Please note that this is a GH mirror of the original emacs-eat project: https://codeberg.org/akib/emacs-eat
Eat’s name self-explainary, it stands for “Emulate A Terminal”. Eat is a terminal emulator. It can run most (if not all) full-screen terminal programs, including Emacs.
It is pretty fast, more than three times faster than Term, despite being implemented entirely in Emacs Lisp. So fast that you can comfortably run Emacs inside Eat, or even use your Emacs as a terminal multiplexer.
It has many feature that other Emacs terminal emulator still don’t have, for example complete mouse support.
It flickers less than other Emacs terminal emulator, so you get more performance and a smooth experience.
To start Eat, run M-x eat
. Eat has three keybinding modes:
- “emacs” mode: No special keybinding, except the following:
C-c C-s
: Switch to semi-char mode.C-c C-j
: Switch to char mode.C-c C-k
: Kill process.
- “semi-char” mode: Most keys are bound to send the key to the
terminal, except the following keys:
C-\
,C-c
,C-x
,C-g
,C-h
,C-M-c
,C-u
,C-q
,M-x
,M-:
,M-!
,M-&
. The following special keybinding are available:C-q
: Send next key to the terminal.C-y
: Like `yank’, but send the text to the terminal.M-y
: Like `yank-pop’, but send the text to the terminal.C-c C-k
: Kill process.
- “char” mode: All supported keys are bound to send the key to the
terminal, except
C-M-m
orM-RET
, which is bound to switch to semi-char mode.
If you like Eshell, then there is a good news for you. Eat integrates with Eshell. Eat has two global minor modes for Eshell:
eat-eshell-visual-command-mode
: Run visual commands with Eat instead of Term.eat-eshell-mode
: Run Eat inside Eshell. After enabling this, you can run full-screen terminal programs directly in Eshell. You have the above three keybinding modes here too, except thatC-c C-k
is not special (i.e. not bound by Eat) in “emacs” mode and “line” mode.
You can add any of these to eshell-first-time-mode-hook
like the
following:
;; For `eat-eshell-visual-command-mode'.
(add-hook 'eshell-first-time-mode-hook
#'eat-eshell-visual-command-mode)
;; For `eat-eshell-mode'.
(add-hook 'eshell-first-time-mode-hook #'eat-eshell-mode)
Eat requires at Emacs 28.1 or above. Eat isn’t available on any ELPA right now. So, you have to follow one of the following methods:
(quelpa (eat :fetcher git
:url "https://codeberg.org/akib/emacs-iwindow.git"
:files ("*.el" "dir"
"*.info" "*.texi"
"*.ti" ("e" "e/*")))
Clone the repository and put it in your load-path
.
Term is the Emacs built-in terminal emulator. Its terminal emulation
is pretty good too. But it’s slow. It is so slow that Eat can beat
native-compiled Term even without byte-compilation, and when Eat is
byte-compiled, Eat is more than three times fast. Also, Term
flickers, just try to run emacs -nw
in it. It doesn’t support
remote connections, for example over Tramp. However, it has “line”
mode, which Eat still doesn’t have. If you want line mode in a
terminal, or use an old version of Emacs, you can use Term, but
Coterm + Shell is probably a better choice in case your Emacs version
is 26.1 or above.
Vterm is powered by a C library, libvterm. For this reason, it can process huge amount of text quickly. It is about 1.5 times faster than Eat (byte-compiled or native-compiled) (and about 2.75 faster then Eat without byte-compilation). But it doesn’t have a char mode (however you can make a char mode spending some effort). And it too flickers like Term, so despite being much faster that Eat, it seems to be slow. If you need your terminal to handle huge bursts (megabytes) of data, you should Vterm.
Coterm adds terminal emulation to Shell mode. Although the terminal Coterm emulates is same as Term, it is much faster, about three times, just a bit slow than Eat. However, it too flickers like other terminals. Since it’s an upgrade to Shell, you get all the features of Shell like “line” mode, completion using your favorite completion UI (Company, Corfu, etc), etc. Most of these features are available in Eat-Eshell-Mode as Eshell is similar to Shell, however it’s not Shell mode. Recommended if you like Shell.
This wouldn’t have been possible if the following awesome softwares didn’t exist: