Skip to content

workgroups for windows -- sexy window management for emacs

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

dabrahams/workgroups.el

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Workgroups for Windows (for Emacs)

It's tedious setting Emacs' window layout just the way you like it -- splitting windows, adjusting their size, switching to the right buffers, etc. And even when it is set, it won't stay that way for long. On top of that, you can't save your window-configurations to disk, so you have to start over from scratch every time you restart Emacs.

There are solutions out there to parts of the problem -- elscreen, revive.el, window-configuration-to-register, etc. -- but none provide a complete solution. Workgroups does.

With Workgroups, you can:

  • Store an unlimited number of window configs

  • Save window configs to disk, and load them from disk

  • Kill and yank window configs

It also provides:

  • Animated window config morphing

  • Frame reversing and window movement

  • A concept of "base" and "working" configs, for maximum flexibility

  • Lots of other stuff

Background

Workgroups is a window configuration management package for GNU Emacs. Here's what the Elisp info docs have to say about window configurations (info "(Elisp)Window Configurations"):

A "window configuration" records the entire layout of one frame--all windows, their sizes, which buffers they contain, how those buffers are scrolled, and their values of point and the mark; also their fringes, margins, and scroll bar settings. It also includes the value of `minibuffer-scroll-window'. As a special exception, the window configuration does not record the value of point in the selected window for the current buffer. Also, the window configuration does not record the values of window parameters; see *Note Window Parameters::.

The problem with Emacs' window configurations is that they're opaque C types: you can't peer inside them. To get at the information in a window configuration, you must restore it in a frame, then access that frame's parameters.

Here's what the same info node has to say about window configuration opacity:

Other primitives to look inside of window configurations would make sense, but are not implemented because we did not need them.

Workgroups solves this problem by implementing an independent window configuration object. Workgroups' window configurations (called "wconfigs") save all the settings listed above, and more. For instance, if a region is highlighted in transient-mark-mode, that region will still be highlighted after restarting Emacs and restoring that wconfig. They also save frame position and size. And wconfigs can be constructed and manipulated programatically, without the need to restore them in a live frame, enabling things like frame morphing, window moving, frame reversing and other operations.

Getting Workgroups

The latest version of Workgroups can always be found here. You can clone the repo by running:

git clone git://github.com/tlh/workgroups.el

Workgroups is being actively developed. Later on, when you want to update to the latest:

git fetch
git merge origin

Installation

  • Put workgroups.el somewhere on your Emacs load path

  • Byte-compile workgroups.el. This isn't required, but it'll speed some things up:

      M-x byte-compile-file RET /path/to/workgroups.el RET
    
  • Add this line to your .emacs file:

      (require 'workgroups)
    

Configuration

  • Set your prefix key (or not). The prefix key for Workgroups' commands defaults to C-z. You could set it to C-c w like this:

      (setq wg-prefix-key (kbd "C-c w"))
    

    Workgroups saves the prefix key's current definition when it's enabled, and restores it when it's disabled, so you don't have to worry about stomping keydefs if you want to try out different prefixes.

    Most commands are bound to both <prefix> <key> and <prefix> C-<key> for convenience. See the definition of wg-map in the source for a complete list of bindings.

  • There are many other customization options. See the customization section in the source for details, or use:

      M-x customize-group RET workgroups RET
    

Usage

  • Turn on workgroups-mode either by issuing the command:

      M-x workgroups-mode RET
    

    or by evaluating this form, which can be added to your .emacs file:

      (workgroups-mode 1)
    

    You should see "wg" in the minor mode list on the mode-line.

  • To get started right away, hit <prefix> ? for a list of commands and their bindings.

Tutorial

Workgroup Creation

To start off, add a few workgroups. Hit <prefix> c to issue the command wg-create-workgroup, give it a name, hit RET, and a new workgroup is created. Maybe split the screen a few times with C-x 2 and C-x 3, and switch to different buffers in some of the windows to make it unique. Repeat this process a few times to create some different workgroups.

Every workgroup must have a unique name. You can rename workgroups after they've been created with <prefix> A (wg-rename-workgroup).

Workgroup Switching

<prefix> v issues the command wg-switch-to-workgroup. This will do a completing-read (with ido if it's enabled) on the available workgroup names, and switch to the workgroup with that name. <prefix> n will switch to the workgroup rightward in the workgroups list from the current workgroup, and <prefix> p will switch to the one leftward in the list. <prefix> 0 through <prefix> 9 switch to the workgroup at that position in the workgroups list. Try switching between your workgroups now.

Morph

After you've switched between workgroups, you'll notice that Workgroups animates the transition between wconfigs. "Morph" reuses whatever tree structure the two window trees have in common, sliding in or wiping subtrees as necessary to complete the transformation. You can toggle it off and on with <prefix> w (wg-toggle-morph), or you can set the value of wg-morph-on to t or nil to turn it on or off permenently.

There are a couple variables that determine morph speed. wg-morph-hsteps and wg-morph-vsteps control the number of columns and lines respectively that window boundaries move for each step of the morph transition. The defaults for these are a little low, so that you can see what morph is doing. You can set them as high as you like, but values less than 1 are invalid.

There are separate horizontal and vertical step values used in terminal frames (wg-morph-terminal-hsteps and wg-morph-terminal-vsteps). This is because Emacs' redisplay is usually significanly faster on local terminal frames, so morphing can happen too fast to see at values appropriate for GUI frames. If they are set, their values are used in terminal frames. If they are nil, the step values default to wg-morph-hsteps and wg-morph-vsteps.

NOTE on morphing in xterm

xterm has some wierd redisplay issues:

  • An unset background color can cause extremely slow redisplay in xterm. So if:

      (frame-parameter (selected-frame) 'background-color)
    

    returns:

      => "unspecified-bg"
    

    you may run into this.

  • Very large terminal geometries (270x70 or higher) can also cause very slow redisplay in xterm. Until I figure out the best way to handle this, you should just see what works, and either set your background color or turn off morphing with:

      `(setq wg-morph-on nil)`
    

Base and Working Configs

Window configs drift through use. Windows get resized; different buffers get selected; point and mark change, and so on. When you switch from one workgroup to another, then back to the first, you want it to be in the same state that you left it in so you don't lose your place. At the same time, it can be tedious getting the window configuration just the way you like it, and it sucks when it gets mangled, so it'd be nice to be able to revert it back to a known-good state at any time.

For this reason, every workgroup actually consists of two wconfigs: a base config and a working config [1]. The base config is the pristine original wconfig, set exactly the way you like it. And the working config is whatever the frame happens to look like while you're using it [2]. The base config only gets altered explicitly, and you can revert back to it at any time. Use <prefix> r (wg-revert-workgroup) to revert the working config to the base config. The opposite of reverting is updating. <prefix> u (wg-update-workgroup) updates the base config with the current working config.

So the two commands are mirror images of each other: the former sets the working config to the base config (reverting the working config), and the latter sets the base config to the working config (updating the base config). You can revert all workgroups' working configs to their base configs with <prefix> R (wg-revert-all-workgroups), and you can update all workgroups' base configs to their working configs with <prefix> U (wg-update-all-workgroups). Update all your workgroups with <prefix> U now.

It's important to understand that you never actually use the base config -- only the working config. The base config sits in the background, and can only be modified with explicit updates.

[1] That's not entirely true: working configs are actually properties of frames, so every frame has its own working config for each workgroup. This is because when working with multiple frames, one expects the working config to remain the same in that frame. If you move to another frame and modify a workgroup's working config, then switch back to the first frame, it doesn't feel right when the working config has changed while you were gone. This may seem complicated, but in practice it's very natural. There's only one base config per workgroup, though -- they're the same across all frames.

[2] Workgroups updates working configs lazily: it doesn't update the working config every time changes are made to the frame -- only when the working config is requested by a function. This produces the same behavior as more tedious perpetual updates, but much simpler code.

Saving and Loading

Saving and loading was the original motivation for writing Workgroups. You can save your workgroups to a file with <prefix> C-s (wg-save) and you can load workgroups from a file with <prefix> C-l (wg-load). Save your workgroups now.

Once you have a file of saved workgroups, it's convenient to load it on Emacs startup. To do so you can add a line like this to your .emacs:

(wg-load "/path/to/saved/workgroups")

So your final .emacs setup may look something like this:

(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/workgroups.el")
(require 'workgroups)
(setq wg-prefix-key (kbd "C-c a"))
(workgroups-mode 1)
(wg-load "/path/to/saved/workgroups")

The customization variable wg-switch-on-load controls whether to automatically switch to the first workgroup in a file when the file is loaded. It defaults to t, so when you add the above to your .emacs file, the first workgroup in the file will automatically be switched to on Emacs startup.

Killing and Yanking

You can kill workgroups with <prefix> k (wg-kill-workgroup). Killing a workgroup deletes it from the list of workgroups, and copies its working config to the kill ring. You can yank killed wconfigs into the current frame with <prefix> y (wg-yank-config). If the last command was wg-yank-config, calling it again will yank the next wconfig in the kill ring, and so on, much like Emacs' own kill ring.

You can save a wconfig to the kill ring without killing its workgroup with the kill-ring-save commands. <prefix> M-w (wg-kill-ring-save-working-config) saves the working config to the kill ring, and <prefix> M-W (wg-kill-ring-save-base-config) saves the base config to the kill ring.

<prefix> M-k (wg-kill-workgroup-and-buffers) kills a workgroup, and all the buffers visible in it, and <prefix> K (wg-delete-other-workgroups) deletes all but the current workgroup.

Cloning

Cloning a workgroup creates a new workgroup under a different name with the a copy of the current workgroup's base and working configs. <prefix> C (wg-clone-workgroup) will clone the current workgroup.

Offsetting and Swapping

You can move a workgroup leftward or rightward in the workgroups list with <prefix> , (wg-offset-left) and <prefix> . (wg-offset-right) respectively. These commands work cyclically, so when you offset a workgroup leftward or rightward when it's already on the far left or right of the list, it will wrap around to the other side.

<prefix> x (wg-swap-workgroups) will swap the position in the workgroups list of the previously selected workgroup with that of the current workgroup.

Switching to Buffers

You can switch to workgroups based on the buffers that are visible in them with <prefix> b (wg-get-by-buffer). Workgroups constructs the list of available buffer names from the workgroups list, so it's possible to switch to a workgroup determined from a buffer file-name that hasn't been visited yet, if you haven't switched to that workgroup yet in your current Emacs session.

Messaging

Workgroups has commands to display various bits of information in the echo-area, like the current workgroup name, the list of workgroups, the current time, etc. The help buffer has a complete list (see the Help section below).

Help

To bring up a help buffer listing all the commands and their bindings, hit <prefix> ? (wg-help).

FAQ

Q: Does Workgroups for Windows have anything to do with Microsoft Windows for Workgroups?
A: Nope.

Q: Why is it called "Workgroups"?
A: Mostly because it's funny, but it also makes sense. I needed a name that would also work for the collections of wconfigs being manipulated. Elscreen has "screens", which works well. I couldn't call them "window configurations" because it's too long, and Emacs already uses that for something else. It'd be misleading, too, since a workgroup is actually a named set of multiple wconfigs (one base config, and then a working config for each frame). "Workgroup" seemed like a good name for such a collection of window configurations, and, thanks to Microsoft, the word "workgroups" is already associated with the word "windows". So "Workgroups" it is. I'll have to do something special for the 0.3.11 release.

Q: Why should I use Workgroups instead of Elscreen?
A: Workgroups provides persistence, base and working configs, morphing, frame-reversing and other chrome, unlimited workgroups per frame and cleaner code. And it's maintained.

Q: What's the difference between a "window configuration", a "wconfig" and a "workgroup"?
A: A "window configuration" is Emacs' opaque internal representation of most of the state of one frame. A "wconfig" is Workgroups' independent, translucent window configuration object. And a "workgroup" is a named set of multiple wconfigs (one base config, and then a working config for each frame).

Feature Requests

Feature requests, like other parameters you'd like Workgroups to persist, should be added to the wiki

Reporting Bugs

If you encounter a bug in Workgroups, please file an issue here. If possible, please include a stack-trace and the value of wg-list.

A Note On Application Buffers

Workgroups doesn't currently save the state of applications like ERC or Gnus, though this is on the TODO list. If you save a workgroup that includes application buffers, and then you restore that workgroup in another Emacs session before relaunching those applications and buffers, Workgroups will just default to *scratch*. To get back to your saved state, launch those applications and buffers and hit <prefix> R to wg-revert-all-workgroups.

License

Copyright (C) 2010 tlh Workgroups for Windows (for Emacs) is released under the GPL. See the file workgroups.el.

About

workgroups for windows -- sexy window management for emacs

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Emacs Lisp 100.0%