A sensible starting point for hacking your own Emacs configuration.
Please note: crafted-emacs
is under active development. The pace of
development may be slow or fast depending on issues and pull requests
submitted. This is a community project, so the pace will depend largely on the
needs of the community. We would encourage you to try using this configuration,
especially if you enjoy tinkering a bit on getting Emacs to work “just
right”(tm) for you.
This project was originally called Rational Emacs. However, we chose to rename to Crafted Emacs to better represent our ideas and fit better with the System Crafters goals and messaging.
If you were previously using rational-emacs, please follow the instructions below.
Install emacs >= 27.2 from your distribution’s repositories.
Clone this repository to ~/.emacs.d
or ~/.config/emacs
:
git clone https://github.com/SystemCrafters/crafted-emacs ~/.config/emacs
This will set up the minimal configuration. If you’d like a more fully-configured experience, see Customization.
Crafted Emacs is an attempt to simplify creating a configuration for Emacs. It is not necessarily intended to provide all possible configuration for every eventuality. We do envision it being a nice baseline for users who want to create their own Emacs configuration. As a user develops their skill with Emacs Lisp and configuring Emacs in general, we anticipate such a person may end up rewriting their configuration to the point they are no longer using Crafted Emacs. This is an exciting possibility to us, and a journey worth taking!
We try to follow these goals:
- No new configuration system, macros, layers etc. Almost everything is straight
Emacs Lisp. The one place we have macros is currently is the packaging system
to provide a simple consistent interface regardless of the packaging system
the user chooses (currently, either the built-in
package.el
orstraight.el
for those who prefer a more functional approach to package management). - Provide some pre-configured modules to shorten the time it takes to build a nice working configuration.
- Customizations in the modules we provide should be opt-in by default to avoid surprising behavior.
- Not a turn-key/kitchen sink solution. There will be holes the user is expected to fill.
- Fewer packages rather than more; we prefer to stay closer to built-in functionality as much as possible.
- Correctness is important, as we expect people who might be new to Emacs Lisp
to learn from what we have written. We prefer
customize-set-variable
instead ofsetq
fordefcustom
values as an example. - Documentation is thorough, complete, and easy to find. There is an info manual for Crafted Emacs distributed with the source.
These goals are based on the Principles listed below.
For more on the vision of this project, see this issue.
This configuration and all associated modules intend to follow the below principles.
NOTE: Some of these may change over time as we learn from this process.
The core configuration only sets up Emacs to have a cleaner presentation with
sensible defaults. It is up to the user to decide which of the various
crafted-*
modules to load and when to load them.
Configuration modules should depend on other modules and the base configuration as little as possible. When a configuration module needs to integrate with other functionality in Emacs, the standard extensibility points of each package should be used (instead of expecting our own configuration module).
The implication is that someone should be able to install or copy code from a
crafted-*
module into their own configuration without using Crafted Emacs.
Where possible, we will leverage built-in Emacs functionality instead of external packages, for example:
project.el
instead ofProjectile
tab-bar-mode
instead ofPerspective.el
,persp-mode
,eyebrowse
, etceglot
instead oflsp-mode
(becauseeglot
prioritizes built-in functionality)- Possibly
vc-mode
by default
While Emacs tends to keep everything (code, configuration, state files, …) inside `user-emacs-directory` modern computer systems tend to keep those separated.
Crafted Emacs tries to maintain some balance between those two paradigms by bringing just the right amount of order to it.
See Folder structure in the documentation for more details.
Some people prefer to use Emacs in the terminal instead of as a graphical program. This configuration should work well in this case too! This also enables the use of Emacs in Termux on Android.
It should be possible to customize aspects of the Crafted Emacs configuration inside of a Guix Home configuration so that things like font sizes, themes, etc can be system-specific.
It can also use packages installed via the Guix package manager instead of
package.el
.
Chemacs2
is an excellent tool for enabling the use of multiple Emacs
configurations simultaneously. This configuration will behave well when used
with Chemacs2
so that users can try and use different Emacs configurations as
needed.
Instead of providing a higher-level configuration system out of the box like other Emacs configurations, we follow standard Emacs Lisp patterns so that you can learn by reading the configuration.
Not everyone will agree with our decisions, so each customization should be
easily reversible in the users config.el
file.
Why choose this configuration over Doom Emacs, Spacemacs, Prelude, or others?
The goal of this configuration is to make it easier to write your own Emacs configuration while using pre-made configuration parts maintained by the community. Instead of using a monolithic, all-encompassing approach, we strive to ensure that all parts of this configuration are optional or interchangeable.
You should even be able to use the configuration modules we provide with your
own init.el
file without using this base configuration repo!
Here is a list of the built-in modules that you may load. They are located in
directory $CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME/modules
, which are in the directory your git
clone from listing li#git_clone. Follow the links to each to get more
information about how they can be configured!
- crafted-compile
- Set up automatic compilation for some emacs-lisp files
- crafted-completion
- A selection framework configuration based on Vertico etc.
- crafted-defaults
- Lightly opinionated default settings for Emacs
- crafted-editing
- Settings for the editing component (whitespace trimming etc.)
- crafted-erlang
- A configuration for Erlang programming
- crafted-evil
- An
evil-mode
configuration - crafted-ide
- A general configuration to make Emacs more like an IDE, uses
eglot
. - crafted-latex
- A configuration for creating documents using the LaTeX typesetting language
- crafted-lisp
- A configuration for the Lisp family of languages (Clojure, Common Lisp, Scheme, Racket)
- crafted-mastering-emacs
- A configuration inspired by the book ”Mastering Emacs” by Mickey Petersen.
- crafted-org
- A few tweaks to Org-mode (org-appear, clickable hyperlinks
- crafted-osx
- Set up some conveniences to work in a Mac OS/OSX environment
- crafted-pdf-reader
- Setup
pdf-tools
for reading PDF files in Emacs - crafted-project
- Built in project management alternative to
projectile
- crafted-python
- A configuration for programming in Python
- crafted-screencast
- Tools for doing screencasts
- crafted-speedbar
- A file-tree
- crafted-ui
- Extra UI configuration for a better experience (mode line, etc)
- crafted-updates
- Tools to upgrade Crafted Emacs
- crafted-windows
- Window management configuration
Pull requests which provide any of these will be gratefully considered. This list is not intended to be all inclusive, if you have an idea not listed here, you are encouraged to raise an issue for discussion and/or submit a pull request with your implementation.
- crafted-desktop
- A desktop environment centered around
EXWM
- crafted-present
- Tools for giving presentations
- crafted-workspace
- An improved workspace experience based on
tab-bar-mode
- crafted-shell
- A starter configuration for
eshell
andvterm
Other ideas might be:
- Modules related to programming (c/c++, go, java, ruby, rust, perl, etc)
- Modules related to music, whether playing it or composing it
To add your own customization to this configuration, create a configuration file in one of the following directories:
~/.crafted-emacs/
~/.config/crafted-emacs/
Crafted Emacs looks out for two configuration files in one of those places:
config.el
– General configuration. Here you can set any Emacs configuration variables, face attributes, themes, etc. In short: anything that would normally go intoinit.el
goes here.early-config.el
– Configuration that needs to happen early during Emacs startup (see “The Early Init File” in the Emacs Manual for details), like customizing the process of initializing the package system etc. In short: anything, that would normally go intoearly-init.el
goes here.
If you prefer to explicitly control where your config.el
and early-config.el
are found for Crafted Emacs, you may provide a value for the
CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME
environment variable, either on the command line or in
your shell configuration. This variable should only contain the path to the
config.el
files, for example:
CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME=~/my-crafted-emacs-config
The crafted config files (config.el
and early-config.el
) are found in the
crafted-config-path
. That path will match exactly one of the following
scenarios, in the order specified:
- Using
Chemacs2
(See below for more on this)- The environment variable
CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME
is used if provided in the profile definition. - The
crafted-emacs
subdirectory of the profile is used when no environment variable is provided in the profile definition.
- The environment variable
- Use the value found in the
CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME
environment variable. - The environment variable
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is present or the path$HOME/.config/crafted-emacs
exists.- These normally resolve to the same file, so build the path from the
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
environment variable or the explicit path~/.config/crafted-emacs
- These normally resolve to the same file, so build the path from the
- Use the
HOME
environment variable to make the path, which expands to$HOME/.crafted-emacs
.
Once the crafted-config-path
is determined, if it does not exist in the
filesystem, it is created. However, just the path is created, the files
config.el
and early-config.el
must be created by you.
To make use of the sensible defaults that Crafted Emacs aims to provide, the first thing in your user configuration is to choose, which of the modules you want to use.
Let’s say for example, you want to have a look at all the modules, but you
don’t want to use evil-mode
and you have no use for the screencasting module.
Also, you need the advanced project management features of projectile, so you
don’t want built-in project management either. In that case, your example
config might begin like this:
(require 'crafted-defaults) ; Sensible default settings for Emacs
(require 'crafted-updates) ; Tools to upgrade Crafted Emacs
(require 'crafted-completion) ; selection framework based on `vertico`
(require 'crafted-ui) ; Better UI experience (modeline etc.)
(require 'crafted-windows) ; Window management configuration
(require 'crafted-editing) ; Whitespace trimming, auto parens etc.
;(require 'crafted-evil) ; An `evil-mode` configuration
(require 'crafted-org) ; org-appear, clickable hyperlinks etc.
;(require 'crafted-project) ; built-in alternative to projectile
(require 'crafted-speedbar) ; built-in file-tree
;(require 'crafted-screencast) ; show current command and binding in modeline
;; Further settings and customizations follow here...
;; ...
More detailed example config files can be found in the folder examples
.
This folder is where you can provide your own modules. As an example, you
can copy one of the crafted modules to this folder and then change it for
your needs. This folder is listed in the load-path
before the crafted
modules path, so modules here will be loaded first.
For example, if you prefer selectrum
instead of vertico
, you might copy
the crafted-completion
module to the custom-modules
folder. Then you
might replace the configuration for vertico
with a configuration you prefer
for selectrum
. Then in your config.el
you would still have (require
'crafted-completion)
but the version from your custom-modules
folder will
be loaded. Names do not have to be the same as a module name listed above.
You may choose to name your modules whatever makes sense to you. One
advantage to not naming your modules the same as a crafted module, you can
still require the crafted module in your own module. To follow the above
example, if you had named your module my-completion.el
you might end up
with the following code:
(require 'crafted-completion)
(vertico-mode -1) ; turn off vertico
(crafted-package-install-package 'prescient)
(crafted-package-install-package 'selectrum)
(crafted-package-install-package 'selectrum-prescient)
(customize-set-variable 'prescient-save-file
(expand-file-name "prescient-save.el" crafted-config-var-directory))
;;; Selectrum
(require 'selectrum)
(require 'selectrum-prescient)
(customize-set-variable 'selectrum-highlight-candidates-function
#'orderless-highlight-matches)
(customize-set-variable 'orderless-skip-highlighting (lambda () selectrum-is-active))
(selectrum-mode +1) ; use selectrum
;; use this to layer prescient with orderless
;; see: https://github.com/radian-software/selectrum
(customize-set-variable 'selectrum-prescient-enable-filtering nil)
(selectrum-prescient-mode +1)
(prescient-persist-mode +1)
The custom.el
file will hold the auto-generated code from the Emacs
Customization UI, and other packages that similarly add code to the variables
and faces form in the init.el
file.
Customizable values are defined with the defcustom
form, and can be
customized using the Easy Customization UI. A complete discussion is out of
scope for this document, instead see the Emacs Manual for more information.
There are several states a value can be in, for our purposes, we will only
consider two of them: the default state and the changed state. These are not
the “official” names but easily convey the concepts of the variable. If a
value is in the default state, looking in the Customization UI, the state
will be listed as STANDARD
. Crafted Emacs takes the approach of using the
customize-set-variable
to update the values defined with
defcustom
. This will show the values as SET for current session only
in
the Customization UI. This is normal since the values are set each time
emacs starts. They are technically “SAVED” since they exist as emacs-lisp
code, but since they are not in a custom-set-variables
form the
Customization UI only sees them as “SET for the current session only”.
A SAVED and set
value means the Customization code has written the
configuration to disk to be loaded again the next time Emacs starts. When
Emacs saves the configuration from the Customization UI, it simply adds a
couple of forms to the end of your initialization file (typically
init.el
), with comments warning about having more than one form with the
same name:
(custom-set-variables
;; custom-set-variables was added by Custom.
;; If you edit it by hand, you could mess it up, so be careful.
;; Your init file should contain only one such instance.
;; If there is more than one, they won't work right.
'(crafted-ui-default-font '(:font "JetBrains Mono" :weight light :height 185))
'(crafted-ui-display-line-numbers t))
(custom-set-faces
;; custom-set-faces was added by Custom.
;; If you edit it by hand, you could mess it up, so be careful.
;; Your init file should contain only one such instance.
;; If there is more than one, they won't work right.
)
When crafted-load-custom-file
is non-nil (the default), the custom.el
file is loaded after the initialization process, including after the user
config.el
is loaded.
The customization variable values (as set in init.el
with
customize-set-variables
) are in the SET for current session only
state,
unless altered by a saved customization loaded from custom.el
. Any values
set through the Customization UI or other work flows, for example by using
the org-agenda-to-front
or org-remove-file
functions, which write to the
custom-set-variables
form, are preserved in the custom.el
file if they are
saved for future sessions (as by the Customization UI widget, or by code).
To not load the custom file
, change the value for the
crafted-load-custom-file
to nil
in your config.el
.
Using customize-set-variable
in Emacs Lisp has the same effect as using
the Customization UI, except the customization is not saved to custom.el
as if you had used the Customization UI and used the widget to save the
customizations for future sessions.
If you choose to follow this pattern, customizing variables in your
config.el
only (not using the UI) then you may never need to load
custom.el
. However, there are some caveats: using certain work flows with
Org Agenda files or risky variables in .dir-locals.el
which write to the
custom.el
file will never be applied, even though they are saved in the
custom file.
If you have the Chemacs2
configuration cloned to ~/.emacs.d
or
~/.config/emacs
, you can clone crafted-emacs
anywhere you like and add an
entry to it in your ~/.emacs-profiles.el
file:
You can then put your early-config.el
and config.el
files in the subfolder
~/path/to/crafted-emacs/crafted-emacs
. So, for example if you installed
Crafted Emacs to ~/.crafted-emacs
, then your early-config.el
and
config.el
files would be in the path ~/.crafted-emacs/crafted-emacs
. This
is the default path, but you can change the name to something else, see below
for examples.
(("crafted" . ((user-emacs-directory . "~/path/to/crafted-emacs"))))
If you prefer to put your Crafted Emacs customizations elsewhere (for example
in a folder called `config` or maybe `personal`), you can specify the
CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME
environment variable, for example like this:
(("crafted" . ((user-emacs-directory . "~/path/to/crafted-emacs")
(env . (("CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME" . "~/path/to/crafted-emacs/personal"))))))
Or some place completely different:
(("crafted" . ((user-emacs-directory . "~/path/to/crafted-emacs")
(env . (("CRAFTED_EMACS_HOME" . "~/crafted-config/personal"))))))
Then launch it with emacs --with-profile crafted
!
If you previously were using rational-emacs, these steps will help you transition your configuration for use with crafted-emacs.
NOTE: When running the script, if there are any errors, the original code is
still in the original location. The crafted-emacs
folder is a copy of the
rational-emacs
folder, all updates occur on the copy.
- Shutdown Emacs, including killing any running server instances.
- Pull the recent changes from this repo:
git pull
(from where you clonedrational-emacs
originally, most likely you’re.config/emacs
folder in your home filesystem). This will convert the code fromrational-emacs
to becrafted-emacs
instead.- You can optionally move the rational code out of the way and clone this
repo directly this way:
cd ~/.config/
mv emacs emacs_rational
git clone https://github.com/SystemCrafters/crafted-emacs emacs
- N.B. on MS Windows, the path “~/.config” is likely
C:\Users\%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\.config
, you can also just clone to the.emacs.d/
folder, thus from theC:\Users\%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\
folder, your git command would be:git clone https://github.com/SystemCrafters/crafted-emacs .emacs.d
- You can optionally move the rational code out of the way and clone this
repo directly this way:
- From the location where you cloned this repo (
~/.config/emacs
for example), run this command to transition your existingrational-emacs
configuration tocrafted-emacs
:emacs -Q --batch -l rational2crafted.el
- Start Emacs. There might still be some errors (hopefully not!) you’ll have to work through (submit an issue if you get really stuck, or reach out on Discord in the SystemCrafters #rational-emacs channel).
The script provided does not work with chemacs2 configurations. There is no way to know the names of the profiles or how you might have configured Emacs when using Rational Emacs in the past. However, the script should be sufficiently useful enough you can either craft your own transition script with the methods provided therein, or read the code and follow the steps manually.
This is a community-run modular Emacs configuration, for which we appreciate feedback in the form of issues and pull requests. Feel free to open an issue prior to opening a pull request if you’re not certain your idea is in the spirit of the Principles.
If you enjoy crafting your computing experience, join the SystemCrafters community!
- Prefer
customize-set-variable
instead ofsetq
fordefcustom
values. This helps make sure constructors or setters attached to the variable are run when the value is set. - Provide
defcustom
variables for things we expect the user to modify and make sure it is in the appropriate group. - Provide verbose doc-strings for
defvar
,defcustom
,defun
,defmacro
, etc to clearly document what is going on. - Make sure to follow doc-string guidelines (see Documentation Tips or [info:elisp#Documentation Tips][elisp#Documentation Tips]])
- Add comments for blocks of code, especially to describe why the code is present, or the intention. These comments serve as documentation when reading the code where a doc-string is not an option.
- Add or update documentation in the docs folder. Especially for new modules, please provide the info file with your PR. (see Contributing Documentation)
- If your PR addresses an issue, whether it closes or fixes the issue, or is just related to it, please add the issue number in your commit message or the description of your PR so they can be linked together.
We welcome your questions and ideas, please open an issue if you have one!
- If you feel there is a defect with what we provide, please provide the steps necessary to reproduce the issue. A minimal configuration, a link to your configuration, or a gist/pastebin link or similar is appreciated to help us work toward a solution together.
- If you feel there is a missing feature, please describe your feature in as much detail as possible so we understand your request.
- If you have a question, be as specific as possible so we can understand how to help you as best we can.
- PRs to address any of the issues you might raise are appreciated and encouraged! If you don’t provide one, please be patient with us, it may take longer to fix an issue or provide a missing feature. That being said, please feel free to check on the status of issues from time to time if it has been a while since the last activity.
Some tips when things don’t seem to work right.
This scenario happened frequently when upgrading to Emacs 28. It also may occur in other scenarios as well. Usually, you will see some message indicating some symbol is void or some function or command does not exist. More often than not, the package maintainer is using a feature from another package which has not yet been released. The new feature is available in the development version of the package however.
Here are some example issues where things went wrong:
- Wrong number of arguments error
- Example config doesn’t start
- there are some bugs in package “helpful”
Here are some strategies:
- Check the code on the package source control page (ie GitHub, GitLab or
whatever), and make sure the missing code is present on the
master
branch. - Look at the code associated with the released version (you need to look at the most recent tag for this). If the code is missing there, ask the maintainer for a new release. Often, there are years between releases of Emacs packages, but that depends completely on the package maintainer. Some of them release more frequently, others only on request.
Once you have done the steps above, you can choose to take one of these actions in your configuration:
- Option 1
- Use
M-x package-list-packages
to display the list of packages. - Find the package in the list which doesn’t work for you, it will have either the installed or dependency status.
- Press the
enter
key to get more details on the package an look near the bottom of the metadata, you should see a line with “Other Versions”. Choose the development version - it will have a version number that looks like a date and the text(melpa)
next to it. Pressenter
on this version. - Following the step above will take you to the same package but from the
MELPA repository, and you’ll see a button at the top labeled
Install
. Click this button. - Optionally you can go back to the list of packages, find previous installed version, press the letter ‘D’ and then the letter ‘X’ to uninstall that version.
- Restart Emacs
- Use
- Option 2
- Edit your
early-config.el
file. - Near the bottom, add a line similar to this to pin the offending package
to MELPA (make sure to replace package-name with the name of the actual
package):
(add-to-list 'package-pinned-packages (cons 'package-name "melpa"))
- Use
M-x package-list-packages
to display the list of packages. - Find the package in the list, press the letter ‘D’ and the letter ‘X’ to uninstall that package.
- Restart Emacs, the package should be installed from MELPA thus using the development version of the package instead of the released version.
- Edit your
Regardless, always feel free to open an issue here and we can help you
out. Please be as complete as possible in your description of the
problem. Include any stack traces Emacs provides (ie start Emacs with: emacs
--debug-init
), mention the version number of the package you are installing,
and anything you might have tried but which didn’t work for you.
This code is licensed under the MIT License. Why? So you can copy the code from this configuration!