This module enables ligatures and arbitrary symbol substitutions with
mac-auto-operator-composition-mode
(on supported macOS systems) or composition
tables (harfbuzz on Emacs 28), falling back on prettify-symbols-mode
otherwise.
This module has no dedicated maintainers.
+extra
Enables extra symbol substitutions in certain modes, for examplelambda
in lisps are replaced withλ
.
This module provides four flags for enabling fall-back ligature support for a particular font. They are:
+fira
EnablesFira Code
ligatures. This requires Fira Code Symbol and a patched version of Fira Code (see below).+hasklig
EnableHasklig
ligatures. This requires a patched version of the HaskLig font (see below).+iosevka
EnableIosevka
ligatures. This requires a patched version of the Iosevka font (see below).+pragmata-pro
EnablePragmata Pro
ligatures. This requires the Pragmata Pro font.
All these flags are ignored if you’re sporting either a) Emacs 28+ with Harfbuzz support (which can compose ligatures natively), or b) Mitsuharu’s
emacs-mac
build on macOS (which usesmac-auto-operator-composition-mode
).
This module installs no packages.
This module requires one of three setups for ligatures to work:
- A recent enough version of Emacs which will compose ligatures automatically (Emacs 28 with Harfbuzz support), or
- Mitsuharu’s
emacs-mac
build on macOS (available on homebrew), or - A patched font for Doom’s fallback ligature support.
Ligatures should be handled without any additional configuration.
- Enable one of the four ligature font flags:
+fira
,+hasklig
,+iosevka
or+pragmata-pro
. - Install the patched version of the associated font with
M-x +ligatures/install-patched-font
. Note: Pragmata Pro cannot be installed this way because it is a non-free font and must be purchased and installed manually.
This module includes configuration to compose combinations like ->
or ::
into prettier glyphs (called a ligature). Depending on the current version of
emacs, this is implemented in two different ways :
- prettify-symbols-mode method
- this is the “legacy” method. It uses a font
which haves the ligatures as separate unicode symbols, and using
prettify-symbols-mode,
->
-like combinations are manually listed and replaced with the correct symbol. The mapping between->
-like sequences and unicode values in the font are font-specific ; therefore+fira
,+iosevka
… files and specific fonts are necessary for it to work. - composition-function-table method
- regexps are used to match all the usual sequences which are composed into ligatures. These regexps are passed to emacs directly, which asks Harfbuzz to shape it. Ligatures are obtained automatically depending on the capabilities of the font, and no font-specific configuration is necessary.
Emacs-mac port implements the composition-function-table method in its code, nothing is necessary on Doom side; otherwise, Doom implements the composition-function-table for emacs 28+ built with Harfbuzz support, and the prettify-symbols-mode method otherwise.
Even though harfbuzz has been included in emacs 27, there is currently a bug (#40864) which prevents a safe usage of composition-function-table method in emacs 27.
If you want to set ligatures for modules that don’t have them by default you can
use the set-ligatures!
macro in your config el file
(after! PACKAGE
(set-ligatures! 'MAJOR-MODE
:symbol "keyword"))
eg.
(after! go-mode ; in this case the major mode and package named the same thing
(set-ligatures! 'go-mode
:def "func" ; function keyword
:true "true" :false "false"
; this will replace not only definitions
; but coresponding functions aswell
:int "int" :str "string"
:float "float" :bool "bool"
:for "for"
:return "return" :yeild "yeild"))
you can set these symbols out of the box
(set-ligatures! 'MAJOR-MODE
;; Functional
:lambda "lambda keyword"
:def "function keyword"
:composition "composition"
:map "map/dictionary keyword"
;; Types
:null "null type"
:true "true keyword"
:false "false keyword"
:int "int keyword"
:float "float keyword"
:str "string keyword"
:bool "boolean keywork"
:list "list keyword"
;; Flow
:not "not operator"
:in "in operator"
:not-in "not in operator"
:and "and keyword"
:or "or keyword"
:for "for keyword"
:some "some keyword"
:return "return"
:yield "yeild"
;; Other
:union "Union keyword"
:intersect "Intersect keyword"
:diff "diff keyword"
:tuple "Tuple Keyword "
:pipe "Pipe Keyword" ;; FIXME: find a non-private char
:dot "Dot operator")
If you have multiple versions of the same keyword you can set the symbol twice
(set-ligatures! scala-mode
:null "none"
:null "None")
if you don’t like the symbols chosen you can change them by using…
;; you don't need to include all of them you can pick and mix
(plist-put! +ligatures-extra-symbols
;; org
:name "»"
:src_block "»"
:src_block_end "«"
:quote "“"
:quote_end "”"
;; Functional
:lambda "λ"
:def "ƒ"
:composition "∘"
:map "↦"
;; Types
:null "∅"
:true "𝕋"
:false "𝔽"
:int "ℤ"
:float "ℝ"
:str "𝕊"
:bool "𝔹"
:list "𝕃"
;; Flow
:not "¬"
:in "∈"
:not-in "∉"
:and "∧"
:or "∨"
:for "∀"
:some "∃"
:return "⟼"
:yield "⟻"
;; Other
:union "⋃"
:intersect "∩"
:diff "∖"
:tuple "⨂"
:pipe "" ;; FIXME: find a non-private char
:dot "•") ;; you could also add your own if you want
If you have any problems with this module, do get in touch!