brew install the_silver_searcher aspellmv ~/.emacs.d ~/.emacs.d.bakgit clone https://github.com/freetonik/castlemacs ~/.emacs.d
Emacs is
a framework for creating any text editor you want. The goal of Castlemacs is to build a simple, modern and minimalist Emacs setup tailored to macOS while following these
init.el
, packages installed and configured via use-package
. avy
instead of full-featured Helm
. Is Castlemacs compatible with non-macOS systems? Yes! Nothing binds Castlemacs to macOS except for some conventions. As long as you have some key on your keyboard that can play a role of Super
(e.g. windows
key), you’re good to go.
I don’t know Emacs. Can I use Castlemacs or is it hard? . You don’t need to know Emacs, but it will help. The goal of this project is to make a setup that is suitable for absolute beginners.
Is this similar to Spacemacs? No. Spacemacs is a big, custom distribution with additional layers on top of Emacs. Castlemacs is simply a pre-configured Emacs. You don’t need to learn anything new if you know your way around Emacs.
Will Castlemacs support <something>? Probably, unless it goes against the Core Principles. Feel free to open an issue.
Does this setup work well in the terminal? It works, but it is not built for terminal use, since one of the Core Principles is to behave like a native macOS application.
Why is it called Castlemacs? See Why this name?
Best option : download the binary from here . Here is the direct link to download version 26.1-mac-7.1 , which is the latest version as of today (Sep 19, 2018).
Unzip and move the file to Applications
, just like any other mac app.
Alternative option 1 : Install Emacs via brew. This will build Emacs from source. It might take some time and can possibly fail.
brew tap railwaycat/emacsmacportbrew install emacs-mac
Alternative option 2 : Install Emacs via brew cask.
brew tap railwaycat/emacsmacportbrew cask install emacs-mac
A canonical version of Emacs for macOS can be found at https://emacsformacosx.com/ . However, this version has a number of disadvantages:
org-protocol
Castlemacs relies on The Silver Searcher to quickly search within a project. Install it:
brew install the_silver_searcher
Castlemacs requires aspell
, a Free and Open Source spell checker. Install it:
brew install aspell
Backup current Emacs config (if exists), then clone Castlemacs from Github:
mv ~/.emacs.d ~/.emacs.d.bakgit clone https://github.com/freetonik/castlemacs ~/.emacs.d
Launch Emacs and wait for several minutes. On the first launch it will download and install packages. When it’s done and the status line in the bottom stops outputting text, restart Emacs.
Don’t worry about warning messages on the first launch, they will go away after first restart.
I highly recommend changing Caps Lock to Control by going to System Preferences → Keyboard → Modifier Keys. This way you will have a more comfortable Control under your left pinky.
Castlemacs takes advantage of two facts:
CommandSuper
So, Command
key becomes Super
Name | On Mac keyboard | Emacs key |
---|---|---|
Super | Command ⌘ | s |
Meta | Left Alt ⌥ | M |
Control | Control ⌃ | C |
In this document we’ll refer to keys with their common macOS names: Cmd, Alt, Ctrl.
Basic combinations with Command
work as expected.
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Escape | Cancel current action | C-g |
Cmd-z | Undo | c-_ |
Cmd-Shift-z | Redo | N/A |
Cmd-s | Save file | C-x C-s |
Cmd-Shift-s | Save file as | C-x C-w |
Cmd-o | Open file | C-x C-f |
Cmd-a | Select whole buffer | C-x h |
Cmd-q | Quit Emacs | C-x C-c |
Cmd-Shift-p | Open command palette | M-x |
Ctrl-x c | Open config file | N/A |
Buttons I, J, K, L form a natural alternative to arrow keys. You can move around by holding Cmd while using these keys, without leaving the home row (press Cmd with your right thumb).
(See http://tonsky.me/blog/cursor-keys/ for some background and motivation.)
Binding | Description | Emacs default | Alternative |
---|---|---|---|
Cmd-i | Go up | C-p | Arrow UP |
Cmd-k | Go down | C-n | Arrow DOWN |
Cmd-j | Go left | C-b | Arrow LEFT |
Cmd-l | Go right | C-f | Arrow RIGHT |
Hold Alt
to move current line up or down. This is sometimes called “bubbling”.
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Alt-UP | Move line up |
Alt-DOWN | Move line down |
Cmd
or Fn
with arrows work just like everywhere else in macOS. Holding Shift
selects the region under movement.
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Cmd-LEFT | Beginning of line† | C-a |
Cmd-RIGHT | End of line | C-e |
Cmd-UP | Beginning of buffer | M-< |
Cmd-DOWN | End of buffer | M-> |
Fn-UP | Page up | C-v |
Fn-DOWN | Page down | M-v |
Fn-Alt-UP | Page up other window | C-M-v |
Fn-Alt-DOWN | Page down other window | C-M-S-v |
† “Beginning of line” is a smart command. It moves cursor to the first non-whitespace character. Press it again, and it moves cursor to the real beginning of line. You can keep pressing it to jump cursor between those two positions.
Many commands in Emacs write the current position into a mark ring. For example, if you were editing line 6, then performed a search with Cmd+f
, did something and want to come back, press Cmd+,= to go back to line 6. =Cmd+.
to go forward.
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Cmd-⸴ | Go to prev. mark | C-u SPC |
Cmd-. | Go to next mark | N/A |
Cmd-< | Go to prev. buffer | C-x LEFT |
Cmd-> | Go to next buffer | C-x RIGHT |
Holding Shift
‘lifts’ the meaning of this movement, and instead of jumping to a previous/next position in the current buffer, it jumps to a previous/next buffer in current window.
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Cmd-f | Search in file | C-s |
Cmd-r | Visual replace | N/A |
Cmd-Alt-f | Visual replace | N/A |
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Cmd-RET | New line below | N/A |
Cmd-Shift-RET | New line above | N/A |
Cmd-/ | Comment line | C-x C-; |
Cmd-j | Join with next line or join all lines in region | N/A |
Alt-u | Upcase current word or region | M-u (same) |
Alt-l | Downcase current word or region | M-l (same) |
Alt-c | Capitalize word | M-c (same) |
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Alt-BACKSPACE | Delete word backwards | N/A |
Alt-Shift-BACKSPACE | Delete word forwards | M-d |
Cmd-BACKSPACE | Delete current line | N/A |
Ctrl-k | Delete to end of line | Ctrl-k |
Ctrl-d | Delete character | Ctrl-d |
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Cmd-d | Select next occurrence† |
Cmd-Shift-d | Select all occurrences |
Alt-Cmd-d | Add cursor to each line in region |
† When no text is selected, Cmd-d
adds new cursor to the next line.
While multiple cursors are active:
Binding | Description |
---|---|
C-g or ESC | Quit multiple cursors mode |
Ctrl-’ | Hide/show lines where cursors are active |
Ctrl-v and Alt-v | Scroll the screen to center on each cursor |
Learn about all features of multiple cursors at https://github.com/magnars/multiple-cursors.el
Emacs is pretty good at indenting stuff automatically. Pressing TAB
on a line or region will indent it as needed. Castlemacs assumes that we never use tabs, only spaces, and use 2 spaces by default in most languages.
Binding | Description |
---|---|
TAB | Indent current line or region correctly |
C-x TAB | Rigidly change indentation of line or region |
Command with apostrophe expands selection. Holding shift contracts it.
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Cmd-’ | Expand region |
Cmd-Shift-’ | Contract region |
Note that in Emacs-talk, a pane is called a window
.
These bindings are based on default Emacs conventions, but save you one keypress. Also, Cmd-w
closes current window just like a browser tab.
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Cmd-1 | Kill other windows | C-x 1 |
Cmd-2 | Split horizontally | C-x 2 |
Cmd-3 | Split vertically | C-x 3 |
Cmd-0 | Kill current window | C-x 0 |
Cmd-w | Kill current window | C-x 0 |
Move left and right just like in iTerm. Hold shift to make it up and down.
Binding | Description | Alternative |
---|---|---|
Cmd-[ | Move left | Ctrl-Cmd-LEFT |
Cmd-] | Move right | Ctrl-Cmd-RIGHT |
Cmd-Shift-[ | Move up | Ctrl-Cmd-UP |
Cmd-Shift-] | Move down | Ctrl-Cmd-DOWN |
This is winner-mode
. It captures the current window configuration and allows you to restore it after it gets changed by some Emacs action.
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Cmd-Alt-[ | Restore previous configuration | C-c LEFT |
Cmd-Alt-] | Go to next configuration (undo restore) | C-c RIGHT |
Castlemacs uses Projectile for project management. There are a lot of features, and most of them are discoverable from the so-called “command map”.
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Ctrl-Cmd-p | Open projectile command map | C-c p |
Ctrl-Cmd-p p | Switch project | C-c p p |
Cmd-p | Find file in project | C-c p f |
Cmd-Shift-f | Search in project | C-c p s s |
Note that ‘Emacs default’ doesn’t make much sense in this context, since Projectile is not part of Emacs. I try to provide commonly used combinations for these cases: C-c p
is what Projectile’s author suggests, for example, and many configs follow this suggestion.
While in search mode:
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Ctrl-Alt-m | Preview current file |
Ctrl-Alt-n | Next file and preview |
Ctrl-Alt-p | Previous file and preview |
ESC | Quit search |
Changes to the current file are shown in the gutter on left side. You can change the appearance of those symbols: search for git-gutter
section in init.el
. To see a list of all available colors run Alt-x counsel-colors-emacs
. See Git-gutter docs for more info.
Castlemacs uses Magit , a wonderful package that aspires to be a complete Git porcelain.
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Cmd-g | Magit status |
From this status window you can do everything. Here are the basic commands available within Magit status window:
Binding | Description |
---|---|
s | Stage current file or chunk |
c | Open commit window |
F | Open pull window |
P | Open push window |
There are cheat sheets available within Magit. Refer to Magit User Manuals for more info.
There is a toggleable popup shell which is actually a full blown terminal emulator ( ansi-term
). It uses your system default shell and loads the appropriate environment.
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Cmd-= | Toggle shell |
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Cmd-b | Switch to another buffer or open recent file |
Cmd-Shift-b-= | Toggle filetree |
Emacs supports many programming languages by default. Castlemacs adds support for YAML, Markdown, Web mode (HTML, CSS, PHP, templating, etc), Emmet.
Feel free to add more features by sending a PR or opening an issue.
Code completion popup shows up immediately when possible. When popup is active:
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Enter | Select current candidate |
Alt-DIGIT | Quickly complete with one of first 10 |
TAB | Complete common part |
F1 | Show documentation for selected candidate |
Ctrl-w | Show source for selected candidate |
Note that not all backends support the last two commands.
This feature is provided by Company mode package. Learn more about Company mode at http://company-mode.github.io/
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Ctrl-Enter or Ctrl-j | Expand Emmet |
Learn more about emmet mode .
Spellchecking requires an external command to be available. See Install dependencies .
Binding | Description | Emacs default |
---|---|---|
Cmd-\ | Correct current word via popup | N/A |
Cmd-Ctlr-\ | Correct current word via list | M-$ |
The last three lines in the popup allow to add current word to your personal dictionary or accept it as correct for current session (as long as Emacs is open) or current buffer.
When correcting via list, you can press i
to quickly add the word to your personal dictionary.
Note that personal dictionary is located at ~/.aspell.LANG.pws
by default.
You can quickly search for synonyms. This requires an internet connection since the package uses https://www.powerthesaurus.org/ as backend.
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Cmd-Shift-\ | Search for synonyms of current word |
Select a synonym and press Enter
to replace word.
This requires an internet connection.
Binding | Description |
---|---|
Alt-\ | Define current word |
Org mode is for keeping notes, maintaining TODO lists, planning projects, and authoring documents with a fast and effective plain-text system. Learn more about Org at https://orgmode.org/ . (Caution! This is a black hole!)
Castlemacs provides some nice defaults:
Put your org files in ~/org
. If you use Dropbox or similar cloud provider, I suggest storing your actual org folder there, and providing a symlink like so:
ln -s ~/Dropbox/Org ~/org
Org agenda looks inside all the files in ~/org
Castlemacs takes advantage of the heavily used Command key on macOS. The Command key icon ⌘ is a ‘looped square’: it’s known as the place of interest sign when used on information signs, a practice which started in Finland in the 1950s, spreading to the other Nordic countries in the 1960s.
The symbol is derived from a shape of a castle. Here, for example, is the Borgholm Castle in Sweden: