21

Inspired by Stack Overflow question Idomatic batch processing of text in Emacs? I tried out an Emacs shell script with the following headline:

#!/usr/bin/emacs --script 

I put some Emacs Lisp code in it, and saved it as textfile rcat.

Since the --script option does not prevent the loading of the site-start file, I had a lot of

Loading /etc/emacs/site-start.d/20apel.el (source)...
Loading /etc/emacs23/site-start.d/35elib-startup.el (source)...
Loading /etc/emacs23/site-start.d/50auctex.el (source)...

messages in the Bash shell (stdout). I can prevent that by calling

rcat --no-site-file

or

rcat -Q

but not by changing the headline in the script:

 #!/usr/bin/emacs --script --no-site-file

Is there a way to pass additional options to Emacs inside such a script file instead of doing it later on the commandline?

1
  • If you're still reading, I'd suggest changing the Accepted answer here to Gilles'. I think it's the best answer to the question. I adopted it very quickly myself as "standard" boilerplate for any elisp script, so 10 years later it feels weird that my answer still has the green tick here :)
    – phils
    Oct 19, 2021 at 4:45

3 Answers 3

40

Many unix variants only allow a single argument to the program on the shebang line. Sad, but true. If you use #!/usr/bin/env emacs so as not to depend on the location of the emacs executable, you can't pass an argument at all.

Chaining scripts is a possibility on some systems, but that too is not supported everywhere.

You can go the time-honored route of writing a polyglot script: a script that is both a shell script and an Emacs Lisp script (like Perl's if $running_under_some_shell, for example). It sure looks hackish, but it works.

Elisp comments begin with ;, which in the shell separates two commands. So we can use a ; followed by a shell instruction to switch over to Emacs, with the actual Lisp code beginning on the next line. Most shells don't like an empty command though, so we need to find something that both the shell and Emacs treat as a no-op, to put before the ;. The shell no-op command is :; you can write it ":" as far as the shell is concerned, and Emacs parses that as a constant at top level which is also a no-op.

#! /bin/sh
":"; exec emacs --no-site-file --script "$0" -- "$@" # -*-emacs-lisp-*-
(print (+ 2 2))
8
  • 2
    Great! Why is everybody so critical about hacking and hackers? Software Engineers probably wouldn't find a solution as creative as this one.
    – Thorsten
    Jun 7, 2011 at 22:06
  • 4
    Cross-referencing to the following answer+comment, which shows how to incorporate the -- argument into this approach to prevent Emacs from trying to process the command line arguments passed to your script stackoverflow.com/questions/6759606/…
    – phils
    Oct 15, 2011 at 1:08
  • 1
    @DiegoSevilla That empty line is from the print function, which prints a newline before and after the object. Use prin1 or princ to avoid the newlines. Sep 13, 2012 at 10:02
  • 2
    It looks like a general solution still needs to (setq argv nil) before the script exits (as per Jurijs Oniscuks' answer), as Emacs will process any remaining arguments as filenames to be visited. See stackoverflow.com/a/24352935/324105
    – phils
    Jun 23, 2014 at 17:43
  • 1
    I'll also leave a link to stackoverflow.com/a/10211087/324105 which collects the key boiler-plate (IMO) for writing an elisp script, based on this and other Q&As.
    – phils
    Sep 22, 2021 at 6:46
13

You could always change #!/usr/bin/emacs to something like #!/home/thorsten/bin/emacs-no-site-file, and set that up as:

#!/bin/sh
exec /usr/bin/emacs --no-site-file "$@"

If this doesn't work for you, or if you wish your script to be portable, then see Gilles' answer below for a more robust (and slightly funky :) approach.

2
  • 1
    That works, thanks. I always forget, that the solution for almost all problems in Computer Science is inserting one additional (abstraction) step in the middle ;)
    – Thorsten
    Jun 6, 2011 at 17:24
  • Unfortunately not all unices accept chained interpreters (i.e. a script can't be the interpreter of another script). Jun 6, 2011 at 23:54
9

If you run emacs in script mode, I would recommend to reset "argv" variable to nil in the end of your script, otherwise emacs will try interpret "argv" after script is finished.

Let's assume you have a file named "test-emacs-script.el" with the following content:

#!/usr/bin/emacs --script
(print argv)
(setq argv nil)

Try running this script as "./test-emacs-script.el -a". If you run this script without resettings "argv" (last line in the script) then the output will be:

("-a")
Unknown option `-a'

Resetting "argv" gets rid of "unknown option" error message

2
  • It looks like this is important even when the -- argument is used, as lunaryorn points out in another Q&A that Emacs will still process non-option arguments as filenames, if any are present. Emptying argv prevents that.
    – phils
    Jun 23, 2014 at 17:37
  • 1
    Even better, if you (kill-emacs 0) to explicitly exit with the specified status, Emacs won't do anything else. This tip from lunaryorn.com/2014/08/12/emacs-script-pitfalls.html (which has become a pretty comprehensive overview, I think).
    – phils
    Jun 9, 2016 at 1:57

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