3.8 KiB
mode-icons
Show icons instead of mode names in emacs.
Some of the modes that have icons instead of names now:
Modes | icon |
---|---|
Coffee | |
CSS | |
Emacs-Lisp | |
Haml | |
HTML | |
JS | |
Lisp | |
Org-mode | |
PHP | |
Python | |
Ruby | |
SVG | |
Sass | |
Scheme | |
Shell | |
Slim | |
YAML |
Requirements
As of version 0.3.0 you can also use icons from some icon fonts, specifically:
You need to have installed these on your system in order to use these fonts, mode-icons will not do this for you.
Installation
manually
Place mode-icons.el
somewhere in your load-path
and copy the
icons/
directory there as well. Then require
mode-icons
in your
Emacs init file.
Usage
Once installed you can add (mode-icons-mode)
to your init file.
Ignoring mode-icons in other buffers
When looking at buffers with commands like ibuffer
, they display the
icons for the mode names as well. If you don't like this behavior you
can change mode-icons-change-mode-name
to be nil:
(setq mode-icons-change-mode-name nil)
Changing how mode-icons recolors images
Additionally, if the image icon was an xpm
icon, then you can have
it changed to match your mode-line face. In the example below, the
inactive mode-line shows the emacs and yasnippet icon changed to match
the inactive mode-line:
This is enabled by default, and can be disabled by:
(setq mode-icons-desaturate-inactive nil)
You can also change the icon to match the active mode line (disabled by default):
(setq mode-icons-desaturate-active t)
Some of the black and white images are tagged as black and white and are automatically recolored to match the mode-line face. You can turn this off and use the black and white image by setting:
(setq mode-icons-grayscale-transform nil)