Nameless — /less is more/ ═════════════════════════ *Hide package namespaces in your emacs-lisp code.* Simply put, turn on this minor mode, and the namespace prefix of the package you’re editing will be hidden by a `:'. Here’s a comparison. The image to the *left* is what you normally see. The image to the *right* has `nameless-mode' turned on. Usage ───── To use this package add the following configuration to your Emacs init file. ┌──── │ (add-hook 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook #'nameless-mode) └──── You can configure a string to use instead of `:' by setting the `nameless-prefix', and the name of the face used is `nameless-face'. You can even just hide the prefix completely by setting this variable to an empty string. While the mode is active, the `C-c C--' key inserts the package namespace if appropriate. Configuration ═════════════ Quickly typing the namespace ──────────────────────────── `nameless-mode' binds the `C-c C--' key to `nameless-insert-name', which immediately inserts the current name for you, or even expands aliases to the names they point to. Let’s say you’re in a file called `foo-bar.el'. ┌──── │ C-c C-- → foo-bar- │ fl C-c C-- → font-lock- └──── There’s also a command called `nameless-insert-name-or-self-insert'. You can bind this to the `_' key and make it even faster to insert the name. Configuring the namespace name ────────────────────────────── Nameless guesses the package name with the `lm-get-package-name' function, but sometimes this might not match the name you want to use. In these situations, simply set `nameless-current-name' as file-local variable. To do that, invoke the following command: ┌──── │ M-x add-file-local-variable RET nameless-current-name RET "package-name" └──── You can also set the same name for all lisp files in a project by setting dir-local variables with `M-x add-file-local-variable'. If you /don’t/ want Nameless to use a namespace name at all (neither manual nor automatic), you can set `nameless-discover-current-name' to `nil'. This will disable this functionality, so that Nameless will /only/ use aliases (see next item). Requiring other packages as aliases ─────────────────────────────────── Nameless can also be used to “import” other packages as aliases. For instance, in the default behaviour, functions in the `font-lock' package (e.g., `font-lock-add-keywords') will be displayed with the `fl:' prefix (e.g., `fl:add-keywords'). You can configure your own aliases globally with `nameless-global-aliases'. ┌──── │ (setq nameless-global-aliases '(("fl" . "font-lock") │ ("s" . "seq") │ ("me" . "macroexp") │ ("c" . "cider") │ ("q" . "queue"))) └──── You can also configure aliases per-file by setting `nameless-aliases' as a file-local variable. ┌──── │ ;; Local Variables: │ ;; nameless-aliases: (("c" . "cider")) │ ;; End: └──── Note that there’s no `quote' before `((c'! You can also configure it for a whole project, by setting it as a dir-local variable. Private symbols ─────────────── Private symbols in elisp are written with an extra dash after the prefix (e.g., `foobar--indent-impl'). With Nameless, these are usually displayed as `:-indent-impl', but you can also make them be displayed as `::indent-impl' by setting ┌──── │ (setq nameless-private-prefix t) └──── Packages that don’t use `-' (hyphen) as a separator ─────────────────────────────────────────────────── You can set `nameless-separator' file-locally to whatever separator you package uses. Most packages use hyphens, by some use `/', `|', or `:'. You can also set it to `nil' globally and the separator will never be hidden. Indentation and paragraph filling ───────────────────────────────── Hiding parts of symbols could affect the way Emacs indents your code and fills your paragraphs. Nameless lets you decide whether you want that to happen or not. The default behavior is that code is indented according to what you see (i.e., according to short symbols), but text inside strings is *not*. So text inside strings will be filled in the same way as if you didn’t have `nameless-mode'. Here’s how a docstring might be filled with `nameless-mode' enabled: ┌──── │ If point is immediately after an alias configured in the name you │ had in `:aliases' or `:global-aliases', replace │ it with the full name for that alias. └──── Altough it may look strange that the second line is so short, that’s the correct way. When view on a `*Help*' buffer, that docstring will look like this: ┌──── │ If point is immediately after an alias configured in the name you │ had in `nameless-aliases' or `nameless-global-aliases', replace │ it with the full name for that alias. └──── To change this behavior, configure the variable `nameless-affect-indentation-and-filling'.