This package provides an orderless
completion style that divides the
pattern into space-separated components, and matches candidates that
match all of the components in any order. Each component can match in
any one of several ways: literally, as a regexp, as an initialism, in
the flex style, or as multiple word prefixes. By default, regexp and
literal matches are enabled.
A completion style is a back-end for completion and is used from a
front-end that provides a completion UI. Any completion style can be
used with the default Emacs completion UI (sometimes called minibuffer
tab completion), with the built-in Icomplete package (which is similar
to the more well-known Ido Mode), or with some third party completion
frameworks such as Selectrum, Vertico or icomplete-vertical. To use a
completion style in this fashion simply add it as an entry in the
variables completion-styles
and completion-category-overrides
(see
their documentation). You may also want to modify the
completion-category-defaults
variable, which serves as a default value
for completion-category-overrides
: if you want to use orderless
exclusively, set both variables to nil
.
With a bit of effort, it might still be possible to use orderless
with
other completion UIs, even if those UIs don’t support the standard
Emacs completion styles. Currently there is support for Ivy (see
below).
If you use MELPA, the easiest way to install orderless
is via
package-install
. If you use both MELPA and use-package
, you can use:
(use-package orderless
:ensure t
:custom (completion-styles '(orderless)))
Alternatively, put orderless.el
somewhere on your load-path
, and use
the following configuration:
(require 'orderless)
(setq completion-styles '(orderless))
Bug reports are highly welcome and appreciated!
This is what it looks like to use describe-function
(bound by default
to C-h f
) to match eis ff
. Notice that in this particular case eis
matched as an initialism, and ff
matched as a regexp. The completion
UI in the screenshot is icomplete-vertical and the theme is
Protesilaos Stavrou’s lovely modus-operandi.
Each component of a pattern can match in any of several matching styles. A matching style is simply a function from strings to strings that maps a component to a regexp to match against, so it is easy to define new matching styles. The predefined ones are:
- orderless-regexp
- the component is treated as a regexp that must
match somewhere in the candidate.
If the component is not a valid regexp, it is ignored.
- orderless-literal
- the component is treated as a literal string
that must occur in the candidate.
This is just
regexp-quote
. - orderless-without-literal
- the component is a treated as a literal
string that must not occur in the candidate.
Note that nothing is highlighted for this matching style. You probably don’t want to use this style directly in
orderless-matching-styles
but with a style dispatcher instead. There is an example in the section on style dispatchers. - orderless-prefixes
- the component is split at word endings and
each piece must match at a word boundary in the candidate, occurring
in that order.
This is similar to the built-in
partial-completion
completion-style. For example,re-re
matchesquery-replace-regexp
,recode-region
andmagit-remote-list-refs
;f-d.t
matchesfinal-draft.txt
. - orderless-initialism
- each character of the component should appear
as the beginning of a word in the candidate, in order.
This maps
abc
to\<a.*\<b.*\c
. - orderless-strict-initialism
- like initialism but only allow
non-letters in between the matched words.
For example
fb
would matchfoo-bar
but notfoo-qux-bar
. - orderless-strict-leading-initialism
- like strict-initialism but
require the first initial to match the candidate’s first word.
For example
bb
would matchbar-baz
but notfoo-bar-baz
. - orderless-strict-full-initialism
- like strict-initialism but
require the first initial to match the candidate’s first word and the
last initial to be at the final word.
For example
fbb
would matchfoo-bar-baz
but notfoo-bar-baz-qux
. - orderless-flex
- the characters of the component should appear in
that order in the candidate, but not necessarily consecutively.
This maps
abc
toa.*b.*c
.
The variable orderless-matching-styles
can be set to a list of the
desired matching styles to use. By default it enables the literal and
regexp styles.
For more fine-grained control on which matching styles to use for
each component of the input string, you can customize the variable
orderless-style-dispatchers
.
Style dispatchers are functions which take a component, its index in the list of components (starting from 0), and the total number of components, and are used to determine the matching styles used for that specific component, overriding the default matching styles.
A style dispatcher can either decline to handle the input string or
component, or it can return which matching styles to use. It can
also, if desired, additionally return a new string to use in place of
the given one. Consult the documentation of orderless-dispatch
for
full details.
As an example, say you wanted the following setup:
- you normally want components to match as regexps,
- except for the first component, which should always match as an
initialism —this is pretty useful for, say,
execute-extended-command
(M-x
) ordescribe-function
(C-h f
), - later components ending in
~
should match (the characters other than the final~
) in the flex style, and - later components starting with
!
should indicate the rest of the component is a literal string not contained in the candidate.
You can achieve this with the following configuration:
(defun flex-if-twiddle (pattern _index _total)
(when (string-suffix-p "~" pattern)
`(orderless-flex . ,(substring pattern 0 -1))))
(defun first-initialism (pattern index _total)
(if (= index 0) 'orderless-initialism))
(defun without-if-bang (pattern _index _total)
(cond
((equal "!" pattern)
'(orderless-literal . ""))
((string-prefix-p "!" pattern)
`(orderless-without-literal . ,(substring pattern 1)))))
(setq orderless-matching-styles '(orderless-regexp)
orderless-style-dispatchers '(first-initialism
flex-if-twiddle
without-if-bang))
The pattern components are space-separated by default: this is
controlled by the variable orderless-component-separator
, which should
be set either to a regexp that matches the desired component
separator, or to a function that takes a string and returns the list
of components. The default value is a regexp matches a non-empty
sequence of spaces. It may be useful to add hyphens or slashes (or
both), to match symbols or file paths, respectively.
Even if you want to split on spaces you might want to be able to
escape those spaces or to enclose space in double quotes (as in shell
argument parsing). For backslash-escaped spaces set
orderless-component-separator
to the function
orderless-escapable-split-on-space
; for shell-like double-quotable
space, set it to the standard Emacs function split-string-and-unquote
.
If you are implementing a command for which you know you want a
different separator for the components, bind
orderless-component-separator
in a let
form.
Orderless allows the definition of custom completion styles using the
orderless-define-completion-style
macro. Any Orderless configuration
variable can be adjusted locally for the new style, e.g.,
orderless-matching-styles
.
By default Orderless only enables the regexp and literal matching
styles. In the following example an orderless+initialism
style is
defined, which additionally enables initialism matching. This completion
style can then used when matching candidates of the symbol or command
completion category.
(orderless-define-completion-style orderless+initialism
(orderless-matching-styles '(orderless-initialism
orderless-literal
orderless-regexp)))
(setq completion-category-overrides
'((command (styles orderless+initialism))
(symbol (styles orderless+initialism))
(variable (styles orderless+initialism))))
Note that in order for the orderless+initialism
style to kick-in with
the above configuration, you’d need to use commands whose metadata
indicates that the completion candidates are commands or symbols. In
Emacs 28, execute-extended-command
has metadata indicating you are
selecting a command, but earlier versions of Emacs lack this metadata.
Activating marginalia-mode
from the Marginalia package provides this
metadata automatically for many built-in commands and is recommended
if you use the above example configuration, or other similarly
fine-grained control of completion styles according to completion
category.
The portions of a candidate matching each component get highlighted in
one of four faces, orderless-match-face-?
where ?
is a number from 0
to 3. If the pattern has more than four components, the faces get
reused cyclically.
If your completion-styles
(or completion-category-overrides
for some
particular category) has more than one entry, remember than Emacs
tries each completion style in turn and uses the first one returning
matches. You will only see these particular faces when the orderless
completion is the one that ends up being used, of course.
The default mechanism for turning an input string into a list of regexps to
match against, configured using orderless-matching-styles
, is probably
flexible enough for the vast majority of users. The patterns are compiled by the
orderless-pattern-compiler
. Under special circumstances it may be useful to
implement a custom pattern compiler by advising the
orderless-pattern-compiler
.
You might want to change the separator or the matching style
configuration on the fly while matching. There many possible user
interfaces for this: you could toggle between two chosen
configurations, cycle among several, have a keymap where each key sets
a different configurations, have a set of named configurations and be
prompted (with completion) for one of them, popup a hydra to choose a
configuration, etc. Since there are so many possible UIs and which to
use is mostly a matter of taste, orderless
does not provide any such
commands. But it’s easy to write your own!
For example, say you want to use the keybinding C-l
to make all
components match literally. You could use the following code:
(defun my/match-components-literally ()
"Components match literally for the rest of the session."
(interactive)
(setq-local orderless-matching-styles '(orderless-literal)
orderless-style-dispatchers nil))
(define-key minibuffer-local-completion-map (kbd "C-l")
#'my/match-components-literally)
Using setq-local
to assign to the configuration variables ensures the
values are only used for that minibuffer completion session.
Several excellent completion UIs exist for Emacs in third party packages. They do have a tendency to forsake standard Emacs APIs, so integration with them must be done on a case by case basis.
If you manage to use orderless
with a completion UI not listed here,
please file an issue or make a pull request so others can benefit from
your effort. The functions orderless-filter
,
orderless-highlight-matches
, orderless--highlight
and
orderless--component-regexps
are likely to help with the
integration.
To use orderless
from Ivy add this to your Ivy configuration:
(setq ivy-re-builders-alist '((t . orderless-ivy-re-builder)))
Recent versions of Selectrum default to using whatever completion
styles you have configured. You can use orderless
that way, or you can
use this configuration:
(setq selectrum-refine-candidates-function #'orderless-filter)
(setq selectrum-highlight-candidates-function #'orderless-highlight-matches)
If you use the above configuration, only the visible candidates are highlighted, which is a litte more efficient.
Vertico relies on emacs built-in completion infrastructure. Hence, no
additional configuration is necessary apart from selecting orderless
as emacs default completion style.
Company comes with a company-capf
backend that uses the
completion-at-point functions, which in turn use completion styles.
This means that the company-capf
backend will automatically use
orderless
, no configuration necessary!
But there are a couple of points of discomfort:
- Pressing SPC takes you out of completion, so with the default
separator you are limited to one component, which is no fun. To fix
this add a separator that is allowed to occur in identifiers, for
example, for Emacs Lisp code you could use an ampersand:
(setq orderless-component-separator "[ &]")
- The matching portions of candidates aren’t highlighted. That’s
because
company-capf
is hard-coded to look for thecompletions-common-part
face, and it only use one face,company-echo-common
to highlight candidates.So, while you can’t get different faces for different components, you can at least get the matches highlighted in the sole available face with this configuration:
(defun just-one-face (fn &rest args) (let ((orderless-match-faces [completions-common-part])) (apply fn args))) (advice-add 'company-capf--candidates :around #'just-one-face)
(Aren’t dynamically scoped variables and the advice system nifty?)
The well-known and hugely powerful completion frameworks Ivy and Helm
also provide for matching space-separated component regexps in any
order. In Ivy, this is done with the ivy--regex-ignore-order
matcher.
In Helm, it is the default, called “multi pattern matching”.
This package is significantly smaller than either of those because it solely defines a completion style, meant to be used with any completion UI supporting completion styles while both of those provide their own completion UI (and many other cool features!).
It is worth pointing out that Helm does provide its multi pattern matching as a completion style which could be used with default tab completion, Icomplete, Selectrum or other UIs supporting completion styles! (Ivy does not provide a completion style to my knowledge.) So, for example, Icomplete users could, instead of using this package, install Helm and configure Icomplete to use it as follows:
(require 'helm)
(setq completion-styles '(helm))
(icomplete-mode)
(Of course, if you install Helm, you might as well use the Helm UI in
helm-mode
rather than Icomplete.)
The prescient.el library also provides matching of space-separated
components in any order and it can be used with either the Selectrum
or Ivy completion UIs (it does not offer a completion-style that
could be used with Emacs’ default completion UI or with Icomplete).
The components can be matched literally, as regexps, as initialisms or
in the flex style (called “fuzzy” in prescient). In addition to
matching, prescient.el
also supports sorting of candidates (orderless
leaves that up to the candidate source and the completion UI).
An effect equivalent to matching multiple components in any order can
be achieved in completion frameworks that provide a way to restrict
further matching to the current list of candidates. If you use the
keybinding for restriction instead of SPC
to separate your components,
you get out of order matching!
- Icicles calls this progressive completion and uses the
icicle-apropos-complete-and-narrow
command, bound toS-SPC
, to do it. - Ido has
ido-restrict-to-matches
and binds it toC-SPC
. - Ivy has
ivy-restrict-to-matches
, bound toS-SPC
, so you can get the effect of out of order matching without usingivy--regex-ignore-order
.