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I'm using the Clojure mode package from ELPA. Otherwise everything is fine, but I just can't stand paredit mode. I can't seem to turn it off easily, now I just disable it for every buffer I open. I tried setting this variable to nil:

(setq clojure-enable-paredit nil)

But paredit still appears. Any ideas?

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  • 1
    One thing that might make it tolerable is knowing that C-u and C-q will allow you to escape the next keystroke. I use C-u DEL to delete unwanted braces/quotes, and C-q ( or C-q ) to insert needed braces. You'll need that if you ever kill/yank or clipboard-yank a block of text into your buffer since that often causes unbalanced forms. Mar 9, 2011 at 13:23
  • I wonder if the original author ever decided he liked paredit mode, or found a satisfactory way to turn it off.
    – amalloy
    Jun 1, 2011 at 6:33
  • you should mark your own answer as correct.
    – Pedro Rolo
    Mar 10, 2012 at 15:04

3 Answers 3

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Not an answer to your actual question, but give paredit mode a chance. I, too, was really annoyed with it automatically closing my parens, and refusing to delete just a single paren for me.

But doing this enables it to be certain at all times that the buffer is a well-balanced sexp, so it can perform many useful sexp-oriented tasks for you instead of just text-oriented tasks. For example, I use the following all the time:

  • M-( to wrap a sexp with a new one, eg turn (map f some-list) into (doto (map f some-list) println)
  • C-) to "slurp" another sexp into the current one, eg turn (let [x 10]) (println x) into (let [x 10] (println x))
  • M-<UP> and/or M-r to pull the sexp at point a level "higher" in the source tree, destroying the thing that was wrapping it, eg to turn (first (map f some-list)) into (map f some-list) or (first some-list)

There are zillions of useful features like this, that let you start editing code instead of text. And while there are plenty of excellent Lisp hackers who don't like paredit mode, I advise you not to decide against it before you realize the awesome stuff it can do for you.

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  • I absolutely agree. I hated paredit at first, but I soon missed it enough in every other language mode that I bound some of paredit's functions in those modes too. For example, M-( for paredit-wrap-round, which encloses the following expressing in parens. Most programming language modes have a concept of sexps for that language's expressions and tokens, so the paredit functions often just Do The Right Thing.
    – sanityinc
    Mar 9, 2011 at 11:12
  • Hm I have strange situation though, did some wrong editing and now I have "(" <block of code> "]" (parenthesis closed with square bracket) and I can't delete the square bracket because its closing the parenthesis! Can solve it selecting the block of code etc. but its annoying. Is there a quick solution for this situation?
    – User
    Mar 29, 2014 at 18:34
  • Actually, I can't remove the wrong bracket with 'M-s' because then I get "Scan error: "Unbalanced parentheses"" o.O this is so sick there's absolutely no way to remove it, commenting, killing, etc., nothing works.
    – User
    Mar 29, 2014 at 18:38
  • Ok, it's possible to turn it off with 'M-x paredit-mode' I'll probably turn it on again when my code is fixed. But it's useful to know how to turn it off for "emergencies".
    – User
    Mar 29, 2014 at 18:43
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    A C-u prefix before a deletion action (backspace or C-d) makes it skip the paredit balancing rules, and C-q before any character inserts that character, ignoring any keybindings that would make it do something else.
    – amalloy
    Mar 29, 2014 at 20:25
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Found one trick that works. Before the elpa packages are loaded in init.el, add this hook to clojure mode:

(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook (lambda () (paredit-mode nil)))
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For what it's worth, I use clojure-mode through ELPA too, and it doesn't imply paredit. Maybe just uninstall it? I find clojure-mode, slime and slime-repl are the only packages I need to install on a clean EMACS to get clojure/swank/slime working.

I only tested this:

http://www.learningclojure.com/2010/08/clojure-emacs-swank-slime-maven-maven.html

a few weeks ago, and it still works fine.

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