Jessie Hildebrandt
2050f81860
inhibit-buffer-hooks parameter for get-buffer-create was introduced in Emacs 28. |
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.repo-assets | ||
test | ||
.gitattributes | ||
ert-test.sh | ||
LICENSE | ||
mood-line-segment-checker.el | ||
mood-line-segment-indentation.el | ||
mood-line-segment-modal.el | ||
mood-line-segment-vc.el | ||
mood-line.el | ||
README.md |
mood-line
About
mood-line is a lightweight, drop-in replacement for the default Emacs mode line configuration.
Features
-
Clean, informative design
-
Customizable, modular segment format
-
Customizable glyph sets
-
Lazy-loaded extensions
-
Lightweight, no dependencies
Preview
Configuration
You can install mood-line directly via package-install
from MELPA.
After installation, you can activate the global minor mode with M-x mood-line-mode
.
Deactivating mode-line-mode
will restore the default mode-line-format
.
If you are a user of use-package
, it is easy to configure mood-line directly in your init.el:
(use-package mood-line
;; Enable mood-line
:config
(mood-line-mode)
;; Use pretty Fira Code-compatible glyphs
:custom
(mood-line-glyph-alist mood-line-glyphs-fira-code))
Format
mood-line uses a modular segment format, and it is easy to reconfigure:
;; Default format:
;; * init.el 4:32 Top ELisp ! Issues: 2
(setq mood-line-format mood-line-format-default)
;; Extended format:
;; * init.el 4:32:52 Top SPCx2 LF UTF-8 ELisp ! Issues: 2
(setq mood-line-format mood-line-format-default-extended)
;; Custom format:
;; * init.el : ELisp Top 4:32 | ! Issues: 2
(setq mood-line-format
(mood-line-defformat
:left
(((mood-line-segment-buffer-status) . " ")
((mood-line-segment-buffer-name) . " : ")
(mood-line-segment-major-mode))
:right
(((mood-line-segment-scroll) . " ")
((mood-line-segment-cursor-position) . " ")
((when (mood-line-segment-checker) "|") . " ")
((mood-line-segment-checker) . " "))))
More information on the format specification is available in the documentation:
M-x describe-variable mood-line-format
M-x describe-function mood-line-defformat
Glyphs
By default, mood-line will use basic ASCII character glyphs to decorate mode line segments.
If you'd like to see prettier Unicode glyphs, you can change the value of mood-line-glyph-alist
:
;; The default set of glyphs:
;; * myModifiedFile.js Replace*3 + main JavaScript ! Issues: 2
(setq mood-line-glyph-alist mood-line-glyphs-ascii)
;; A set of Fira Code-compatible Unicode glyphs:
;; ● myModifiedFile.js Replace×3 + main JavaScript → Issues: 2
(setq mood-line-glyph-alist mood-line-glyphs-fira-code)
;; A set of Unicode glyphs:
;; ● myModifiedFile.js Replace✕3 🞤 main JavaScript ⚑ Issues: 2
(setq mood-line-glyph-alist mood-line-glyphs-unicode)
If you'd like to supply your own glyphs, you can use the customization interface
(M-x customize-variable mood-line-glyph-alist
) or view the documentation
(M-x describe-variable mood-line-glyph-alist
) for more information.
You can further tweak the behavior and appearance of mood-line by viewing the customizable variables
and faces in the mood-line
and mood-line-faces
customization groups. (M-x customize-group mood-line
)
Testing
To run the included tests:
./ert-test.sh
Feedback
If you experience any issues with this package, please open an issue on the issue tracker.
Suggestions for improvements and feature requests are always appreciated, as well!