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I use flymake in Emacs to check code written in several languages. However, I can't see any way to use flymake on elisp itself.

I'm aware of elint-current-buffer, and byte-compile-file, which both give useful warnings about undefined variables etc. Oddly, they don't always give the same errors: for example, elint doesn't warn about (require 'cl). I've also tried auto-compile-mode (available on MELPA) but this still writes the warnings to a separate buffer.

I would really like my elisp code to be underlined when I make mistakes, as I type. How do I do this? I've configured flymake before, but that was with external programs, not Emacs itself.

3 Answers 3

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The Emacs wiki has this to say about flymake for emacs lisp, though it doesn't seem very complete.

flycheck supports Emacs Lisp "out of the box", though.

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  • I didn't know about flycheck, thanks. The EmacsWiki solution only checks that parens are balanced, which isn't very useful. Apr 2, 2013 at 16:43
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Erefactor is pretty decent, and available from the wiki as well as melpa: http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/erefactor.el

I also like to run checkdoc post-save:

 (defun emagician/run-checkdoc () 
   "run checkdoc on save if it is an elisp file"
   (if (and (eq major-mode 'emacs-lisp-mode)
            (> (length buffer-file-name)
               (length package-user-dir))
            (not (string= (concat package-user-dir "/")
                          (substring buffer-file-name 0 (+ 1 (length package-user-dir))))))
       (checkdoc)))

 (add-hook 'after-save-hook 'emagician/run-checkdoc)
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  • Thanks, I didn't know about erefactor. However, it runs elint in a separate buffer. I ran erefactor-elint on erefactor.el and it gave me the following output: gist.github.com/Wilfred/5320601 . For the record: I should also mention that redshank is very similar to erefactor. Apr 5, 2013 at 16:19
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Now there is elisp-flymake-byte-compile backend for flymake built in.
To enable add this to config:

(add-hook 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook #'flymake-mode)

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