This holy module brings the vim experience to Emacs.
+everywhere
Enables evilified keybinds everywhere possible. Uses the evil-collection plugin as a foundation.
- evil
- evil-args
- evil-easymotion
- evil-embrace
- evil-escape
- evil-exchange
- evil-indent-plus
- evil-lion
- evil-nerd-commentary
- evil-numbers
- evil-textobj-anyblock
- evil-snipe
- evil-surround
- evil-vimish-fold
- evil-visualstar
- exato
- evil-collection*
- evil-quick-diff
- The o/O keys will respect and continue commented lines (can be disabled by
setting
+evil-want-o/O-to-continue-comments
tonil
). - In visual mode,
*
and#
will search for the current selection instead of the word-at-point. - The
:g[lobal]
ex command has been modified to highlight matches. - More of vim’s filename modifiers are supported in ex commands (like
:p
,:p:h
or:t
) than vanilla evil-mode offers. - A custom filename modifier is available in Doom:
:P
, which expands to the project root (throws an error if not in a project).
This module has no external prerequisites.
The following vim plugins have been ported to evil:
Vim Plugin | Emacs Plugin | Keybind(s) |
---|---|---|
vim-commentary | evil-nerd-commenter | omap gc |
vim-easymotion | evil-easymotion | omap gs |
vim-lion | evil-lion | omap gl / gL |
vim-seek or vim-sneak | evil-snipe | mmap s / S , omap z / Z & x / X |
vim-surround | evil-embrace and evil-surround | vmap S , omap ys |
vim-unimpaired | (provided by Doom) | see the list |
This module has also ported vim-unimpaired keybinds to Emacs.
In other modules:
- The tools/neotree & tools/treemacs modules provide a
NERDTree
equivalent. - The editor/multiple-cursors module contains functionality equal to the
following vim plugins:
- evil-multiedit => vim-multiedit
- evil-mc => vim-multiple-cursors
This module provides a couple extra text objects, along with the built-in ones. For posterity, here are the built-in ones:
w W
wordss
sentencesp
paragraphsb
parenthesized blocksb ( ) { } [ ] < >
braces, parentheses and brackets' " `
quotest
tagso
symbols
And these are text objects added by this module:
a
C-style function arguments (provided byevil-args
)B
any block delimited by braces, parentheses or brackets (provided byevil-textobj-anyblock
)c
Commentsf
For functions (but relies on the major mode to have sane definitions forbeginning-of-defun-function
andend-of-defun-function
)g
The entire bufferi j k
by indentation (k
includes one line above;j
includes one line above and below) (provided byevil-indent-plus
)q
For quotes (any kind)u
For URLsx
XML attributes (provided byexato
)
Ex Command | Description |
---|---|
:@ | Apply macro on selected lines |
:al[ign][!] REGEXP | Align text to the first match of REGEXP. If BANG, align all matches on each line |
:cp[!] NEWPATH | Copy the current file to NEWPATH |
:dash QUERY | Look up QUERY (or the symbol at point) in dash docsets |
:dehtml [INPUT] | HTML decode selected text / inserts result if INPUT is given |
:enhtml [INPUT] | HTML encode selected text / inserts result if INPUT is given |
:iedit REGEXP | Invoke iedit on all matches for REGEXP |
:k[ill]all[!] | Kill all buffers (if BANG, affect buffer across workspaces) |
:k[ill]b | Kill all buried buffers |
:k[ill]m[!] REGEXP | Kill buffers whose name matches REGEXP (if BANG, affect buffers across workspaces) |
:k[ill]o | Kill all other buffers besides the selected one |
:k[ill] | Kill the current buffer |
:lo[okup] QUERY | Look up QUERY on an online search engine |
:mc REGEXP | Invoke multiple cursors on all matches for REGEXP |
:mv[!] NEWPATH | Move the current file to NEWPATH |
:na[rrow] | Narrow the buffer to the selection |
:pad | Open a scratch pad for running code quickly |
:ral[ign][!] REGEXP | Right-Align text that matches REGEXP. If BANG, align all matches on each line |
:repl | Open a REPL and/or copy the current selection to it |
:retab | Convert indentation to the default within the selection |
:rev[erse] | Reverse the selected lines |
:rm[!] [PATH] | Delete the current buffer’s file and buffer |
:tcd[!] | Send cd X to tmux. X = the project root if BANG, X = default-directory otherwise |
You must do two things to remove Evil:
- Remove
:editor evil
from~/.doom.d/init.el
, - Run
doom sync
to clean up lingering dependencies and regenerate your autoloads files. - [OPTIONAL] You may want to assign new values to
doom-leader-alt-key
anddoom-localleader-alt-key
. These are bound toC-c
andC-c l
by default.
Ignore
doom-leader-key
anddoom-localleader-key
, they don’t apply to non-evil sessions.
Evil-specific configuration and keybindings (defined with map!
) will be
ignored without :editor evil
present (and omitted when byte-compiling).
Keep in mind that, at the time of this writing, Doom was designed by a vimmer, for vimmers. Little consideration has been put into designing a keybind scheme for vanilla Emacs users (though it’s being worked on!).
That means that much of Doom’s functionality will be orphaned in an evil-less setup. You’ll have to set your own keybinds.
I suggest studying config/default/+emacs-bindings.el to see what keybinds are available for non-evil users. Otherwise, you may find inspiration on the example Doom configurations page.
Doom replaces the s
and S
keys with the evil-snipe
package (a port of
vim-seek/vim-sneak for 2-character versions of f/F/t/T).
To disable evil-snipe on s/S, you can either:
- Disable
evil-snipe-mode
by adding(remove-hook 'doom-first-input-hook #'evil-snipe-mode)
to$DOOMDIR/config.el
, - Or disable
evil-snipe
completely with(package! evil-snipe :disable t)
added to$DOOMDIR/packages.el
, but this will also disable incremental highlighting for the f/F/t/T motions keys. - Or use
cl
andcc
, respectively; they do the same thing.
Doom changes the behavior of the Y
key in normal mode to yank-to-EOL
(equivalent to y$
). This was to make it consistent with the C
and D
capital operators, and because it was redundant with yy
, which is easier to
type than y$
.
If you prefer the old behavior, it can be reversed with:
;; add to ~/.doom.d/config.el
(setq! evil-want-Y-yank-to-eol nil)
Vim (and evil) move the cursor one character back when exiting insert mode. If you prefer that it didn’t, set:
;; add to ~/.doom.d/config.el
(setq evil-move-cursor-back nil)