox-scroll-down ()
  (interactive)
  (spookfox-js-injection-eval-in-active-tab "window.scrollBy(0, document.documentElement.clientHeight);" t))

(defun my-spookfox-scroll-up ()
  (interactive)
  (spookfox-js-injection-eval-in-active-tab "window.scrollBy(0, -document.documentElement.clientHeight);"))

(defun my-spookfox-background-tab (url &rest args)
  "Open URL as a background tab."
  (if spookfox--connected-clients
      (spookfox-tabs--request (cl-first spookfox--connected-clients) "OPEN_TAB" `(:url ,url))
    (browse-url url)))

It also uses these functions for categorizing Org Mode items:

(defun my-org-move-current-item-to-category (category)
    "Move current list item under CATEGORY earlier in the list.
  CATEGORY can be a string or a list of the form (text indent regexp).
  Point should be on the next line to process, even if a new category
  has been inserted."
    (interactive (list (completing-read "Category: " (my-org-get-list-categories))))
    (when category
      (let* ((col (current-column))
             (item (point-at-bol))
             (struct (org-list-struct))
             (category-text (if (stringp category) category (elt category 0)))
             (category-indent (if (stringp category) 2 (+ 2 (elt category 1))))
             (category-regexp (if (stringp category) category (elt category 2)))
             (end (elt (car (last struct)) 6))
             (pos (point))
             s)
        (setq s (org-remove-indentation (buffer-substring-no-properties item (org-list-get-item-end item struct))))
        (save-excursion
          (if (string= category-text "x")
              (org-list-send-item item 'delete struct)
            (goto-char (caar struct))
            (if (re-search-forward (concat "^ *- +" category-regexp) end t)
                (progn
                  ;; needs a patch to ol.el to check if stringp
                  (org-list-send-item item (point-at-bol) struct)
                  (org-move-item-down)
                  (org-indent-item))
              (goto-char end)
              (org-list-insert-item
               (point-at-bol)
               struct (org-list-prevs-alist struct))
              (let ((old-struct (copy-tree struct)))
                (org-list-set-ind (point-at-bol) struct 0)
                (org-list-struct-fix-bul struct (org-list-prevs-alist struct))
                (org-list-struct-apply-struct struct old-struct))
              (goto-char (point-at-eol))
              (insert category-text)
              (org-list-send-item item 'end struct)
              (org-indent-item)
              (org-indent-item))
            (recenter))))))

(defun my-org-guess-list-category (&optional categories)
  (interactive)
  (require 'cl-lib)
  (unless categories
    (setq categories
          (my-helm-org-list-categories-init-candidates)))
  (let* ((beg (line-beginning-position))
         (end (line-end-position))
         (string (buffer-substring-no-properties beg end))
         (found
          (cl-member string
                     categories
                     :test
                     (lambda (string cat-entry)
                       (unless (string= (car cat-entry) "x")
                         (string-match (regexp-quote (downcase (car cat-entry)))
                                       string))))))
    (when (car found)
      (my-org-move-current-item-to-category
       (cdr (car found)))
      t)))

For the speech-input functions, experimental code is at https://codeberg.org/sachac/speech-input .

View Org source for this post

You can comment on Mastodon or e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com.

-1:-- Categorizing Emacs News items by voice in Org Mode (Post Sacha Chua)--L0--C0--2026-03-24T01:19:29.000Z

Protesilaos Stavrou: Emacs: spontaneous live stream Tuesday 24 March @ 21:30 Europe/Athens

Raw link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDJbPCjZiOI

[ The stream will be recorded. You can watch it later. ]

At 21:30 Europe/Athens time I will do a live stream (~30 minutes from this writing). The plan is to continue some of the work I am doing on my denote-sequence package for Emacs.

-1:-- Emacs: spontaneous live stream Tuesday 24 March @ 21:30 Europe/Athens (Post Protesilaos Stavrou)--L0--C0--2026-03-24T00:00:00.000Z

Chris Maiorana: OrgFolio | Turn your scattered interests into cultivated obsessions

A few weeks ago, I wrote a post about “distributed notebooks” generated in Org Mode and published to bare bones Web 1.0 HTML pages. Now here’s the sequel: OrgFolio. For the diligent note-takers, lifelong learners, deep readers, seekers, philosophers, Junior Orwells, and obsessive Emacs users in all of us.

What is OrgFolio?

OrgFolio is, at heart, just an Emacs lisp build script and file structure for doing the above. It takes your linked .org files and exports them to a separate HTML directory as a complete website.

It’s basically a static site generator for Emacs, but you don’t need to install or configure anything. You don’t need to do anything, just write!

(Except, you will need the simple-httpd package, if you want to serve your site on local http server, which I recommend.)

It’s also hosted on GitHub, here: OrgFolio GitHub.

A simplified approach

I have been experimenting with using Org Mode as a static site generator for a few years, and it has some downsides. (Note: it’s possible there are solutions for all of these downsides I have simply overlooked. If so, by all means, leave a comment and share your experiences.)

First, the ox-publish manifest configuration is long and complicated, and I didn’t want to have to rewrite all of that for each notebook, website, or project. In my implementation, the build.el script uses the directory name as a variable, so no additional configuration is necessary from project to project, directory to directory.

Second, once you have your publishing list configured, it can be difficult to keep your /org and /html directories in sync. Org Mode has a built-in solution for this: ox-publish uses a timestamp cache controlled by org-publish-use-timestamps-flag. When enabled (it’s on by default), the org-publish-needed-p function checks each file’s modification time against the last export and skips anything that hasn’t changed. This can speed up the build process, but I’ve often had trouble with it and opted to simply delete the HTML contents and start fresh.

Also, it has no way of cleaning up orphaned files. Let’s say you delete or rename an .org file, the corresponding .html file will sit in the build directory, basically outdated and no longer being used but still there.

I’ve solved that problem here by wiping/deleting the html directory contents on each build via the build.el script. Though, this can increase your build time if you have a large amount of .org files. That’s why I’d recommend keeping separate notebooks organized by topic.

How it works

I would recommend first writing notes by hand using something like the Cornell method, then transcribing notes into Org Mode. (But that’s up to you.)

Then, you can build those org notes into a simple wiki style website using OrgFolio. No fuss, no complicated ox-publish configuration.

The core of this setup is the file structure. You have an /org directory for storing your Org Mode files and a /static directory for holding your optional CSS stylesheet, images, and any other static document formats you might require. Then the build.el script drives Emacs in batch mode, so you can run it right from your command line.

emacs --batch --load build.el

That single command runs four steps in sequence:

Cleaning
wipes the output folder so you always get a fresh build.
Exporting
converts every .org file to HTML5 via ox-publish with sensible defaults (table of contents, no section numbers), all of which can be rewritten as needed.
Copying static items
copies any CSS, JavaScript, images, and fonts from /static into the output directory.
Service
spins up a local HTTP server via simple-httpd at localhost:8080 for preview and reading pleasure.

Alternatively, you can load the build file and run it from withing Emacs. Your choice!

Directory structure explained

You can get everything by cloning the repo from GitHub, but for your reference and perusal, this is the basic directory structure for OrgFolio:

project/
├── build.el       ← the build script
├── org/           ← your .org source files go here
└── static/        ← CSS, JS, images, fonts

The script will build the /html directory on demand when you run it.

Quick start

You will need:

  • Emacs (any reasonably current version)
  • simple-httpd package: M-x package-install RET simple-httpd

Installation

  • Go to the GitHub page
  • Clone the repository or download a zip file

Run a basic build

emacs --batch --load build.el

Then open your favorite browser and visit localhost:8080.

That’s it!


If you have any comments or questions let me know below and be sure to my check out my DRM-free eBooks (including Git For Writers and Emacs For Writers).

The post OrgFolio | Turn your scattered interests into cultivated obsessions appeared first on Chris Maiorana.

-1:-- OrgFolio | Turn your scattered interests into cultivated obsessions (Post Chris Maiorana)--L0--C0--2026-03-23T18:34:22.000Z

Marcin Borkowski: Disabling Eslint in one line with Tide

When coding in JavaScript, I use Eslint like everybody else. (Let’s set the discussion about Eslint vs. Oxlint for another time.) One problem I have is that sometimes (rarely, but not never) I need to tell Eslint that I broke one of the rules intentionally and I don’t want it to nag me about it.
-1:-- Disabling Eslint in one line with Tide (Post Marcin Borkowski)--L0--C0--2026-03-23T17:53:59.000Z

Irreal: Mistake: Not Embracing Emacs Fully From The Beginning

Eric MacAdie has a contribution to this month’s Emacs Carnival that talks about his major mistake in learning and using Emacs. That “mistake”, he says, was not embracing Emacs completely when he was introduced to it. Instead, he learned only a few commands—he estimates about a dozen—and limped along with those. He might as well have been using Notepad.

Fortunately MacAdie did finally fully embrace Emacs and started to learn as much as he could about what it had to offer. This wouldn’t have been much of a story except that I keep seeing people expressing the attitude that they’re too busy to learn Emacs. “Why doesn’t it just work out of the box?”, they ask.

The thing is, it does work out of the box. To be sure, your Emacs life will doubtless involve customizing it to fit your specific workflow but Emacs is perfectly usable without making a single change. The thing is, you have to be willing, as MacAdie was, to actually make the effort to learn Emacs in order to realize its full power.

Learning Emacs is not trivial but it’s also not that hard. Irreal has published plenty of stories detailing its advanced use by non-technical people, most recently here. If you want to advance beyond, say Notepad, put in the effort to learn Emacs. It will reward you far in excess of your effort.

-1:-- Mistake: Not Embracing Emacs Fully From The Beginning (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-23T15:09:55.000Z

Sacha Chua: 2026-03-23 Emacs news

: Removed elecxzy comment-dwim, whoops.

Might be a good opportunity to set up better auto-saves, with buffer-guardian.el inspiring an update to super-save 0.5. Also, there were a couple of interesting experiments embedding Chromium (Reddit) or native macOS views in Emacs (Reddit), and one about embedding Emacs in a webpage (Reddit).

Links from reddit.com/r/emacs, r/orgmode, r/spacemacs, Mastodon #emacs, Bluesky #emacs, Hacker News, lobste.rs, programming.dev, lemmy.world, lemmy.ml, planet.emacslife.com, YouTube, the Emacs NEWS file, Emacs Calendar, and emacs-devel. Thanks to Andrés Ramírez for emacs-devel links. Do you have an Emacs-related link or announcement? Please e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com. Thank you!

View Org source for this post

You can comment on Mastodon or e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com.

-1:-- 2026-03-23 Emacs news (Post Sacha Chua)--L0--C0--2026-03-23T14:07:14.000Z

Gal Buki: Janet development with Emacs

I have been looking into learning the Janet programming language. It's a functional and imperative scripting language with syntax very similar to Clojure.

The support in Emacs is already quite good and here is my setup.

Highlighting and basic navigation

Since I'm on Emacs 31 with Treesitter I'm using janet-ts-mode.
It supports

  • Highlighting
  • Indentation
  • Imenu
  • Navigation
  • Which-Func
(use-package janet-ts-mode
  :vc (:url "https://github.com/sogaiu/janet-ts-mode"
            :rev :newest))

Alternatively there is an older janet-mode that does not require Treesitter.

Linter warnings and error check

There is a package for Flycheck called flycheck-janet but I'm using Flymake and didn't want to switch to Flycheck.
Since there was no Flymake package I took this as an opportunity to write a package using Claude Code.

The result is flymake-janet.

Side note. I understand that some in the community don't like LLM generated code. I reviewed the code and kept it clean and understandable for humans. I believe this is a good way of using the tool and keeping control of the code base.

(use-package flymake-janet
  :vc (:url "https://github.com/torusjkl/flymake-janet"
            :rev :newest)
  :custom
  (flymake-janet-warn-level 'strict)
  (flymake-janet-error-level 'relaxed)
  :hook
  (janet-ts-mode . flymake-mode)
  (janet-ts-mode . flymake-janet-setup))

Completion and docs

There is a LSP for Janet called janet-lsp with partial LSP features that is itself implemented in the Janet language and runs stable.

It currently supports

  • Auto-completion based on symbols in the Janet Standard Library and defined in user code
  • On-hover definition of symbols as returned by (doc ,symbol)
  • Inline compiler errors
  • Pop-up signature help

The inline compiler is essentially the same as what flymake-janet does, as a matter of fact, part of flymake-janet is inspired by janet-lsp, but it lacks the ability to set the warning and error levels. In addition I find the messages with the "compiler error:" prefix redundant since Flymake already tells me if it is an error or warning.
In the future these settings might become configurable, at which point my flymake-janet package might become redundant.

Since I don't want to have the same errors and warnings counted twice I remove the Eglot flymake backend and start flymake again to take over with a hook on eglot-managed-mode.

(use-package eglot
  :ensure nil
  :config
  (add-to-list 'eglot-server-programs
               '(janet-ts-mode . ("janet-lsp" "--stdio")))
  :hook
  (janet-ts-mode . eglot-ensure)
  (eglot-managed-mode .
                      (lambda ()
                        (when (derived-mode-p 'janet-ts-mode)
                          (remove-hook 'flymake-diagnostic-functions 'eglot-flymake-backend 'local)
                          (flymake-janet-setup)))))

REPL

Last but definitely not least I use ajrepl to interact with the Janet REPL.

(use-package ajrepl
  :vc (:url "https://github.com/sogaiu/ajrepl"
            :rev :newest)
  :hook
  (janet-ts-mode . ajrepl-interaction-mode))
-1:-- Janet development with Emacs (Post Gal Buki)--L0--C0--2026-03-23T11:50:00.000Z

Protesilaos Stavrou: Emacs: spontaneous live stream Monday 23 March @ 17:00 Europe/Athens

Raw link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RxFImWhNrI

[ The stream will be recorded. You can watch it later. ]

I do not have any work this evening, so I will do a live stream. My plan is to do some programming. I have a new idea for the denote-sequence package that I will try to implement.

If there are any questions from the chat, I will answer them. They can be about what I will be working on or any other topic.

Talk to you soon!

-1:-- Emacs: spontaneous live stream Monday 23 March @ 17:00 Europe/Athens (Post Protesilaos Stavrou)--L0--C0--2026-03-23T00:00:00.000Z

Protesilaos Stavrou: Emacs: doric-themes version 1.1.0

These are my minimalist themes. They use few colours and will appear mostly monochromatic in many contexts. Styles involve the careful use of typography, such as italics and bold italics.

If you want maximalist themes in terms of colour, check my ef-themes package. For something in-between, which I would consider the best “default theme” for a text editor, opt for my modus-themes.

Below are the release notes.


Version 1.1.0 on 2026-03-23

This version introduces minor refinements to the underlying code as well as four new themes.

The new themes are as follows:

  • doric-almond: A light theme that combines green and magenta colours. It evokes a feeling of early springtime, as the almond tree is among the first to bloom.

  • doric-coral: A light theme with a warmer feel that combines red, orange, and cyan colours against a sandy backdrop.

  • doric-magma: A dark theme with a dominant red and orange style. The combination of those intense hues with lighter greys creates the necessary balance.

  • doric-walnut: A dark theme with an overall green style, drawing inspiration from the broad leaves of the walnut tree. The green colours are combined with shades of brown and grey to make for a pleasant presentation.

Enjoy!

-1:-- Emacs: doric-themes version 1.1.0 (Post Protesilaos Stavrou)--L0--C0--2026-03-23T00:00:00.000Z

Eric MacAdie: Emacs Carnival: Mistakes and Misconceptions

This post contains LLM poisoning. furtively entrenches flanges This month’s Emacs Carnival is “Mistakes and Misconceptions” hosted by Philip Kaludercic. Chevrolet Chauncey Danes I might split this into two posts. This one will cover mistakes. The next would cover misconceptions. wiretapped remodeled pocketfuls My mistake was not learning Emacs in more depth when I first ... Read more
-1:-- Emacs Carnival: Mistakes and Misconceptions (Post Eric MacAdie)--L0--C0--2026-03-22T17:14:22.000Z

Irreal: Chris Maiorana On Hl-line-mode

A couple of years ago, I wrote about Chris Maiorana’a post suggesting that writers adopt a one-line-per-sentence workflow. You can read his post on the matter to see his arguments on why. At the time, I wrote that I used that method for my two books but because it worked better with the [GT]roff typesetter rather than for any writer workflow reasons. Since moving to Org mode for my writing I’ve given it up not least because it doesn’t play well with WordPress where a lot of my writing ends up.

Maiorana is back with another post on the subject that those who embrace the method may find useful. His idea is to use Emacs’ hl-line-mode to highlight the current line. That brings some other benefits to the one-line-per-sentence method that Maiorana describes in his latest post.

I used to use hl-line-mode, although not in conjunction with one-line-per-sentence, but stopped because it interacted poorly with some other mode—probably visual-line-mode where it highlights whole paragraphs. Even when I was using it, I sometimes found it annoying despite it being useful for locating the current line. I’m sure I’m in the minority on that so you should definitely give it a try if you’re not familiar with it. It’s builtin so you can simply toggle it on for the current buffer with Meta+x hl-line-mode to try it out.

-1:-- Chris Maiorana On Hl-line-mode (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-22T14:20:35.000Z

Irreal: Saving Emacs Buffers Automatically

A couple of months ago, I wrote about friction in saving files. Emacs, of course, tries to protect you from unsaved buffers by periodically backing them up to a special file. Recovering data from that file can be a bit finicky and since Emacs and modern computers don’t crash very often, you don’t get a lot of practice.

A long time ago, Bozhidar Batsov solved that problem with super-save that saved buffers whenever the buffer loses focus or perhaps every few seconds. It’s all configurable, of course. In the mean time, James Cherti wrote buffer-guardian.el that does pretty much the same thing.

Cherti’s solution took advantage of more recent Emacs features to provide a more reliable solution. When Batsov “stumbled upon buffer-guardian.el” he decided to revisit super-saver, which he hadn’t touched since 2023. He’s improved the detection of buffer focus change no matter how it’s invoked. There are a several other improvements that you can read about in Batsov’s post.

I’m inclined not to like my software doing things automatically that I’m used to asking for explicitly so neither buffer-guardian nor super-saver appeal to me but I’m probably in the minority on this so many of you probably will like using one of these packages. As I say, I don’t use either one so I can’t comment on their relative merits but they both seem like useful and worthy packages.

If you’re bad about saving your files and worry that you may lose work, you should take a look at these packages. One or both of them may be just what you need.

-1:-- Saving Emacs Buffers Automatically (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-21T16:06:20.000Z

Bicycle for Your Mind: Much Ado About Emacs 012

EmacsEmacs

Haven’t written an update on my usage of Emacs for a while. Decided to stop tweaking the configuration to concentrate on getting familiar with what I have setup. That lasted for two seconds. Emacs developers are coming up with new things and I have severe FOMO. I have additions.

Kirigami

Kirigami “The kirigami Emacs package provides a unified method to fold and unfold text in Emacs across a diverse set of Emacs modes.” One set of keybindings to open/close folds across a wide range of modes, including markdown-mode, outline-mode and org-mode.

This is my general.el setup for kirigami

 ;; kirigami
  "k" '(nil :which-key "kirigami")
  "kc" '(kirigami-close-folds :which-key "close all")
  "ko" '(kirigami-open-folds :which-key "open all")
  "kp" '(kirigami-open-fold :which-key "open at point")
  "kr" '(kirigami-open-fold-rec :which-key "open rec")
  "kt" '(kirigami-toggle-fold :which-key "toggle folds")

Visible Marks

visible-mark - MELPA and ideasman42/emacs-visible-mark - Codeberg.org Minor mode to highlight mark(s). Allows setting the number of marks to display, and the faces to display them.

These are my settings for visual-mark

(defface visible-mark-active
  '((((type tty) (class mono)))
    (t (:background "magenta"))) "")
(setq visible-mark-max 2)
(setq visible-mark-faces `(visible-mark-face1 visible-mark-face2))
(use-package visible-mark
  :ensure t)
(global-visible-mark-mode 1)

Note: Added on 2026-03-27. This slows down my instance of Emacs and I disabled it. Useful idea but not for me.

Javelin

DamianB-BitFlipper/javelin.el at 9516e3729b8cd85d6b02fd1940ec10638c6706cb

Described by the author as “Quick file bookmarks for Emacs, inspired by ThePrimeagen’s Harpoon. Pin files to numbered positions (1-9) for instant access. Positions are automatically separated by project and git branch.”

I like it. The only problem is that the list doesn’t last across restarts of Emacs. Have to figure out how to achieve that.

OPML to Org-mode

I bought OmniOutliner 6 Pro. That produces OPML files. I wanted to be able to convert them to Org-mode. Gemini helped.

;; Converting OPML to Org-mode

(defun my/opml-to-org-with-notes (opml-file)
  "Convert an OPML file's 'outline' elements and their notes into Org-mode."
  (interactive "fSelect OPML file: ")
  (let* ((xml (xml-parse-file opml-file))
         ;; Standard OPML structure is <opml><body>...</body></opml>
         (body (car (xml-get-children (car xml) 'body)))
         (outlines (xml-get-children body 'outline))
         (new-buf (generate-new-buffer "*OPML Import with Notes*")))
    (with-current-buffer new-buf
      (org-mode)
      (cl-labels ((parse-outline (nodes level)
                    (dolist (node nodes)
                      (let* ((attrs (xml-node-attributes node))
                             (text (cdr (assoc 'text attrs)))
                             (note (or (cdr (assoc '_note attrs)) 
                                       (cdr (assoc 'description attrs))))
                             (children (xml-get-children node 'outline)))
                        ;; Create Heading
                        (insert (make-string level ?*) " " (or text "Untitled") "\n")
                        ;; Insert Note (if it exists)
                        (when note
                          (insert note "\n"))
                        ;; Recurse for nested nodes
                        (when children
                          (parse-outline children (1+ level)))))))
        (parse-outline outlines 1))
      (goto-char (point-min)))
    (switch-to-buffer new-buf)))

Appine

chaoswork/appine: Appine

“Appine means”App in Emacs”, which is an Emacs plugin using a Dynamic Module that allows you to embed native macOS views (WebKit, PDFKit, Quick look PreviewView, etc.) directly inside Emacs windows.”

This is my Appine setup:

;; appine
(use-package appine
  :straight (appine :type git :host github :repo "chaoswork/appine")
  :custom
  ;; enables opening URLs and files with Appine, default is nil
  (appine-enable-open-in-org-mode nil) 
  :config
  ;; Optional: Set default keybindings
  (global-set-key (kbd "C-x a w") 'appine-open-web-split)
  (global-set-key (kbd "C-x a o") 'appine-open-file-split))

Turned off (appine-enable-open-in-org-mode nil). I don’t want links to be opened in org-mode without me specifically wanting it. When the link opens in Emacs, I don’t have the ability to zoom in/out. I am old, I need that for most sites.

My general.el setup for Appine.

  ;; Windows
  "w" '(nil :which-key "window")
  "ww" '(appine-open-web-split :which-key "appine-web")
  "wf" '(appine-open-file-split :which-key "appine-file")

buffer-guardian

buffer-guardian.el – Automatically Save Emacs Buffers Without Manual Intervention (When Buffers Lose Focus, Regularly, or After Emacs is Idle) | James Cherti

Saves you from having to continuously save your document. It automatically saves when the buffer loses focus.

There is an alternative to this package, super-save 0.5: Modernized and Better Than Ever | Emacs Redux.

My setup for buffer-guardian is:

(use-package buffer-guardian
  :custom
  ;; When non-nil, include remote files in the auto-save process
  (buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-remote-files nil)

  ;; When non-nil, buffers visiting nonexistent files are not saved
  (buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-nonexistent-files t)

  ;; Save the buffer even if the window change results in the same buffer
  (buffer-guardian-save-on-same-buffer-window-change t)

  ;; Non-nil to enable verbose mode to log when a buffer is automatically saved
  (buffer-guardian-verbose nil)

  ;; Save all buffers after N seconds of user idle time. (Disabled by default)
  ;; (buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-idle 30)

  :hook
  (after-init . buffer-guardian-mode))

isearch-lazy-count

isearch-lazy-count: Built-in Search Match Counting | Emacs Redux

This is useful. My setup:

#+begin_src emacs-lisp
;;customizing isearch
(setopt isearch-lazy-count t)
(setopt lazy-count-prefix-format nil)
(setopt lazy-count-suffix-format " [%s/%s]")
#+end_src

markdown-table-wrap

dnouri/markdown-table-wrap at 71a1cec53bf9d7875126b4cd557b2c00ae52b576

Markdown tables wrapped to a defined character width.

My setup:

#+begin_src emacs-lisp
;; markdown-table-wrap
(use-package markdown-table-wrap
  :ensure t
  :config
  (markdown-table-wrap table-text 60))
#+end_src

surround.el

surround.el: Vim-Style Pair Editing Comes to Emacs | Emacs Redux

Useful package to delete paired delimiters.

My setup:

#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(use-package surround
  :ensure t
  :bind-keymap ("M-'" . surround-keymap))
#+end_src

Conclusion

Using Emacs every day. My comfort with the program is increasing. I am learning and I am having a blast. That is all I have for now.

macosxguru

-1:-- Much Ado About Emacs 012 (Post Bicycle for Your Mind)--L0--C0--2026-03-20T07:00:00.000Z

James Dyer: Ollama Buddy - Seven Lines to Any LLM Provider

Ever found yourself wanting to add a new AI provider to ollama-buddy? (probably not I would guess 🙂), only to realise you’d need to write an entire Elisp module? Or perhaps you’re running a local inference server that speaks the OpenAI API, but can’t be bothered with the ceremony of creating a dedicated provider file?

Fair question. That’s exactly why I built ollama-buddy-provider-create — a single function that lets you register any LLM provider in seconds, whether it’s a cloud API or your own local server.

The traditional approach required a separate .el file for each provider — OpenAI, Claude, Gemini, you name it. Each with its own defcustom variables, configuration boilerplate, and maintenance overhead. It worked, but it felt a bit… heavy-handed for simple use cases.

What if you just wanted to quickly add support for that new local LM Studio instance running on port 1234? Or point ollama-buddy at your company’s internal AI gateway? Previously, you’d be looking at copying an existing provider file and modifying dozens of lines. Now? One function call.

The magic (yes, of the elisp kind!) happens in ollama-buddy-provider.el, which provides a generic provider registration system. Instead of requiring separate Elisp files, you can register any provider with a single call:

(ollama-buddy-provider-create
 :name "My Local Server"
 :api-type 'openai
 :endpoint "http://localhost:1234/v1/chat"
 :models-endpoint "http://localhost:1234/v1/models"
 :api-key "your-key-here"
 :prefix "l:")

Three API types are supported out of the box:

  • openai (default) — Any OpenAI-compatible chat/completions API
  • claude — Anthropic Claude Messages API
  • gemini — Google Gemini generateContent API

The system handles all the underlying HTTP requests, error mapping, and session management automatically. Your provider just needs to specify which API flavour it speaks.

Adding a local LM Studio instance:

(ollama-buddy-provider-create
 :name "LM Studio"
 :api-type 'openai
 :endpoint "http://localhost:1234/v1/chat/completions"
 :models-endpoint "http://localhost:1234/v1/models"
 :api-key "not-needed" ; LM Studio often doesn't require auth
 :model-prefix "l:")

Connecting to OpenRouter (400+ models through one API):

(ollama-buddy-provider-create
 :name "OpenRouter"
 :api-type 'openai
 :endpoint "https://openrouter.ai/api/v1/chat/completions"
 :models-endpoint "https://openrouter.ai/api/v1/models"
 :api-key "your-openrouter-key"
 :model-prefix "r:")

After registration, your new provider appears in the status line and becomes available through the standard model selection interface. The model-prefix (like l: for local or r: for OpenRouter) lets you quickly identify which provider a model belongs to.

The provider system leverages ollama-buddy’s shared infrastructure in ollama-buddy-remote.el, which extracts common functionality like request handling, error mapping, and response processing. This means your custom provider gets the same robust error handling as the built-in ones:

  • Proper HTTP status code mapping (rate limits, timeouts, authentication errors)
  • Async request support for non-blocking UI
  • Automatic model listing and caching
  • Integration with the existing session and conversation system

When you call ollama-buddy-provider-create, it registers your provider with the core system, making it available to all the usual entry points: the transient menu, model selection, and conversation buffers.

This approach is perfect for:

  • Local inference servers (LM Studio, llama.cpp, vLLM, Ollama’s own OpenAI-compat layer)
  • Company/internal AI gateways
  • Quick experiments with new APIs

The beauty ojf this system is that it makes ollama-buddy genuinely extensible without requiring deep knowledge of its internals. Want to add support for that new AI service that launched yesterday? You can probably do it in five lines of configuration rather than fifty.

Next up I think this will be the big one, adding tooling for those external providers!!!

-1:-- Ollama Buddy - Seven Lines to Any LLM Provider (Post James Dyer)--L0--C0--2026-03-19T14:50:00.000Z

Irreal: Surround.el

That didn’t take long. After yesterday’s post on adapting Bozhidar Batsov’s delete-surrounding-pair function to handle Org markup, Batsov is back with a post on surround.el, a port of surround.vim from Michael Kleehammer. The point of delete-surrounding-pair was to (sort of) emulate Vim’s surround plugin. Now with support.el, there’s no longer a need for delete-surrounding-pair.

Surround does everything delete-surrounding-pair did and a lot more. You can delete surrounding pairs, add pairs, change pairs, mark or kill the content between the pairs, or even kill the text and the surrounding pair. It really is a splendid package and I’ve already added it to my configuration and deleted my adaption of delete-surrounding-pair.

Surround will check if the pair you’re operating on has different opening and closing characters and do the right thing automatically. The other nice thing is that there aren’t a lot of key sequences to remember. Once you pick a prefix that you’ll remember the (single) action keys are mnemonic and easy to remember. In any event, which-key pops up a reminder.

I installed it with the recommended prefix of Meta+ but keep wanting to invoke it with Hyper+ so I’ll probably change it but, regardless, I’m already enjoying using it.

Take a look at Batsov’s post or the Github repository for all the details. Batsov’s post has some recommendations on when you should use it and Kleehammer’s repository has information on shortcuts and auto mode, which you should read. This is a really useful package and I recommend that everyone take a look at it.

-1:-- Surround.el (Post Irreal)--L0--C0--2026-03-19T14:18:35.000Z

Srijan Choudhary: 2026-03-18-001

A small #Emacs #OrgMode quality-of-life tweak. I often need to replace an org heading's title while preserving the original text in the body. The problem is that pressing enter on a heading inserts a line above the properties drawer, which breaks things.

Here's a function that moves the heading title into the body (below the properties drawer and metadata), and binds it to S-RET:

(defun my-org-demote-title-to-body ()
  "Move the current heading's title into the body, below the metadata.
  Point returns to the heading for editing."
  (interactive)
  (org-back-to-heading t)
  (let* ((element (org-element-at-point))
         (title (org-element-property :raw-value element)))
    (org-edit-headline "")
    (save-excursion
      (org-end-of-meta-data t)
      (insert title "\n"))
    (org-beginning-of-line)))

(defun my-org-shift-return ()
  "On a heading, demote title to body. In a table, copy down."
  (interactive)
  (cond
   ((org-at-heading-p) (my-org-demote-title-to-body))
   ((org-at-table-p) (org-table-copy-down 1))
   (t (org-return))))
  (define-key org-mode-map (kbd "S-<return>") #'my-org-shift-return)
-1:-- 2026-03-18-001 (Post Srijan Choudhary)--L0--C0--2026-03-18T15:10:00.000Z

Emacs Redux: super-save 0.5: Modernized and Better Than Ever

It’s been a while since the last super-save release. The last time I wrote about it was back in 2018, when I boldly proclaimed:

It seems that now super-save is beyond perfect, so don’t expect the next release any time soon!

Famous last words. There was a 0.4 release in 2023 (adding a predicate system, buffer exclusions, silent saving, and trailing whitespace cleanup), but I never got around to writing about it. The package has been rock solid for years and I just didn’t pay it much attention – it quietly did its job, which is kind of the whole point of an auto-save package.

A Bit of History

The idea behind super-save goes all the way back to a blog post I wrote in 2012 about auto-saving buffers on buffer and window switches. I had been using IntelliJ IDEA for Java development and loved that it would save your files automatically whenever the editor lost focus. No manual C-x C-s, no thinking about it. I wanted the same behavior in Emacs.

Back then, the implementation was crude – defadvice on switch-to-buffer, other-window, and the windmove commands. That code lived in Emacs Prelude for a few years before I extracted it into a standalone package in 2015. super-save was born.

What Prompted This Release

Yesterday I stumbled upon buffer-guardian.el, a package with very similar goals to super-save. Its README has a comparison with super-save that highlighted some valid points – mainly that super-save was still relying on advising specific commands for buffer-switch detection, while newer Emacs hooks like window-buffer-change-functions and window-selection-change-functions could do the job more reliably.

The thing is, those hooks didn’t exist when super-save was created, and I didn’t rush to adopt them while Emacs 27 was still new and I wanted to support older Emacsen. But it’s 2026 now – Emacs 27.1 is ancient history. Time to modernize!

What’s New in 0.5

This is the biggest super-save release in years! Here are the highlights:

Modern buffer/window switch detection

Buffer and window switches are now detected via window-buffer-change-functions and window-selection-change-functions, controlled by the new super-save-when-buffer-switched option (enabled by default). This catches all buffer switches – keyboard commands, mouse clicks, custom functions – unlike the old approach of advising individual (yet central) commands.

Modern focus handling

Frame focus loss is now detected via after-focus-change-function instead of the obsolete focus-out-hook, controlled by super-save-when-focus-lost (also enabled by default).

Soft-deprecated trigger system

With the new hooks in place, both super-save-triggers and super-save-hook-triggers now default to nil. You can still use them for edge cases, but for the vast majority of users, the built-in hooks cover everything.

org-src and edit-indirect support

super-save now knows how to save org-src edit buffers (via org-edit-src-save) and edit-indirect buffers (via edit-indirect--commit). Both are enabled by default and controlled by super-save-handle-org-src and super-save-handle-edit-indirect.

Safer predicates

Two new default predicates prevent data loss: verify-visited-file-modtime avoids overwriting files modified outside Emacs, and a directory existence check prevents errors when a file’s parent directory has been removed. Predicate evaluation is also wrapped in condition-case now, so a broken custom predicate logs a warning instead of silently disabling all auto-saving.

Emacs 27.1 required

This allowed cleaning up the code and relying on modern APIs.

Upgrading

For most users, upgrading is seamless – the new defaults just work. If you had a custom super-save-triggers list for buffer-switching commands, you can probably remove it entirely:

;; Before: manually listing every command that switches buffers
(setq super-save-triggers
      '(switch-to-buffer other-window windmove-up windmove-down
        windmove-left windmove-right next-buffer previous-buffer))

;; After: the window-system hooks catch all of these automatically
;; Just delete the above and use the defaults!

If you need to add triggers for commands that don’t involve a buffer switch (like ace-window), super-save-triggers is still available for that.

A clean 0.5 setup looks something like this:

(use-package super-save
  :ensure t
  :config
  ;; Save buffers automatically when Emacs is idle
  (setq super-save-auto-save-when-idle t)
  ;; Don't display "Wrote file..." messages in the echo area
  (setq super-save-silent t)
  ;; Disable the built-in auto-save (backup files) since super-save handles it
  (setq auto-save-default nil)
  (super-save-mode +1))

It’s also worth noting that Emacs 26.1 introduced auto-save-visited-mode, which saves file-visiting buffers to their actual files after an idle delay. This overlaps with super-save-auto-save-when-idle, so if you prefer using the built-in for idle saves, you can combine the two:

(use-package super-save
  :ensure t
  :config
  ;; Don't display "Wrote file..." messages in the echo area
  (setq super-save-silent t)
  ;; Disable the built-in auto-save (backup files)
  (setq auto-save-default nil)
  (super-save-mode +1))

;; Let the built-in auto-save-visited-mode handle idle saves
(auto-save-visited-mode +1)

Burst-Driven Development Strikes Again

Most of my Emacs packages are a fine example of what I like to call burst-driven development – long periods of stability punctuated by short intense bursts of activity. I hadn’t touched super-save in years, then spent a few hours modernizing the internals, adding a test suite, improving the documentation, and cutting a release. It was fun to revisit the package after all this time and bring it up to 2026 standards.

If you’ve been using super-save, update to 0.5 and enjoy the improvements. If you haven’t tried it yet – give it a shot. Your poor fingers might thanks for you this, as pressing C-x C-s non-stop is hard work!

That’s all I have for you today. Keep hacking!

-1:-- super-save 0.5: Modernized and Better Than Ever (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-18T09:00:00.000Z

Chris Maiorana: Writing gloriously long sentences in Emacs with line highlighting

Everyone knows I love finding whatever Emacs tricks and dodges I can to help writers. I wrote an article a while back about the benefits of writing in one-sentence-per-line (OSPL) style. No need to re-hash the whole article, but suffice to say this style can help you organize and transpose sentences, get a quick visual cue for sentence length and complexity, as well as clearer version control diffs, etc.

Transitioning over to this style from the standard paragraph-per-line style can be a little disorienting at first, especially if your longer soft-wrapped sentences are starting to ramble into two or three lines. This where hl-line-mode in Emacs can be a big help. Most text editors have a highlighting feature to help you focus on the current working line, and Emacs is no different. In this article, we’ll take a look at the built-in highlighting mode in Emacs and all the hows and whys you need to know.

Before we get into it, I will mention that if you are a power writer, and want to join the elite of Emacs users, you should check out my downloadable DRM-free eBooks here:

Let’s dig into hl-line-mode now.

Table of Contents

What is hl-line-mode?

hl-line-mode is a built-in Emacs minor mode that highlights the line containing your point. That basically means the line where your cursor is sitting will be highlighted. Different themes will have different highlight colors that fit nicely within the current palette, so no need to worry about getting an ugly yellow caution line in your Emacs.

The mode has been part of Emacs since version 21, so it is already installed in your editor. No additional packages required.

Why enable it?

The author Henry James (1843-1916) is famous for writing egregiously long sentences extended with prepositional phrases, nested clauses, and deferred verbs. Contemporary writers shun these kinds of sentence steroids because they can make lines difficult for readers to parse. Nevertheless, it’s a strong style that can be employed strategically, particularly in sections that are meant to pull the reader’s focus in or create disorienting special effects. On the flip side, done well, longer sentences can lull readers through luxurious passages that are a pleasure to write and read. So, if you want to use this style, hl-line-mode paired with OSPL can be a secret weapon in your text editor arsenal.

With highlighting enabled, you get a whisper-subtle visual indicator of your position in the buffer, making it easier to track where you are in a large document, but also helping you focus on a single line.

Beyond OSPL, the mode benefits anyone working with large files. Writers can visually anchor themselves in a long draft while programmers get a persistent cue for the current line in dense code, which pairs nicely with line numbers. Whether writing or programming, this mode can also help you avoid unwanted line breaks.

How to enable it

To enable hl-line-mode, you can add one line to your Emacs config:

(global-hl-line-mode 1)

This activates highlighting in every buffer.

If you only want to try it interactively in the current session, run:

M-x global-hl-line-mode

You can also enable it per-buffer with M-x hl-line-mode if you prefer selective use.


As I mentioned above, I like writing in OSPL style, so having highlighting enabled, particularly when working on some long Henry James type sentences it can really help me isolate my focus without getting distracted by all the text surrounding that sentence.

The post Writing gloriously long sentences in Emacs with line highlighting appeared first on Chris Maiorana.

-1:-- Writing gloriously long sentences in Emacs with line highlighting (Post Chris Maiorana)--L0--C0--2026-03-18T04:00:46.000Z

Einar Mostad: Use virtual environment in Emacs' Python Mode if in a project with a venv

Today, I was going to work on a python project for half an hour at the end of my work day. I tried to find a good python module to use to work with RSS and Atom feeds. I found one and installed it in my virtual environment and pasted in some example code in a buffer in Emacs. I wanted to run the code in the python shell with Emacs' handy C-c C-c keyboard shortcut. So I opened the shell with C-c C-p and then hit C-c C-c, but I got an error that the shell did not understand the import on line 1 where I was importing the module I just installed in my virtualenv. I realised the shell ran from outside the virtualenv. I had not looked into this before, but found there were various packages people recommended to fix this. I tried one that looked interesting, but it did not work. Maybe because I was on my work laptop with Windows at the time. I tried a few things, but soon gave up.

I then discovered .dir-locals.el files was a possible solution. It gives buffer-local values to variables inside the folder it is placed for the mode that you configure through an alist. The first suggestion I found was to use a variable that did not work at all. I wasted a lot of time trying to get it to work. When I was close to giving up, I discovered that I could use the python-shell-interpreter variable in the .dir-locals.el file and it worked. If you launch the python shell from the python within the virtual environment, then the shell also sees all the other packages installed in that virtual environment.

I then thought that the solution I had found would not work on my own machines that run GNU/Linux since the python.exe-file neither exists nor the folder it is in in virtual environments on my preferred platform. A .dir-locals.el-file inside a project checked in with git is not a particularly cross-platform solution to this problem for this reason and it would be a hassle to make one for every python project with a virtual environment. I thought I could make a function in my Emacs configuration that would check which platform I was on, whether I was in a project or not and whether a directory with the name venv exists (I tend to use that name for virtual environments) and then just set the variable to the correct path based on that.

When I got home, after dinner, I made that function. I love how well-documented Emacs is. It makes doing things like this really easy. I just looked up function names starting with project and found something useful after reading up on a few. A bit of evaluation in different buffers with C-x C-e to check if things worked the way I thought and a bit of tweaking when it turned out that cddr did not return the same as nth 2 (cddr returned a list with a string, but nth 2 returned a string) and then I ended up with this function:

(defun emo-python-virtualenv ()
  "Sets the python interpreter to python in the venv if in a project and a venv exists."
  (when (project-current)
    (let ((pythonpath (concat
                       (nth 2 (project-current)) (if (eq system-type 'gnu/linux)
                                                     "venv/bin/python"
                                                   "venv/Scripts/python.exe"))))
      (when (file-exists-p pythonpath)
        (setq-local python-shell-interpreter pythonpath)))))

To put it to work every time I open a python file, I also needed to add it to python-mode-hook like this in my configuration for Python mode:

(add-hook 'python-mode-hook 'emo-python-virtualenv)

When I now try to import packages that only exists in a virtual environment into the python shell, it works if I loaded the shell from a file within the same project as the virtual environment, but not from a file from outside that project. If I load the shell from a file within a project without a venv, I get the system's Python and its available packages. No need for outdated packages that doesn't work or directory-local variables that are platform dependent. This works on Windows as well. It's easy and fun to fix things like this in Emacs, and I learned some Elisp and a bit about Python virtual environments in the process. It would be convenient if things like these worked out of the box, but that would demand a bit more code since my function works on the basis of the directory name venv for every virtual environment. If I can find a way to do this that is not dependent on the name of the virtual environment folder, that would be even better.

-1:-- Use virtual environment in Emacs' Python Mode if in a project with a venv (Post Einar Mostad)--L0--C0--2026-03-17T17:16:00.000Z

Emacs Redux: Tree-sitter Font-Lock and Indentation in Comint Buffers

If you maintain a tree-sitter major mode that has a REPL (comint) companion, you’ve probably wondered: can the REPL input get the same syntax highlighting and indentation as source buffers? The answer is yes – and the infrastructure has been in Emacs since 29.1. It’s just not widely known yet.

I ran into this while working on neocaml, my tree-sitter major mode for OCaml. The OCaml REPL buffer used simple regex-based font-lock-keywords for input, which was definitely a step backward from the rich highlighting in source buffers.

Initially I didn’t even bother to research using tree-sitter font-lock in comint, as assumed that would be something quite complicated. Turns out the fix was surprisingly easy.

Font-Lock: comint-fontify-input-mode

Emacs 29.1 introduced comint-fontify-input-mode, a minor mode that fontifies input regions in comint buffers through an indirect buffer. The idea is simple:

  1. You tell comint which major mode to use for input via comint-indirect-setup-function.
  2. Comint creates an indirect buffer and runs that mode in it.
  3. When fontifying, comint splits the buffer into output and input regions. Output gets the comint buffer’s own font-lock; input is fontified in the indirect buffer using the full major mode – including tree-sitter.

Here’s all it took for neocaml’s REPL:

(define-derived-mode neocaml-repl-mode comint-mode "OCaml-REPL"
  ;; ... existing setup ...

  ;; Tree-sitter fontification for REPL input
  (setq-local comint-indirect-setup-function #'neocaml-mode)
  (comint-fontify-input-mode))

That’s it. REPL input now gets the exact same tree-sitter font-lock as .ml buffers. The existing font-lock-keywords for output (error messages, warnings, val/type results) keep working as before – they only apply to output regions.

Important: comint-fontify-input-mode is incompatible with comint-use-prompt-regexp – the two features can’t be active at the same time. Most modern comint-derived modes don’t set comint-use-prompt-regexp to t, so this usually isn’t an issue.

Who’s Already Doing This

Two built-in modes use this approach:

  • shell.el sets up sh-mode in the indirect buffer (enabled by default via shell-fontify-input-enable)
  • ielm.el sets up emacs-lisp-mode (enabled by default via ielm-fontify-input-enable)

On the third-party side, inf-lua and ts-repl both use this pattern with tree-sitter modes. And now there’s also neocaml, of course. :-)

Indentation: comint-indent-input-line-default

Comint also provides indentation delegation via comint-indent-input-line-default and comint-indent-input-region-default. When you set these as indent-line-function and indent-region-function, pressing TAB on an input line delegates indentation to the indirect buffer’s indent-line-function – which will be treesit-indent if the indirect buffer runs a tree-sitter mode.

(setq-local indent-line-function #'comint-indent-input-line-default)
(setq-local indent-region-function #'comint-indent-input-region-default)

shell.el already does this. For your own REPL modes, you can add these two lines alongside the font-lock setup.

The Caveat

Here’s where things get tricky. Tree-sitter parsers are shared between indirect and base buffers (this is by design – see bug#59693). When treesit-indent runs in the indirect buffer, the parser it uses sees the entire comint buffer – prompts, output, previous commands, everything. The parse tree will be full of errors from non-code content.

Font-lock handles this gracefully because comint-fontify-input-mode only applies fontification results to input regions, so garbled parses of output regions are harmless. But indentation is different – treesit-indent looks at the node context around point, and a broken parse tree can confuse it.

In practice, it works better than you’d expect.1 For simple multi-line expressions, the local tree-sitter nodes at the cursor position are often correct enough for reasonable indentation. But for deeply nested multi-line input, the results can be off.

Because of this, I chose not to enable indentation delegation by default in neocaml’s REPL. Instead, it’s documented as an opt-in configuration for adventurous users.

The Recipe

If you maintain a tree-sitter mode with a comint REPL, here’s the minimal pattern:

(define-derived-mode my-repl-mode comint-mode "My-REPL"
  ;; ... your existing setup ...

  ;; Font-lock: full tree-sitter highlighting for input
  (setq-local comint-indirect-setup-function #'my-ts-mode)
  (comint-fontify-input-mode)

  ;; Indentation: delegate to tree-sitter (experimental)
  (setq-local indent-line-function #'comint-indent-input-line-default)
  (setq-local indent-region-function #'comint-indent-input-region-default))

Consider making these features opt-in via defcustoms, especially the indentation part. And remember that your existing font-lock-keywords for output highlighting (errors, warnings, result values) will continue working – they don’t conflict with comint-fontify-input-mode.

The End

That’s it. Two overlooked comint features, a few lines of setup, and your REPL goes from basic regex highlighting to full tree-sitter support.

Keep hacking!

  1. Depends on your expectations, of course. 

-1:-- Tree-sitter Font-Lock and Indentation in Comint Buffers (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-17T14:30:00.000Z

Emacs Redux: surround.el: Vim-Style Pair Editing Comes to Emacs

In my recent article on removing paired delimiters, I mentioned that I kind of miss Vim’s surround.vim experience in Emacs. Well, it turns out someone has done something about it – surround.el brings the core ideas of surround.vim to native Emacs, without requiring Evil mode.

surround.vim (and similar plugins like mini.surround in Neovim) are some of my favorite Vim packages. The idea is so simple and so useful that it feels like it should be a built-in. So I’m happy to see someone took the time to port that beautiful idea to Emacs.

The Core Ideas of surround.vim

For those who haven’t used surround.vim, the concept is straightforward. You have a small set of operations for working with surrounding characters – the delimiters that wrap some piece of text:

  • Delete surrounding pair: ds( removes the parentheses around point
  • Change surrounding pair: cs(" changes parens to quotes
  • Add surrounding pair: ys + motion + character wraps text with a delimiter

That’s basically it. Three operations, consistent keybindings, works everywhere regardless of file type. The beauty is in the uniformity – you don’t need different commands for different delimiters, and you don’t need to think about which mode you’re in.

surround.el in Practice

surround.el is available on MELPA and the setup is minimal:

(use-package surround
  :ensure t
  :bind-keymap ("M-'" . surround-keymap))

You bind a single keystroke (M-' in this example) to surround-keymap, and that gives you access to all the operations through a second keystroke. Here are the commands available in the keymap:

Key Operation
s Surround region/symbol at point
d Delete surrounding pair
c Change pair to another
k Kill text inside pair
K Kill text including pair
i Mark (select) inside pair
o Mark including pair

There are also shortcuts for individual characters – pressing an opening delimiter (like () after the prefix does a mark-inner, while pressing the closing delimiter (like )) does a mark-outer.

A Short Walkthrough

Let’s see how this works in practice. Starting with the word Hello (with point somewhere on it):

SurroundM-' s " wraps the symbol at point with quotes:

Hello  →  "Hello"

ChangeM-' c " ( changes the surrounding quotes to parens:

"Hello"  →  (Hello)

Mark innerM-' i ( selects just the text inside the parens:

(|Hello|)    ;; "Hello" is selected

Mark outerM-' o ( (or M-' )) selects the parens too:

|( Hello)|   ;; "(Hello)" is selected

DeleteM-' d ( removes the surrounding parens:

(Hello)  →  Hello

KillM-' k ( kills the text inside the pair (leaving the delimiters gone too), while M-' K ( kills everything including the delimiters.

Inner vs. Outer

Like surround.vim, surround.el distinguishes between “inner” (just the content between delimiters) and “outer” (content plus the delimiters themselves). The i and k commands operate on inner text, o and K on outer.

There’s also an “auto” mode – the default for i and k – that behaves as inner when you type an opening character and outer when you type a closing character. So M-' ( marks inner, M-' ) marks outer. Handy shortcut if your fingers remember it (I’m still building the muscle memory).

One caveat: auto mode can’t distinguish inner from outer for symmetric pairs like quotes (", '), since the opening and closing character are the same. In those cases it defaults to inner.

How It Differs from Vim

The biggest difference is in how you surround text. In Vim, surround.vim uses motions – ysiw( means “surround inner word with parens.” In Emacs, surround.el operates on the active region or the symbol at point. So the typical workflow is: select something, then M-' s (.

This actually pairs beautifully with expreg (which I wrote about recently). Use expreg to incrementally select exactly the text you want, then M-' s to wrap it. It’s a different rhythm than Vim’s motion-based approach, but once you get used to it, it feels natural.

The other operations (d, c, k, i, o) work similarly to their Vim counterparts – you invoke the command and then specify which delimiter you’re targeting.

When to Use It

surround.el fills a specific niche:

  • Using electric-pair-mode? Then surround.el is an excellent complement. electric-pair-mode handles auto-pairing when you type delimiters, but offers nothing for removing, changing, or wrapping existing text with delimiters. surround.el fills exactly that gap.

  • Using smartparens? You probably don’t need surround.elsmartparens already has sp-unwrap-sexp, sp-rewrap-sexp, and friends. The overlap is significant, and adding another package on top would just be confusing.

  • Using paredit? Same story for Lisp code – paredit has you covered with paredit-splice-sexp, paredit-wrap-round, and so on. But if you want the surround experience in non-Lisp buffers, surround.el is a good pick.

My current setup is paredit for Lisps, electric-pair-mode for everything else, and I’m adding surround.el to complement the latter. Early days, but it feels right.

Wrapping Up

If you’ve ever wondered whether some Vim feature you miss exists in Emacs – the answer is always yes. It’s Emacs. Of course someone has written a package for it. Probably several, in fact… Admittedly, I discovered surround.el only when I had decided to port surround.vim to Emacs myself. :D

That’s all I have for you today. Keep hacking!

-1:-- surround.el: Vim-Style Pair Editing Comes to Emacs (Post Emacs Redux)--L0--C0--2026-03-17T08:00:00.000Z

James Cherti: buffer-guardian.el – Automatically Save Emacs Buffers Without Manual Intervention (When Buffers Lose Focus, Regularly, or After Emacs is Idle)

The buffer-guardian Emacs package provides buffer-guardian-mode, a global mode that automatically saves buffers without requiring manual intervention.

By default, buffer-guardian-mode saves file-visiting buffers when:

  • Switching to another buffer.
  • Switching to another window or frame.
  • The window configuration changes (e.g., window splits).
  • The minibuffer is opened.
  • Emacs loses focus.

In addition to regular file-visiting buffers, buffer-guardian-mode also handles specialized editing buffers used for inline code blocks, such as org-src (for Org mode) and edit-indirect (commonly used for Markdown source code blocks). These temporary buffers are linked to an underlying parent buffer. Automatically saving them ensures that modifications made within these isolated code environments are correctly propagated back to the original Org or Markdown file.

If this package enhances your workflow, please show your support by ⭐ starring buffer-guardian on GitHub to help more users discover its benefits.

Other features that are disabled by default:

  • Save the buffer even if a window change results in the same buffer being selected. (Variable: buffer-guardian-save-on-same-buffer-window-change)
  • Save all file-visiting buffers periodically at a specific interval. (Variable: buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-interval)
  • Save all file-visiting buffers after a period of user inactivity. (Variable: buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-idle)
  • Prevent auto-saving remote files. (Variable: buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-remote-files)
  • Prevent saving files that do not exist on disk. (Variable: buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-nonexistent-files)
  • Set a maximum buffer size limit for auto-saving. (Variable: buffer-guardian-max-buffer-size)
  • Ignore buffers whose names match specific regular expressions. (Variable: buffer-guardian-exclude-regexps)
  • Use custom predicate functions to determine if a buffer should be saved. (Variable: buffer-guardian-predicate-functions)

(Buffer Guardian runs in the background without interrupting the workflow. For example, the package safely aborts the auto-save process if the file is read-only, if the file’s parent directory does not exist, or if the file was modified externally. Additionally, it gracefully catches and logs errors if a third-party hook attempts to request user input, ensuring that the editor never freezes during an automatic background save.)

Installation

Installation from MELPA

To install buffer-guardian from MELPA:

  1. If you haven’t already done so, add MELPA repository to your Emacs configuration.
  2. Add the following code to your Emacs init file to install buffer-guardian from MELPA:
(use-package buffer-guardian
  :custom
  ;; When non-nil, include remote files in the auto-save process
  (buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-remote-files t)

  ;; When non-nil, buffers visiting nonexistent files are not saved
  (buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-nonexistent-files nil)

  ;; Save the buffer even if the window change results in the same buffer
  (buffer-guardian-save-on-same-buffer-window-change t)

  ;; Non-nil to enable verbose mode to log when a buffer is automatically saved
  (buffer-guardian-verbose nil)

  ;; Save all buffers after N seconds of user idle time. (Disabled by default)
  ;; (buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-idle 30)

  :hook
  (after-init . buffer-guardian-mode))

Alternative installation: Doom Emacs

Here is how to install buffer-guardian on Doom Emacs:

  1. Add to the ~/.doom.d/packages.el file:
(package! buffer-guardian
  :recipe
  (:host github :repo "jamescherti/buffer-guardian.el"))
  1. Add to ~/.doom.d/config.el:
(after! buffer-guardian
  ;; When non-nil, include remote files in the auto-save process
  (setq buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-remote-files t)

  ;; When non-nil, buffers visiting nonexistent files are not saved
  (setq buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-nonexistent-files nil)

  ;; Save the buffer even if the window change results in the same buffer
  (setq buffer-guardian-save-on-same-buffer-window-change t)

  ;; Non-nil to enable verbose mode to log when a buffer is automatically saved
  (setq buffer-guardian-verbose nil)

  ;; Save all buffers after N seconds of user idle time. (Disabled by default)
  ;; (setq buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-idle 30)

  (buffer-guardian-mode 1))
  1. Run the doom sync command:
doom sync

Configuration

You can customize buffer-guardian to fit your workflow. Below are the main customization variables:

Triggers

  • buffer-guardian-save-on-focus-loss (Default: t): Save when the Emacs frame loses focus.
  • buffer-guardian-save-on-minibuffer-setup (Default: t): Save when the minibuffer opens.
  • buffer-guardian-save-on-buffer-switch (Default: t): Save when window-buffer-change-functions runs.
  • buffer-guardian-save-on-window-selection-change (Default: t): Save when window-selection-change-functions runs.
  • buffer-guardian-save-on-window-configuration-change (Default: t): Save when window-configuration-change-hook runs.
  • buffer-guardian-save-on-same-buffer-window-change (Default: nil): Save the buffer even if the window change results in the same buffer.

Timers

  • buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-interval (Default: nil): Save all buffers periodically every N seconds.
  • buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-idle (Default: nil): Save all buffers after N seconds of user idle time.

Exclusions and Filters

  • buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-remote-files (Default: t): Prevent auto-saving remote files.
  • buffer-guardian-inhibit-saving-nonexistent-files (Default: t): Prevent saving files that do not exist on disk.
  • buffer-guardian-exclude-regexps (Default: nil): A list of regular expressions for file names to ignore.
  • buffer-guardian-max-buffer-size (Default: nil): Maximum buffer size (in characters) to save. Set to 0 or nil to disable.
  • buffer-guardian-predicate-functions (Default: nil): List of predicate functions to determine if a buffer should be saved.

Specialized Buffers (Inline Code Blocks)

  • buffer-guardian-handle-org-src (Default: t): Enable automatic saving for org-src buffers.
  • buffer-guardian-handle-edit-indirect (Default: t): Enable automatic saving for edit-indirect buffers.

Advanced

  • buffer-guardian-save-all-buffers-trigger-hooks: A list of hooks that trigger saving all modified buffers. Defaults to nil.
  • buffer-guardian-save-trigger-functions: A list of functions to advise. A :before advice will save the current buffer before these functions execute.
  • buffer-guardian-verbose (Default: nil): Enable logging messages when a buffer is saved.

Author and License

The buffer-guardian Emacs package has been written by James Cherti and is distributed under terms of the GNU General Public License version 3, or, at your choice, any later version.

Copyright (C) 2026 James Cherti

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program.

Links

Other Emacs packages by the same author:

  • minimal-emacs.d: This repository hosts a minimal Emacs configuration designed to serve as a foundation for your vanilla Emacs setup and provide a solid base for an enhanced Emacs experience.
  • compile-angel.el: Speed up Emacs! This package guarantees that all .el files are both byte-compiled and native-compiled, which significantly speeds up Emacs.
  • outline-indent.el: An Emacs package that provides a minor mode that enables code folding and outlining based on indentation levels for various indentation-based text files, such as YAML, Python, and other indented text files.
  • easysession.el: Easysession is lightweight Emacs session manager that can persist and restore file editing buffers, indirect buffers/clones, Dired buffers, the tab-bar, and the Emacs frames (with or without the Emacs frames size, width, and height).
  • vim-tab-bar.el: Make the Emacs tab-bar Look Like Vim’s Tab Bar.
  • elispcomp: A command line tool that allows compiling Elisp code directly from the terminal or from a shell script. It facilitates the generation of optimized .elc (byte-compiled) and .eln (native-compiled) files.
  • tomorrow-night-deepblue-theme.el: The Tomorrow Night Deepblue Emacs theme is a beautiful deep blue variant of the Tomorrow Night theme, which is renowned for its elegant color palette that is pleasing to the eyes. It features a deep blue background color that creates a calming atmosphere. The theme is also a great choice for those who miss the blue themes that were trendy a few years ago.
  • Ultyas: A command-line tool designed to simplify the process of converting code snippets from UltiSnips to YASnippet format.
  • dir-config.el: Automatically find and evaluate .dir-config.el Elisp files to configure directory-specific settings.
  • flymake-bashate.el: A package that provides a Flymake backend for the bashate Bash script style checker.
  • flymake-ansible-lint.el: An Emacs package that offers a Flymake backend for ansible-lint.
  • inhibit-mouse.el: A package that disables mouse input in Emacs, offering a simpler and faster alternative to the disable-mouse package.
  • quick-sdcv.el: This package enables Emacs to function as an offline dictionary by using the sdcv command-line tool directly within Emacs.
  • enhanced-evil-paredit.el: An Emacs package that prevents parenthesis imbalance when using evil-mode with paredit. It intercepts evil-mode commands such as delete, change, and paste, blocking their execution if they would break the parenthetical structure.
  • stripspace.el: Ensure Emacs Automatically removes trailing whitespace before saving a buffer, with an option to preserve the cursor column.
  • persist-text-scale.el: Ensure that all adjustments made with text-scale-increase and text-scale-decrease are persisted and restored across sessions.
  • pathaction.el: Execute the pathaction command-line tool from Emacs. The pathaction command-line tool enables the execution of specific commands on targeted files or directories. Its key advantage lies in its flexibility, allowing users to handle various types of files simply by passing the file or directory as an argument to the pathaction tool. The tool uses a .pathaction.yaml rule-set file to determine which command to execute. Additionally, Jinja2 templating can be employed in the rule-set file to further customize the commands.
  • kirigami.el: The kirigami Emacs package offers a unified interface for opening and closing folds across a diverse set of major and minor modes in Emacs, including outline-mode, outline-minor-mode, outline-indent-minor-mode, org-mode, markdown-mode, vdiff-mode, vdiff-3way-mode, hs-minor-mode, hide-ifdef-mode, origami-mode, yafolding-mode, folding-mode, and treesit-fold-mode. With Kirigami, folding key bindings only need to be configured once. After that, the same keys work consistently across all supported major and minor modes, providing a unified and predictable folding experience.
-1:-- buffer-guardian.el – Automatically Save Emacs Buffers Without Manual Intervention (When Buffers Lose Focus, Regularly, or After Emacs is Idle) (Post James Cherti)--L0--C0--2026-03-16T21:57:02.000Z

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