Various programs such as mail
can invoke your choice of editor
to edit a particular piece of text, such as a message that you are
sending. By convention, most of these programs use the environment
variable EDITOR
to specify which editor to run. If you set
EDITOR
to `emacs', they invoke Emacs--but in an
inconvenient fashion, by starting a new, separate Emacs process. This
is inconvenient because it takes time and because the new Emacs process
doesn't share the buffers in the existing Emacs process.
You can arrange to use your existing Emacs process as the editor for
programs like mail
by using the Emacs client and Emacs server
programs. Here is how.
First, the preparation. Within Emacs, call the function
server-start
. (Your `.emacs' file can do this automatically
if you add the expression (server-start)
to it.) Then, outside
Emacs, set the EDITOR
environment variable to `emacsclient'.
(Note that some programs use a different environment variable; for
example, to make TeX use `emacsclient', you should set the
TEXEDIT
environment variable to `emacsclient +%d %s'.)
Then, whenever any program invokes your specified EDITOR
program, the effect is to send a message to your principal Emacs telling
it to visit a file. (That's what the program emacsclient
does.)
Emacs displays the buffer immediately and you can immediately begin
editing it.
When you've finished editing that buffer, type C-x #
(server-edit
). This saves the file and sends a message back to
the emacsclient
program telling it to exit. The programs that
use EDITOR
wait for the "editor" (actually, emacsclient
)
to exit. C-x # also checks for other pending external requests
to edit various files, and selects the next such file.
You can switch to a server buffer manually if you wish; you don't have to arrive at it with C-x #. But C-x # is the only way to say that you are "finished" with one.
If you set the variable server-window
to a window or a frame,
C-x # displays the server buffer in that window or in that frame.
While mail
or another application is waiting for
emacsclient
to finish, emacsclient
does not read terminal
input. So the terminal that mail
was using is effectively
blocked for the duration. In order to edit with your principal Emacs,
you need to be able to use it without using that terminal. There are
two ways to do this:
mail
and the principal Emacs in two
separate windows. While mail
is waiting for emacsclient
,
the window where it was running is blocked, but you can use Emacs by
switching windows.
mail
;
then, emacsclient
blocks only the subshell under Emacs, and you
can still use Emacs to edit the file.
Some programs write temporary files for you to edit. After you edit
the temporary file, the program reads it back and deletes it. If the
Emacs server is later asked to edit the same file name, it should assume
this has nothing to do with the previous occasion for that file name.
The server accomplishes this by killing the temporary file's buffer when
you finish with the file. Use the variable
server-temp-file-regexp
to specify which files are temporary in
this sense; its value should be a regular expression that matches file
names that are temporary.
If you run emacsclient
with the option `--no-wait', it
returns immediately without waiting for you to "finish" the buffer in
Emacs.
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