I have setup my windows in a certain way. How do I save this setting to be invoked later?
5 Answers
I sometimes still use C-x r w <register>
to store a window configuration in a register, and C-x r j <register>
(where <register>
is a single character) to jump back to it.
While this is a nice way for storing a few window configurations which you want to go back to after some time, I find winner-mode to be more convenient in a few regards. (For example, you won't have to bother naming the configurations).
Just put (winner-mode 1)
in your .emacs, bind winner-undo
and winner-redo
to convenient shortcuts (or use the IMHO awkward C-c <left>
and C-c <right>
predefined ones), and you'll be able to switch back to previous window configurations.
See also: M-: (info "(emacs) Window Convenience")
and M-: (info "(emacs) RegConfig")
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how about naming window layouts in winner mode so you don't have to cycle through many levels of undo/redo to get back to what you want? May 23, 2014 at 2:28
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@OpenLearner Hm, if you want to name layouts, what would be the benefit of using winner mode over plain registers?– danleiMay 23, 2014 at 23:35
I know you allready accepted an answer, however because I understand your question in another way (concerning layout) and this question showed up for me when I was in search for something to persist my emacs window layout, I would like to mention:
which purpose is to save and restore the way, emacs windows are layed out and many more.
Check out emacs desktop. I have no emacs available but I believe it's part of the standard lisp packages you get when you install emacs.
Use the desktop library to save the state of Emacs from one session to another. Once you save the Emacs desktop—the buffers, their file names, major modes, buffer positions, and so on—then subsequent Emacs sessions reload the saved desktop.
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2I use desktop-save-mode to store the buffers and use workgroups to store the arrangement of my frames and windows. github.com/tlh/workgroups.el. Aug 25, 2012 at 5:37
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4This answer may be misleading for some, I believe the author is confusing "frames" with "windows". The linked desktop package only supports restoring of frames (which outside of the emacs universe are called windows), but actual emacs windows are not persisted. Also downvoted because author doesn't appear to have actually tried it out.– robertOct 11, 2017 at 10:24
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1Downvoted, the author should have used it before recommending a library as a solution. Jan 3, 2019 at 2:04
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I can confirm that it doesn't work as quite described in the quote above! It restores all of the buffers, but not the window layout. The problem seems to be, at least in part, that the windows are themselves populated with "computed" contents" (like Org Agenda with various settings)! — So, in order to actually restore what I had before, it would have to either recompute everything, or write the buffer contents to disk. Since it doesn't seem to do either of those things, it's of limited use as a true "checkpointing" mechanism. May 7, 2021 at 13:20
Give Layout Restore a try if you just want to restore the window layout later.
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Layout Restore works nicely, associating a layout to a buffer and providing a save layout, restore layout and delete layout However its code is old and uses advices that prevent other modes from operating. The idea of associating a list of layouts to a buffer is a nice idea but I think the code should be looked at.– PRouleauNov 29, 2023 at 16:03
If you want to persist a layout in your hard-drive, desktop-save
is the option.
If you need to store multiple layouts during emacs' process lifetime (e.g. you connect to a long-running emacs daemon using emacsclient
), you can use C-x r f <register>
to store the frame layout in some register and C-x r j <register>
for restore.
Since I now and then remotely connect to the work station to do sth, disconnect for a while and later reconnect, restoring layout helps me continue stuff seamlessly (note in this case window layouts stored by C-x r w
would be gone).