An emacs global minor mode to use emacs frames (i.e. operating system windows) instead of emacs' internal windowing system. This combines particularly well with tiling window managers such as XMonad.
There's a fairly rough screencast showing the kind of things you can do with this here.
By default frames-only-mode
doesn't modify any keybindings. To replace common
window-using keybindings with their frame equivalents add
(frames-only-mode-remap-common-window-split-keybindings)
to your config.
In combination with frames-only-mode
I recommend:
- Running emacs as server-client.
- Binding a window manager hotkey to open new emacs frames (see below).
Bind this shell command to a hotkey to automatically open a useful buffer in a new frame (usually your most recently viewed buffer which isn't currently open):
emacsclient -c -n -e '(switch-to-buffer nil)'
To make this work nicely with git (e.g. to pop up a new frame when we run git commit from the command line) we need to set the editor to run an emacsclient in a new frame. However, unlike the case for running emacsclient instances from the window manager, we don't want it to detach from the console. We can achieve this by adding the following to the ~/.gitconfig
file:
[core]
editor = emacsclient -c
If instead we only used editor = emacsclient
it would try to open a new buffer in an existing frame. This often results in the commit message buffer showing up in a different workspace(!), or in the terminal.
Sometimes when a buffer is closed/buried you want to kill the containing frame,
for example when pressing q
in a help buffer. For things in Emacs itself this
is usually configured by default, but for other things you can control this
behaviour using frames-only-mode-kill-frame-when-buffer-killed-buffer-list
.
For example to automatically kill frames for buffers named *foo*
:
(add-to-list 'frames-only-mode-kill-frame-when-buffer-killed-buffer-list "*foo*")
This variable also supports using regular expressions by using a cons cell where
the car (first) element is 'regexp
and the cdr (second) is the regexp. This is a
little tricky because transient buffers are typically named with *
characters
at the start and end of their names which need escaping. For example to
automatically kill frames for popup buffers from po-mode which are named like
*foo.po*
do:
(add-to-list 'frames-only-mode-kill-frame-when-buffer-killed-buffer-list '(regexp . "\\*.*\\.po\\*"))
(note the double-backslash escaping of the regexp special character here * because we want to treat it as a normal literal character).
If you use the default emacs completion (or ido with a popup completion buffer)
then frames-only-mode-use-windows-for-completion
can be used to control
whether the *Completions*
buffer is displayed in a frame or an emacs window.
The default is to use an emacs window, which works well with any window manager.
Alternatively the *Completions*
buffer can be disabled entirely by setting
completion-auto-help
to nil
.
- Add support for eshell completion
- Fix some customize group weirdness
- Fix sometimes leaving additional frames open after quitting magit
- Regexp support in kill-frame-when-buffer-killed-buffer-list
- Add frames-only-mode-remap-common-window-split-keybindings
This mode originated in a blog post which has some additional details.