vote up 2 vote down star

How do I apply a set of formatting rules to an existing source file in emacs?

Specifically I have an assembly (*.s) file, but I would like a generic command for all types of files.

I am trying to use M-x c-set-style with gnu style, but I am getting an error:

Buffer *.s is not a CC Mode buffer (c-set-style)

flag

4 Answers

vote up 11 vote down check

Open the file and then indent it by indenting the entire region:

M-x find-file /path/to/file RET
C-x h                             (M-x mark-whole-buffer)
C-M-\                             (M-x indent-region)

Now, it looks like you're trying to apply C indentation to a buffer that's not in C mode. To get it into C mode

M-x c-mode

Or c++-mode, or whatever mode you want. But, since it's assembler code, you probably want assembler mode (which Emacs will do by default for .s files). In which case, the indentation command above (C-M-\ is also known as M-x indent-region) should work for you.

Note: the command sequence at the top can be rolled into a single command like this:

(defun indent-file (file)
  "prompt for a file and indent it according to its major mode"
  (interactive "fWhich file do you want to indent: ")
  (find-file file)
  ;; uncomment the next line to force the buffer into a c-mode
  ;; (c-mode)
  (indent-region (point-min) (point-max)))

And, if you want to learn how to associate major-modes with files based on extensions, check out the documentation for auto-mode-alist. To be fair, it's not necessarily extension based, just regular expressions matched against the filename.

link|flag
1  
Best with emacs questions to note what the keystrokes bind to. I.e. M-< is usually bound to beginning-of-buffer. Use C-h k for keystroke help. – dmckee Jun 14 at 14:26
3  
Also, `C-x h' (mark-whole-buffer) selects everything in slightly fewer steps, and works even if you are using transient-mark-mode. – Jouni K. Seppänen Jun 14 at 18:21
@Jouni, thanks for C-x h, I didn't know about that. incorporated the solution. – Trey Jackson Jun 16 at 20:41
vote up 0 vote down

The major mode it's using for your .s files won't be cc-mode hence c-set-style makes no sense. However you can always manually enter cc-mode (M-x cc-mode) and then do the c-set-style you want. However as the C styles are keyed for C source code and not assembler this is almost certainly not what you want to do.

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Try M-x asm-mode. That will switch to assembler mode. Not sure how it will go with assembler embedded in the middle of a C file.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

emacs will use the file name extension to identify the mode, you should add some assemble language mode style in your custom.el file

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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