nex3 / perspective-el

Perspectives for Emacs.
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Perspective for Emacs

Test perspective

The Perspective package provides multiple named workspaces (or "perspectives") in Emacs, similar to multiple desktops in window managers like Awesome and XMonad, and Spaces on the Mac.

Each perspective has its own buffer list and its own window layout, along with some other isolated niceties, like the xref ring. This makes it easy to work on many separate projects without getting lost in all the buffers. Switching to a perspective activates its window configuration, and when in a perspective, only its buffers are available (by default).

Each Emacs frame has a distinct list of perspectives.

Perspective supports saving its state to a file, so long-lived work sessions may be saved and recovered as needed.

At long last this project has a changelog; please refer to it for release notes.

Sample Use Cases

Multiple Projects

Working on multiple projects can become difficult to organize as their buffer lists mix together during a long-running Emacs session. Searching for a buffer by name works well if you know what to search for, but sometimes picking from a list is easier — in which case, keeping the list well-pruned for relevant buffers becomes an important source of efficiency in file and buffer management. Perspective helps out by letting you keep separate named buffer lists and window layouts.

This use case works really well in conjunction with Projectile. Projectile helps with buffer navigation (and other project-specific tasks) in cases when a project has a well-defined root directory. Perspective then steps in to help manage unrelated buffers: shells, REPLs, dired buffers visiting directories outside the project, or files relevant to the project not under the same root as the rest of the source. It also helps deal with the situation of one project with multiple source repositories where having a shared window layout or buffer list makes sense.

Yak Shaving

Suppose you're developing feature X in perspective feature-X. This keeps you working with one set of files and windows. You then realize that this feature requires you to fix a bug in an unrelated set of files. You don't want to lose all the context you have built up for feature X, so you open a new perspective, bugfix-Y, letting you open new files and buffers without disturbing your work on feature-X. Then you are asked to urgently look into something related to development of feature Z, but again: you don't want to lose context. So you open a new perspective feature-Z, and fill it with a whole bunch of new files and windows — all without losing any of the context for your work on bug Y or feature X.

When you finish looking at Z, you close perspective feature-Z, and return to bugfix-Y, and restore its window layout and buffer list. When you finish with Y, you close perspective bugfix-Y and return to feature-X.

(Hint: this workflow works best with the persp-sort variable set to 'created — see documentation below.)

Perspective Merging

Yak shaving is useful for working on projects that are largely unrelated but sometimes you are working on multiple projects that are very much related, to the point that you want to view files from both projects at the same time. This is where perspective merging comes in.

Suppose you are working on a project that requires developing multiple auxiliary libraries. It may get messy to develop both the main project and all the libraries from the same perspective so instead you put each library in its own perspective so you can work on them in isolation. All of a sudden though you wish to see library code from the main projects perspective. Instead of switching back and forth between the library and main projects perspectives you can run M-x persp-merge and import the buffers from the libraries perspective. When you are done you can run remove the imported buffers with M-x persp-unmerge.

The purpose of perspective merging is to combine the buffer lists of different perspectives while keeping a clear distinction of which buffers belong to which perspective.

Similar Packages

The following Emacs packages implement comparable functionality:

Emacs 27 includes two new buffer and window organizing features: Tab Line (global-tab-line-mode) and Tab Bar (tab-bar-mode).

Compatibility

Perspective does not work with Emacs desktop.el. This is because Perspective state stores buffer and window information in frame parameters, and desktop-save-mode does not support saving those types of data.

Instead, Perspective provides its own disk save and load feature, which cleanly saves perspectives.

Installation

You should install Perspective from MELPA or MELPA Stable.

Users of use-package can install Perspective as follows:

(use-package perspective
  :bind
  ("C-x C-b" . persp-list-buffers)         ; or use a nicer switcher, see below
  :custom
  (persp-mode-prefix-key (kbd "C-c M-p"))  ; pick your own prefix key here
  :init
  (persp-mode))

Replace the binding for C-x C-b, the default Emacs buffer switcher, with one of the nicer implementations described in the Buffer switchers section.

If not using use-package, put perspective.el from this source repository somewhere on your load path, and use something similar to this:

(require 'perspective)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-b") 'persp-list-buffers)
(customize-set-variable 'persp-mode-prefix-key (kbd "C-c M-p"))
(persp-mode)

Users of Debian 9 or later or Ubuntu 16.04 or later may simply apt-get install elpa-perspective, though be aware that the stable version provided in these repositories is likely to be (extremely) outdated.

Usage

To activate Perspective, use (persp-mode). This creates a single default main perpsective.

:information_source: Since the release of Emacs 28, Perspective no longer ships with a default command prefix. Users should pick a prefix comfortable for them. In the days of Emacs 27 and earlier, the default prefix was C-x x. This conflicts with bindings built into Emacs 28.

To set a prefix key for all Perspective commands, customize persp-mode-prefix-key. Reasonable choices include C-x x (for users who don't care about the Emacs buffer-related commands this shadows), C-z (for users who don't suspend Emacs to shell background), C-c C-p (for users who don't mind the conflicting keys with org-mode and markdown-mode), C-c M-p (for users who don't mind the slightly awkward chord), and H-p (for users who don't mind relying exclusively on a non-standard Hyper modifier).

The actual command keys (the ones pressed after the prefix) are defined in perspective-map. Here are the main commands defined in perspective-map:

Buffer Switching

Since Perspective maintains distinct buffer lists for each perspective, it helps to use Perspective-aware methods for buffer switching.

Since Emacs 27.1, the commands previous-buffer and next-buffer can be made Perspective-aware using the switch-to-prev-buffer-skip variable as follows:

(setq switch-to-prev-buffer-skip
      (lambda (win buff bury-or-kill)
        (not (persp-is-current-buffer buff))))

When using one of the following buffer switchers, you will only be prompted for buffers in the current perspective and the frame-specific "global" shared perspective. (The persp-add-buffer-to-frame-global command adds a buffer to this special frame-specific perspective, whose name is determined by persp-frame-global-perspective-name and defaults to GLOBAL.)

Ido: Interactive Do (Ido, ido-mode), in particular its ido-switch-buffer command, is automatically Perspective-aware when persp-mode is enabled.

list-buffers / buffer-menu: Perspective provides wrappers for the similar list-buffers and buffer-menu: persp-list-buffers and persp-buffer-menu. (Note that Emacs binds C-x C-b to list-buffers by default.) When these functions are called normally, they show the buffer menu filtered by the current perspective. With a prefix argument, they show the buffer menu of all the buffers in all perspectives. (The difference between list-buffers and buffer-menu: the former calls display-buffer, i.e., may split windows depending on display-buffer-alist, and the latter calls switch-to-buffer, i.e., flips the current window to the buffer list buffer.)

bs.el: Perspective provides a wrapper for bs-show: persp-bs-show. When this function is called normally, it shows a list of buffers filtered by the current perspective. With a prefix argument, it shows a list of buffers in all perspectives.

IBuffer: Perspective provides a wrapper for ibuffer: persp-ibuffer. When this function is called normally, it shows a list of buffers filtered by the current perspective. With a prefix argument, it shows a list of buffers in all perspectives.

If you want to group buffers by persp-name in ibuffer buffer, use persp-ibuffer-set-filter-groups. Or, make it the default:

(add-hook 'ibuffer-hook
          (lambda ()
            (persp-ibuffer-set-filter-groups)
            (unless (eq ibuffer-sorting-mode 'alphabetic)
              (ibuffer-do-sort-by-alphabetic))))

Helm: Perspective ships with buffer-listing advice for Helm, so Helm's buffer listing code should be automatically Perspective-aware when persp-mode is enabled. (Older versions of Helm relied on the machinery of ido-mode for listing buffers, so they did not require this advice; see this Helm commit and this Perspective commit for details.) If helm-buffers-list is called with a prefix argument, it will show buffers in all perspectives. In addition, Perspective adds actions to helm-buffers-list to add buffers to the current perspective (mainly relevant to the prefix-argument version) and to remove buffers from the current perspective.

Consult: Perspective provides persp-consult-source source that will list buffers in current perspective. You can hide default buffer source and add persp-consult-source to consult-buffer-sources for consult to only list buffers in current perspective like so:

(consult-customize consult--source-buffer :hidden t :default nil)
(add-to-list 'consult-buffer-sources persp-consult-source)

Note that you can still access list of all buffers in all perspectives by narrowing using prefix b.

Ivy / Counsel: Perspective provides two commands for listing buffers using Ivy and Counsel: persp-ivy-switch-buffer and persp-counsel-switch-buffer. When these functions are called normally, they show a list of buffers filtered by the current perspective. With a prefix argument, they shows a list of buffers in all perspectives. The distinction between the ivy and counsel versions is the same as between ivy-switch-buffer and counsel-switch-buffer: the latter shows a preview of the buffer to switch to, and the former does not.

It is a good idea to bind one these helper functions with the :bind form of use-package. Or, if you do not use use-package, it can also be bound globally, e.g.:

(global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-b") (lambda (arg)
                                  (interactive "P")
                                  (if (fboundp 'persp-bs-show)
                                      (persp-bs-show arg)
                                    (bs-show "all"))))

Notes on completing-read Enhancements

Users of a completing-read enhancement framework (such as Ivy, Selectrum, or Vertico) may wish to use the following two functions:

Both these functions behave like the built-ins, but use completing-read directly. When called normally, they list buffers filtered by the current perspective. With a prefix argument, they list buffers in all perspectives.

The following sample use-package invocation changes Emacs default key bindings to use the replacements:

(use-package perspective
  :bind (("C-x b" . persp-switch-to-buffer*)
         ("C-x k" . persp-kill-buffer*))
  :config
  (persp-mode))

Saving Sessions to Disk

A pair of functions, persp-state-save and persp-state-load, implement perspective durability on disk. When called interactively, they prompt for files to save sessions to and restore from.

A custom variable, persp-state-default-file, sets a default file to use for saving and restoring perspectives. When it is set, persp-state-save may be called non-interactively without an argument and it will save to the file referenced by that variable. This makes it easy to automatically save perspective sessions when Emacs exits:

(add-hook 'kill-emacs-hook #'persp-state-save)

A limitation of persp-state-save and persp-state-load is that they do not attempt to deal with non-file-visiting buffers with non-trivial state. Saving shell, REPL, and compilation-mode buffers is not supported. When saved to a file, any windows pointing to them are changed to point to the perspective's *scratch* buffer. (Live windows are, of course, left alone.)

Customization

Perspective supports several custom variables (see its section in M-x customize). The following are likely to be of most interest:

To change keys used after the prefix key, with use-package you can do:

;; remap n to N to switch to next perspective
(use-package perspective
  :bind (
    :map perspective-map
      ("n" . nil)
      ("N" . persp-next)))

Or without use-package:

(define-key perspective-map (kbd "n") nil)
(define-key perspective-map (kbd "N") 'persp-next)

Some Musings on Emacs Window Layouts

The following discussion exceeds the needs of documenting Perspective, but it falls in the category of helping users learn to manage Emacs sessions, and therefore will likely help potential users of Perspective make the experience smoother.

Emacs has bad default behavior when it comes to window handling: many commands and modes have a habit of splitting existing windows and changing the user's carefully thought-out window layout. This tends to be a more serious problem for people who run Emacs on large displays (possibly in full-screen mode): the greater amount of screen real estate makes it easy to split the frame into many smaller windows, making any unexpected alterations more disruptive.

As a result of indiscriminate-seeming window splits and buffer switching in existing windows, new Emacs users can get into the habit of expecting Emacs and its packages to lack basic respect for their layouts. Hence the popularity of things like winner-mode, and packages like shackle.

This may make the value of Perspective seem questionable: why bother with carefully preserving window layouts if Emacs just throws them away on a M-x compile? The answer is to fix the broken defaults. This is fairly easy:

(customize-set-variable 'display-buffer-base-action
  '((display-buffer-reuse-window display-buffer-same-window)
    (reusable-frames . t)))

(customize-set-variable 'even-window-sizes nil)     ; avoid resizing

These settings do the following:

  1. Tell display-buffer to reuse existing windows as much as possible, including in other frames. For example, if there is already a *compilation* buffer in a visible window, switch to that window. This means that Emacs will usually switch windows in a "do what I mean" manner for a warmed-up workflow (one with, say, a couple of source windows, a compilation output window, and a Magit window).
  2. Prevent splits by telling display-buffer to switch to the target buffer in the current window. For example, if there is no *compilation* buffer visible, then the buffer in whichever window was current when compile was run will be replaced with *compilation*. This may seem intrusive, since it changes out the current buffer, but keep in mind that most buffers popped up in this manner are easy to dismiss, either with a dedicated keybinding (often q) or the universally-applicable kill-buffer. This is easier than restoring window arrangements. It is also easier to handle for pre-arranged window layouts, since the appropriate command can simply be run in a window prepared for it in advance. (If this is a step too far, then replace display-buffer-same-window with display-buffer-pop-up-window.)

(An earlier version of this hint modified display-buffer-alist instead of display-buffer-base-action. This was too aggressive and can impact packages which may legitimately want to split windows.)

Documentation of the Emacs framework responsible for "pop-up" windows, display-buffer, is dense and difficult to read, so there have been attempts to summarize the most important bits: