/helm

Emacs incremental completion and selection narrowing framework

Primary LanguageEmacs LispGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

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Abstract

Helm is incremental completion and selection narrowing framework for Emacs. It will help steer you in the right direction when you're looking for stuff in Emacs (like buffers, files, etc).

Helm is a fork of anything.el originaly written by Tamas Patrovic and can be considered to be its successor. Helm sets out to clean up the legacy code in anything.el and provide a cleaner, leaner and more modular tool, that's not tied in the trap of backward compatibility.

Requirements

You need a recent Emacs to use latest helm, at least Emacs-24.3.

async will be installed as dependency when installing from melpa but is facultative when installing from git (recommended though as it may fix installation of all packages from (m)elpa and will allow you to copy/rename asynchronously your files from helm and/or dired if needed).

Getting Started

Quick install from git

  1. Clone the helm repository to some directory:
```elisp
$ git clone https://github.com/emacs-helm/helm.git /path/to/helm/directory
```
  1. Clone the async repository to some directory (facultative)
```elisp
$ git clone git@github.com:jwiegley/emacs-async.git /path/to/async/directory
```
  1. Run make from the helm directory.

  2. Add to .emacs.el (or equivalent):

```elisp
;; [Facultative] Only if you have installed async.
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/async/directory")

(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/helm/directory")
(require 'helm-config)
```

NOTE: Installing helm like this (i.e from git+make) is the safest way.

You can have a quick try to helm by launching from the helm directory:

./emacs-helm.sh

It is also recommended to use this when reporting bug.

NOTE: That this will not work on Windows systems.

Install from Emacs packaging system

Helm is now available on Melpa at http://melpa.milkbox.net/ You will find there instructions to install. Then you should need only in your init file:

(require 'helm-config)

WARNING: Due to a bad concept of package.el which is in charge of fetching helm files and compiling them, users had errors most of the time when upgrading from melpa and list-package. To avoid this Async have been added as dependency to helm to force package.el compiling its files in a clean environment. People installing from git and using the make file will not suffer from this problem and don't need Async though it is recommended as it fix installation of all other packages you may install with package.el from (m)elpa. See FAQ for more infos.

Note: After upgrading from the emacs packaging system you should restart emacs for the changes take effect.

Note to Linux Distributions Maintainers

Only the extensions present in the github emacs-helm organisation are supported.

Alternate install warning

Some people are installing helm with their own config using diverses require, autoload and other hacks, not using helm-config. Expect failures and slowdown at startup unless you really know what you are doing when you do so.

Emacs Prelude

If you're afraid to play with Emacs's configuration, but want to try out Helm - have NO FEAR. Have a look at Emacs Prelude - it has Helm built-in and properly set-up.

Basic usage

Just type M-x helm-mini and enjoy. You might want to bind that command to a keyboard shortcut. Here's a suggestion:

(global-set-key (kbd "C-c h") 'helm-mini)

You can also start with M-x helm-mode and enjoy helm completion in your favourites Emacs commands (e.g M-x, C-x C-f, etc...). You can enable this by adding in your init file:

(helm-mode 1)

As a startup point you can also look at the helm section in Emacs menu to discover some of the commands provided by helm.

Advanced usage

Helm is capable of a lot. Here is a demo of helm-buffers-list:

helm-buffers-list

The demo starts when you see Eval: START in the minibuffer.

  • All the C buffers are selected using the regexp *C. In the demo, I also select Tcl buffers with *Tcl and then switched back to C buffers with *C.
  • I only want to have buffers that contains only the string "crash". To do that, I add a space, then add the pattern @crash.
  • After the initial search pattern, I hand over the current matching buffers to helm-moccur - moccur with Helm interface. In the above demo, I only switch to one file, that is kexec.c. However, you can select multiple buffers with C-SPC or select all buffers with M-a.
  • Candidates can be filtered gradually by adding more pattern, i.e. I added memory to filtered down to buffers that contain the string "memory" among the buffers that are containing "crash".

As you can see, as you filtered out, the number of candidates decreases, as displayed in the modeline. At the end, there were 12 buffers remained as the result of filtering, down from the total 253 buffers.

You can read this guide to quickly get started with Helm.

You can find all the gory details on the Helm Wiki.

Known issues

Check out the project's issue list a list of unresolved issues. By the way - feel free to fix any of them and sent us a pull request. :-)

Contributors

Here's a list of all the people who have contributed to the development of Helm.

Bugs & Improvements

Bug reports and suggestions for improvements are always welcome, be sure though they are related to helm, many bugs are coming from emacs itself or other packages. GitHub pull requests are even better! :-)

NOTE: When trying if something is working or not, be sure to start helm from Emacs -Q or even better Start it from your helm directory with ./emacs-helm.sh.

Getting help

If Helm Wiki is not enough, you can ask for help on emacs-helm google group.

Cheers,
The Helm Team