Emacs
For reference use the emacs chapter in the nixos manual.
About
Emacs is an interactive graphical emacs lisp interpreter that comes with many applications, but is primarily used as a text and code editor. It has one of the largest repositories of packages of any similar code editor such as vim
or its fork neovim
.
Features
Emacs is often valued as a general purpose programming environment. Its power comes from its
- Extensibility
- Automatic self-documenting behaviour
- Flexibility
- Syntax awareness
- language server protocol support
- potential for reproducible portable literate configurations
Unstable branches
As of July 2021, the Nix community offers 7 variants of GNU Emacs as overlays: emacsGit, emacsGcc, emacsPgtk, emacsPgtkGcc, emacsUnstable, emacsGit-nox, and emacsUnstable-nox.
Pure GTK
Offers better integration with wayland compositors, in particular, there's better support for sharing the kill ring contents with the system clipboard.
GCC
Branches offer a means for automatic, asynchronous native compilation of emacs lisp into native code, that is then transparently used whenver the original versions of the functions are requested.
Installation
Emacs overlay
For installing one of the unstable branches of emacs, add the following lines to /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
(replace emacsPgtkGcc with the variant of your choice).
configuration.nix
{
services.emacs.package = pkgs.emacsPgtkGcc;
nixpkgs.overlays = [
(import (builtins.fetchGit {
url = "https://github.com/nix-community/emacs-overlay.git";
ref = "master";
rev = "bfc8f6edcb7bcf3cf24e4a7199b3f6fed96aaecf"; # change the revision
}))
];
environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [
emacsPgtkGcc
];
}
Doom Emacs
The Doom Emacs project provides a framework with a better default configuration and modules for different programming languages. Since it uses pinning in its configuration for dependencies, it is possible to package Doom Emacs with nix (see nix-doom-emacs)