vote up 5 vote down star
2

How do you change the default face which Emacs uses to style text on a per-mode basis?

For example, say that I am already happy with the face customizations that I have, which include a default fixed-width font. However, in one particular mode (markdown-mode.el, say), I want the default font to be variable-width.

It is easy to style headers, links etc. uniquely for markdown-mode: simply place the cursor over the styled text and M-x describe-face, then click the link to customize it.

However, the default face is the face used if no other face is specified, so it is not specific to markdown-mode and if modified will affect all other modes.

What magic can I put in the markdown-mode-hook to set the default face for buffers using this mode?

flag
If there is a some variable that controls the default faces then you can localized it for the current buffer only in a hook that getting called while opening a file w/ markdown. – J.F. Sebastian Feb 10 at 22:04

2 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

How about something like this:

(add-hook 'markdown-mode-hook (lambda () (variable-pitch-mode t))

You can then customize the variable-pitch face, and the other faces in the buffer will inherit from this instead of the default face.

Read the docs for buffer-face-mode for more customization details. (BufFace is also used for text-scale-increase and text-scale-decrease... very useful.)

link|flag
To my understanding this requires Emacs 23, can't find neither variable-pitch-mode nor buffer-face-mode in Emacs 22. – danielpoe Feb 11 at 8:19
Wow, people still use Emacs 22? – jrockway Feb 11 at 8:36
Thanks, does the trick. However, when a buffer uses variable-pitch fonts scrolling becomes so paaainfully slow that it's unusable. But this is probably just a bug. – emax Feb 18 at 20:51
vote up 3 vote down

I have to give a partial answer because this is too complicated to figure out on the spot and I already blew my time budget.

Face is a frame property. A frame can display multiple buffers at the same time. Mode is a buffer property. You ask how to vary the face on a per-mode basis. Combining all this, it seems that the question cannot not have a single fully-correct answer.

You can approximate the desired answer if you assume that a given frame will never display more than one buffer. You can actually accomplish that with something like this, but modified to use special-display-regexps and a set of regexps that match your markdown-mode buffer names.

(append special-display-buffer-names
        '("*VC-log*"
          "*Help*"
          ("*Completions*" 
           (height . 25)
           (font . "8x13"))))

However, this is probably not what you want. Your question seems to imply changing the face properties of a single frame.

Again assuming that a frame will never display more than one buffer at a time, you can try advising switch-to-buffer. But that might not be sufficiently low level and it might be too slow. (untested)

(defadvice switch-to-buffer (after switch-to-buffer activate compile)
  "change the frame's default face after switch-to-buffer"
  (doSomethingToChangePropertiesOfDefaultFace))

And now for my actual (incomplete) answer...

A better, albeit more complicated, approach would instruct markdown-mode to use a new face for all regions that are not already assigned one of the built-in faces. You can create a new face with copy-face and give it interesting properties with set-face-*.

Modify markdown-mode's font-lock-defaults to override the default font-lock-fontify-region-function as described in the comment block near line 946 of font-lock.el that begins, "Fontification functions". You can probably use a very slightly modified font-lock-default-fontify-region that does just one extra step immediately after it does:

  (unless font-lock-keywords-only
    (font-lock-fontify-syntactically-region beg end loudly))

The extra step parses the region similar to what font-lock-fontify-syntactically-region does, breaking the region into "interesting" sub-regions. But this time you find sub-regions that have the default face and you put-text-property those sub-regions to the new face that you previously created.

In all this feels like it should be only a couple lines of elisp in your .emacs file, plus make a copy of font-lock-default-fontify-region that has only a minor diff from the original (call one new function), plus make a copy of font-lock-fontify-syntactically-region and modify it to do your bidding (the most difficult part).

Actually, if you "after" advise font-lock-fontify-syntactically-region then you probably don't even need to modify font-lock-defaults or font-lock-default-fontify-region.

link|flag
Names and line numbers speak to GNU emacs 22.3.1. – JeffJ Feb 11 at 9:43
Or just get a recent version of emacs and use buffer-face-mode. – jrockway Feb 11 at 12:54
Cool. But I'll probably wait until emacs 23 actually ships before updating to it. – JeffJ Feb 11 at 19:27

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.