/ace-window

Quickly switch windows using `ace-jump-mode'

Primary LanguageEmacs Lisp

ace-window

GNU Emacs package for selecting a window to switch to

What and why

I'm sure you're aware of other-window command. While it's great for two windows, it quickly loses it's value when there are more windows: you need to call it many times, and since it's not easily predictable, you have to check each time if you're in the window that you wanted.

Another approach is to use windmove-left, windmove-up etc. These are fast and predictable. Their disadvantage is that they need 4 key bindings. The default ones are shift+arrows, which are hard to reach.

This package aims to take the speed and predictability of windmove and pack it into a single key binding, similar to other-window.

Setup

Just assign ace-window to a short key binding, as switching windows is a common task. I suggest M-p, as it's short and not bound in the default Emacs.

Usage

When there are two windows, ace-window will call other-window. If there are more, each window will have its first character highlighted. Pressing that character will switch to that window. Note that, unlike ace-jump-mode, the point position will not be changed: it's the same behavior as that of other-window.

The windows are ordered top-down, left-to-right. This means that if you remember your window layouts, you can switch windows without even looking at the leading char. For instance, the top left window will always be 1.

ace-window works across multiple frames, as you can see from the in-action gif.

Swap and delete window

  • You can swap windows by calling ace-window with a prefix argument C-u.

  • You can delete the selected window by calling ace-window with a double prefix argument, i.e. C-u C-u.

Customization

Aside from binding ace-window:

(global-set-key (kbd "M-p") 'ace-window)

maybe you'd like the following customizations:

aw-keys

aw-keys - the sequence of leading characters for each window:

(setq aw-keys '(?a ?s ?d ?f ?g ?h ?j ?k ?l))

aw-keys are 0-9 by default, which is reasonable, but in the setup above, the keys are on the home row.

aw-scope

The default one is global, which means that ace-window will work across frames. If you set this to frame, ace-window will offer you the windows only on current frame.

aw-background

By default, ace-window temporarily sets a gray background and removes color from available windows in order to make the window-switching characters more visible. This is the behavior inherited from ace-jump-mode.

This behavior might not be necessary, as you already know the locations where to look, i.e. the top-left corners of each window. So you can turn off the gray background with:

(setq aw-background nil)