Spacemacs divides its configuration into self-contained units called
configuration layers
. These layers are stacked on top of each other
to achieve a custom configuration.
By default Spacemacs uses a dotfile called ~/.spacemacs
to control which
layers to load. Within this file you can also configure certain features.
A configuration layer is a directory containing at least a packages.el
file which defines and configures packages to be downloaded from Emacs
package repositories using the package.el
built-in feature of Emacs.
If you already have your own Emacs
configuration you can move it to your
own layer.
The following command creates a layer in the private
directory:
SPC SPC configuration-layer/create-layer RET
Any configuration layers you create must be explicitly loaded in ~/.spacemacs
.
Note: For your privacy, the contents of the private
directory are not
under source control. See the section on private configuration management in
the documentation.
As mentioned .spacemacs
controls which configuration layers to load and
is also a means to customizing Spacemacs.
The following command will create a .spacemacs
file in your home directory:
SPC SPC dotspacemacs/install RET
To open the installed dotfile:
SPC f e d
To load some configuration layers using the variable
dotspacemacs-configuration-layers
:
;; List of configuration layers to load.
dotspacemacs-configuration-layers '(auto-completion smex)
Some configuration layers support configuration variables to expose granular
control over layer-specific features, git layer being one such example.
Variables can be directly set within dotspacemacs-configuration-layers
like so:
;; List of configuration layers to load.
dotspacemacs-configuration-layers '(auto-completion
(git :variables
git-magit-status-fullscreen t)
smex)
At anytime you can apply the changes made to the dotfile or layers
without restarting Spacemacs by pressing SPC f e R
.
The dotfile template contains further information about how to customize Spacemacs. See the dotfile configuration section of the documentation for more details.
Like Emacs
, Spacemacs initialization can also be contained in an init.el
file
in a special directory ~/.spacemacs.d
. The contents of the dotfile should be
then copied in the init.el
file.
The Emacs dotfile or dotdirectory is not replaced but rather
complemented by the Spacemacs dotfile or dotdirectory. During startup,
Emacs still uses ~/.emacs.d/init.el
(or ~/.emacs
) for its
initialization, and variable user-emacs-directory
will still point
to ~/.emacs.d/
, even if ~/.spacemacs.d
or ~/.spacemacs
are
present. Only now ~/.emacs.d/init.el
is provided by Spacemacs
(e.g. after cloning the Spacemacs git repo into an empty
~/.emacs.d/
), and your own personnal configurations go into
~/.spacemacs.d/init.el
(or ~/.spacemacs
).
Have a look into the FAQ for an easy workaround to maintain (your
former) vanilla Emacs and (your new) Spacemacs configurations
side-by-side without the need to rename and backup ~/.emacs.d/
.
Spacemacs can be used by Vim users or Emacs users by setting the
dotspacemacs-editing-style
variable to vim
, emacs
or even hybrid
in the dotfile ~/.spacemacs
.
Spacemacs key bindings use a leader key which is by default bound to
SPC
(space bar) in vim
or hybrid
editing styles and M-m
in emacs
style.
You can change it by setting the variable dotspacemacs-leader-key
if
you use the vim
style or dotspacemacs-emacs-leader-key
if you use
the emacs
style (these variables must be set in the file ~/.spacemacs
).
For simplicity the documentation always refers to the leader key as
SPC
.
There is secondary leader key called the major-mode leader key which is
set to ,
by default. This key is a shortcut for SPC m
where all the major-mode specific commands are bound.
If you are willing to learn the Vim key bindings (highly recommended since
you can benefit from them even in emacs
style), press SPC h T
to begin an Evil-adapted Vimtutor.
In vim
editing style the universal argument defaults to SPC u
instead of C-u
because the latter is used to scroll up as in Vim.
By using helm-spacemacs-help
with SPC h SPC
you can quickly search
for a package and get the name of the layers using it.
You can also easily go to the README.org
of a layer or go to the initialization
function of a package.
Thanks to which-key, whenever a prefix command is pressed (like SPC
)
a buffer appears after one second listing the possible keys for this prefix.
It is also possible to search for specific key bindings by pressing:
SPC ?
To narrow the bindings list to those prefixed with SPC
,
type a pattern like this regular expression:
SPC\ b
which would list all buffer
related bindings. Note: You are at the
HELM-Descbind prompt, the pattern consists of 6 letters: uppercase SPC
, a
backslash, an actual space and a lowercase b
.
Describe functions
are powerful Emacs introspection commands to get information
about functions, variables, modes etc. These commands are bound thusly:
Key Binding | Description |
---|---|
SPC h d f | describe-function |
SPC h d k | describe-key |
SPC h d m | describe-mode |
SPC h d v | describe-variable |
Some quick how-to's
are compiled in the FAQ.