From 7a1418dd6474a3b1bc5357b5fbd3ff0771e53cb9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom Willemse Date: Sat, 3 Oct 2015 00:39:52 +0200 Subject: Move circe settings to separate Org file --- emacs/.emacs.d/Makefile | 13 ++- emacs/.emacs.d/init-circe.org | 221 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ emacs/.emacs.d/init.org | 226 +----------------------------------------- 3 files changed, 236 insertions(+), 224 deletions(-) create mode 100644 emacs/.emacs.d/init-circe.org (limited to 'emacs') diff --git a/emacs/.emacs.d/Makefile b/emacs/.emacs.d/Makefile index a5ab771..def0856 100644 --- a/emacs/.emacs.d/Makefile +++ b/emacs/.emacs.d/Makefile @@ -15,11 +15,18 @@ all: init2.elc init.elc $(AUTOLOADS_FILE) $(SITE_LISPS) snippets @echo "ELC $<" @$(EMACS) $(EARGS) -eval "(byte-compile-file \"$<\")" -init.el: init2.el -init2.el site-lisp/circe-init.el: init.org +define tangle= @echo "OBT $<" @$(EMACS) $(EARGS) -l "ob-tangle" \ - -eval "(org-babel-tangle-file \"init.org\")" + -eval "(org-babel-tangle-file \"$<\")" +endef + +init.el: init2.el +init2.el: init.org + $(call tangle) + +site-lisp/circe-init.el: init-circe.org + $(call tangle) ### Site Lisp diff --git a/emacs/.emacs.d/init-circe.org b/emacs/.emacs.d/init-circe.org new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b13c3e0 --- /dev/null +++ b/emacs/.emacs.d/init-circe.org @@ -0,0 +1,221 @@ +#+PROPERTY: tangle site-lisp/circe-init.el +#+STARTUP: content + +I used to use ERC mostly because I didn't really use IRC at all and it +was basically the first IRC client in Emacs that was presented to me, +it being built-in and all. When I started to use IRC more and wanted +to customize the way it looks more I was surprised to find that it +wasn't all that easy. A friend of mine was using Circe and he helped +me figure out how to get started with customizing Circe the way I +wanted it. So now I use Circe. + +* Require the needed libraries + + In order to keep compiler warnings to a minimum, require the + libraries that are used in the configuration of Circe. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (require 'lui) + (require 'circe) + (require 's) + #+END_SRC + +* Clean-up the display of messages + + I once saw a very clean and simple weechat configuration on + [[https://www.reddit.com/r/unixporn][/r/unixporn]] and really wanted to have something similar. This was + the start of my disappointment in ERC, I couldn't figure out how to + change the way messages were printed. With a little help I did find + out how to do it in Circe. + + First we create a variable to store the length of the longest known + nick, so we can properly align all messages. This variable should be + buffer-local because each IRC chat will have different users with + different length names. We start with a length of ~0~ because we don't + know what the shortest nick there is going to be. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defvar oni:circe-longest-nick 0) + (make-variable-buffer-local 'oni:circe-longest-nick) + #+END_SRC + + Then we write the function that will print the most important + messages, the ones people send, including me. Whenever we get a + message or send a message, we check the length of the nick with the + last recorded maximum length. If the new nick is longer that any + previous ones we set this new length as the longest known length and + adjust =lui-fill-type= accordingly. This ensures that continuation + lines are indented to the correct column. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun oni:circe-say-formatter (&rest keywords) + (let* ((nick (plist-get keywords :nick)) + (len (length nick))) + (when (> len oni:circe-longest-nick) + (setq oni:circe-longest-nick len) + (setq-local lui-fill-type (make-string (+ len 3) ?\ ))) + (format "%s %s" (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " nick) + (plist-get keywords :body)))) + #+END_SRC + + I use this formatter both for messages I send myself and incoming + messages, because they should basically look the same. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (setq circe-format-self-say #'oni:circe-say-formatter + circe-format-say #'oni:circe-say-formatter) + #+END_SRC + + The rest of the formatting functions are basically the same, except + they don't need to change the known size of nicks because they don't + print the nick in the same column, instead they usually print + something like =***= to indicate that it is a system message and not a + user message. We do pad whatever they print with the same number of + spaces to keep them right-justified with the nicks. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun oni:circe-action-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s %s %s" (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "*") + (plist-get keywords :nick) + (plist-get keywords :body))) + + (defun oni:circe-server-message-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s %s" (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") + (plist-get keywords :body))) + + (defun oni:circe-server-join-in-channel-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s Join: %s (%s) joined %s" + (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") + (plist-get keywords :nick) + (plist-get keywords :userinfo) + (plist-get keywords :channel))) + + (defun oni:circe-server-join-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s %s joined the channel" + (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") + (plist-get keywords :nick))) + + (defun oni:circe-server-quit-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s %s quit IRC: %s" + (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") + (plist-get keywords :nick) + (plist-get keywords :reason))) + + (defun oni:circe-server-quit-channel-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s %s left %s: %s" + (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") + (plist-get keywords :nick) + (plist-get keywords :channel) + (plist-get keywords :reason))) + + (defun oni:circe-server-part-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s %s parted %s: %s" + (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") + (plist-get keywords :nick) + (plist-get keywords :channel) + (plist-get keywords :reason))) + + (defun oni:circe-server-nick-change-formatter (&rest keywords) + (format "%s %s is now known as %s" + (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") + (plist-get keywords :old-nick) + (plist-get keywords :new-nick))) + + (setq circe-format-self-action #'oni:circe-action-formatter) + (setq circe-format-action #'oni:circe-action-formatter) + (setq circe-format-server-message #'oni:circe-server-message-formatter) + (setq circe-format-server-join-in-channel + #'oni:circe-server-join-in-channel-formatter) + (setq circe-format-server-join #'oni:circe-server-join-formatter) + (setq circe-format-server-quit #'oni:circe-server-quit-formatter) + (setq circe-format-server-quit-channel + #'oni:circe-server-quit-channel-formatter) + (setq circe-format-server-part #'oni:circe-server-part-formatter) + (setq circe-format-server-nick-change + #'oni:circe-server-nick-change-formatter) + #+END_SRC + +* Automatically join some channels + + I started using IRC because #mowedline was started and I felt + obligated to join it as I was one of two known Mowedline users at + the time. So now that's the one I'm usually active in. I do like to + keep an eye on #emacs from time to time and #ninthfloor in case + something happens there, though usually not. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (setq circe-network-options + `(("Freenode" + :nick "ryuslash" + :channels ("#emacs" "#mowedline" "#ninthfloor")))) + #+END_SRC + +* Change the time-stamp + + I use only a small window to view the IRC channel I'm in usually, + the default format put the time-stamp just a little too far to the + right and would always cause either line truncation or filling to + the next line. So I put the time-stamp in the right margin so it's + always to the right of all messages and no messages can run under + it, so essentially it has it's own column. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (setq lui-time-stamp-position 'right-margin) + (setq lui-time-stamp-format "%H:%M") + #+END_SRC + + Give the right margin just enough room to show the time-stamps, no + more, no less. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun oni:set-circe-margin-width () + (setq right-margin-width 5)) + + (add-hook 'lui-mode-hook #'oni:set-circe-margin-width) + #+END_SRC + +* Clean-up the channel buffers further + + When chatting with people in an IRC channel, there really isn't much + need for any information in the mode-line. This is mostly because + the channel I'm most active on always has its own window. Visual + line mode is very handy to have in chats, in case I type very long + lines. And the =wrap-prefix= is set so that when I do type long lines, + they are filled nicely to the circe prompt. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun oni:remove-mode-line () + (setq mode-line-format nil)) + + (defun oni:set-circe-prompt-wrap-prefix () + (setq wrap-prefix " ")) + + (add-hook 'circe-channel-mode-hook #'oni:remove-mode-line) + (add-hook 'circe-channel-mode-hook #'oni:set-circe-prompt-wrap-prefix) + (add-hook 'circe-channel-mode-hook 'visual-line-mode) + #+END_SRC + +* Show #mowedline in a frame without minibuffer + + When I'm chatting on #mowedline I do so in a separate small window. + This window needs no minibuffer as I do very little actualy Emacsy + things in it. Just typing a little and reading. So far I only do + this with #mowedline. In order to specifically show it in a frame + without a minibuffer I use =display-buffer-alist= to specify how to + show it. The function called dynamically binds =default-frame-alist= + to add a =minibuffer= element with the value =nil= (meaning, no + minibuffer). I can't do this in the regular =default-frame-alist= + because I want all other frames to show up /with/ a minibuffer. It + then creates a new frame and switches to the given buffer in it. + + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun oni:display-in-minibufferless-frame (buffer _) + (let ((default-frame-alist default-frame-alist)) + (push '(minibuffer . nil) default-frame-alist) + (let ((frame (make-frame))) + (select-frame frame) + (switch-to-buffer buffer)))) + + (add-to-list 'display-buffer-alist + '("^\#mowedline$" oni:display-in-minibufferless-frame)) + #+END_SRC diff --git a/emacs/.emacs.d/init.org b/emacs/.emacs.d/init.org index 03630c9..c7d2e27 100644 --- a/emacs/.emacs.d/init.org +++ b/emacs/.emacs.d/init.org @@ -1294,232 +1294,16 @@ #+END_SRC ** Circe - :PROPERTIES: - :header-args: :tangle site-lisp/circe-init.el - :END: - - I used to use ERC mostly because I didn't really use IRC at all and - it was basically the first IRC client in Emacs that was presented - to me, it being built-in and all. When I started to use IRC more - and wanted to customize the way it looks more I was surprised to - find that it wasn't all that easy. A friend of mine was using Circe - and he helped me figure out how to get started with customizing - Circe the way I wanted it. So now I use Circe. These settings will be tangled to =site-lisp/circe-init.el= and loaded when Circe is loaded. -*** Require the needed libraries - - In order to keep compiler warnings to a minimum, require the - libraries that are used in the configuration of Circe. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (require 'lui) - (require 'circe) - (require 's) - #+END_SRC - -*** Clean-up the display of messages - - I once saw a very clean and simple weechat configuration on - [[https://www.reddit.com/r/unixporn][/r/unixporn]] and really wanted to have something similar. This was - the start of my disappointment in ERC, I couldn't figure out how - to change the way messages were printed. With a little help I did - find out how to do it in Circe. - - First we create a variable to store the length of the longest - known nick, so we can properly align all messages. This variable - should be buffer-local because each IRC chat will have different - users with different length names. We start with a length of ~0~ - because we don't know what the shortest nick there is going to be. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (defvar oni:circe-longest-nick 0) - (make-variable-buffer-local 'oni:circe-longest-nick) - #+END_SRC - - Then we write the function that will print the most important - messages, the ones people send, including me. Whenever we get a - message or send a message, we check the length of the nick with - the last recorded maximum length. If the new nick is longer that - any previous ones we set this new length as the longest known - length and adjust =lui-fill-type= accordingly. This ensures that - continuation lines are indented to the correct column. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (defun oni:circe-say-formatter (&rest keywords) - (let* ((nick (plist-get keywords :nick)) - (len (length nick))) - (when (> len oni:circe-longest-nick) - (setq oni:circe-longest-nick len) - (setq-local lui-fill-type (make-string (+ len 3) ?\ ))) - (format "%s %s" (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " nick) - (plist-get keywords :body)))) - #+END_SRC - - I use this formatter both for messages I send myself and incoming - messages, because they should basically look the same. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (setq circe-format-self-say #'oni:circe-say-formatter - circe-format-say #'oni:circe-say-formatter) - #+END_SRC - - The rest of the formatting functions are basically the same, - except they don't need to change the known size of nicks because - they don't print the nick in the same column, instead they usually - print something like "***" to indicate that it is a system message - and not a user message. We do pad whatever they print with the - same number of spaces to keep them right-justified with the nicks. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (defun oni:circe-action-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s %s %s" (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "*") - (plist-get keywords :nick) - (plist-get keywords :body))) - - (defun oni:circe-server-message-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s %s" (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") - (plist-get keywords :body))) - - (defun oni:circe-server-join-in-channel-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s Join: %s (%s) joined %s" - (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") - (plist-get keywords :nick) - (plist-get keywords :userinfo) - (plist-get keywords :channel))) - - (defun oni:circe-server-join-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s %s joined the channel" - (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") - (plist-get keywords :nick))) - - (defun oni:circe-server-quit-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s %s quit IRC: %s" - (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") - (plist-get keywords :nick) - (plist-get keywords :reason))) - - (defun oni:circe-server-quit-channel-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s %s left %s: %s" - (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") - (plist-get keywords :nick) - (plist-get keywords :channel) - (plist-get keywords :reason))) - - (defun oni:circe-server-part-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s %s parted %s: %s" - (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") - (plist-get keywords :nick) - (plist-get keywords :channel) - (plist-get keywords :reason))) - - (defun oni:circe-server-nick-change-formatter (&rest keywords) - (format "%s %s is now known as %s" - (s-pad-left oni:circe-longest-nick " " "***") - (plist-get keywords :old-nick) - (plist-get keywords :new-nick))) - - (setq circe-format-self-action #'oni:circe-action-formatter) - (setq circe-format-action #'oni:circe-action-formatter) - (setq circe-format-server-message #'oni:circe-server-message-formatter) - (setq circe-format-server-join-in-channel - #'oni:circe-server-join-in-channel-formatter) - (setq circe-format-server-join #'oni:circe-server-join-formatter) - (setq circe-format-server-quit #'oni:circe-server-quit-formatter) - (setq circe-format-server-quit-channel - #'oni:circe-server-quit-channel-formatter) - (setq circe-format-server-part #'oni:circe-server-part-formatter) - (setq circe-format-server-nick-change - #'oni:circe-server-nick-change-formatter) - #+END_SRC - -*** Automatically join some channels - - I started using IRC because #mowedline was started and I felt - obligated to join it as I was one of two known Mowedline users at - the time. So now that's the one I'm usually active in. I do like - to keep an eye on #emacs from time to time and #ninthfloor in case - something happens there, though usually not. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (setq circe-network-options - `(("Freenode" - :nick "ryuslash" - :channels ("#emacs" "#mowedline" "#ninthfloor")))) - #+END_SRC - -*** Change the time-stamp - - I use only a small window to view the IRC channel I'm in usually, - the default format put the time-stamp just a little too far to the - right and would always cause either line truncation or filling to - the next line. So I put the time-stamp in the right margin so it's - always to the right of all messages and no messages can run under - it, so essentially it has it's own column. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (setq lui-time-stamp-position 'right-margin) - (setq lui-time-stamp-format "%H:%M") - #+END_SRC - - Give the right margin just enough room to show the time-stamps, no - more, no less. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (defun oni:set-circe-margin-width () - (setq right-margin-width 5)) - - (add-hook 'lui-mode-hook #'oni:set-circe-margin-width) - #+END_SRC - -*** Clean-up the channel buffers further - - When chatting with people in an IRC channel, there really isn't - much need for any information in the mode-line. This is mostly - because the channel I'm most active on always has its own window. - Visual line mode is very handy to have in chats, in case I type - very long lines. And the =wrap-prefix= is set so that when I do type - long lines, they are filled nicely to the circe prompt. - - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (defun oni:remove-mode-line () - (setq mode-line-format nil)) - - (defun oni:set-circe-prompt-wrap-prefix () - (setq wrap-prefix " ")) - - (add-hook 'circe-channel-mode-hook #'oni:remove-mode-line) - (add-hook 'circe-channel-mode-hook #'oni:set-circe-prompt-wrap-prefix) - (add-hook 'circe-channel-mode-hook 'visual-line-mode) - #+END_SRC - -*** Show #mowedline in a frame without minibuffer - - When I'm chatting on #mowedline I do so in a separate small - window. This window needs no minibuffer as I do very little - actualy Emacsy things in it. Just typing a little and reading. So - far I only do this with #mowedline. In order to specifically show - it in a frame without a minibuffer I use =display-buffer-alist= to - specify how to show it. The function called dynamically binds - =default-frame-alist= to add a =minibuffer= element with the value - =nil= (meaning, no minibuffer). I can't do this in the regular - =default-frame-alist= because I want all other frames to show up - /with/ a minibuffer. It then creates a new frame and switches to the - given buffer in it. + #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (with-eval-after-load 'circe + (require 'circe-init)) + #+END_SRC - #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp - (defun oni:display-in-minibufferless-frame (buffer _) - (let ((default-frame-alist default-frame-alist)) - (push '(minibuffer . nil) default-frame-alist) - (let ((frame (make-frame))) - (select-frame frame) - (switch-to-buffer buffer)))) - - (add-to-list 'display-buffer-alist - '("^\#mowedline$" oni:display-in-minibufferless-frame)) - #+END_SRC +#+INCLUDE: init-circe.org :minlevel 3 * Minor mode customization -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf