55

I am new to Emacs. I have googled this but no good answer there. One of them is Ctrl-n Ctrl-a Backspace This works but is stupid. Is there a quick and simple way to join a block of lines into a single line?

Actually, I can use Esc-q to auto-fill a paragraph now, but how could I get it to revert without UNDO?

3
  • 1
    Thanks, for the idea, I'll bind it to <M-1>.
    – Ralph
    Jul 2, 2009 at 6:46
  • The command "undo" is usually bound to C-_ (control-underscore)... Jul 2, 2009 at 13:37
  • 3
    Normally I do C-e C-d
    – sharjeel
    Apr 12, 2014 at 0:27

15 Answers 15

199

Place point anywhere on the last line of the group of lines that need joining and call

M-^

repeatedly until all the lines are merged.

Note: It leaves one space between all of the now joined lines.

7
  • 2
    What is M-^ usually bound to?
    – stsquad
    Jun 16, 2015 at 11:14
  • stsquad: you need to press Meta + Shift + 6 (Shift + 6 will give you ^) Dec 4, 2015 at 6:47
  • 1
    Ah, the joys of day by day improving my Emacsfu. Only it can make me wonder about having different join lines functions: one with an extra space, one without it. May 13, 2016 at 18:13
  • 4
    And if you want to join from the first line, it's (intuitively enough), C-u M-^ (which tends to be a lot more useful imho).
    – gypsydave5
    Jul 2, 2018 at 11:49
  • 1
    @DirkHerrmann M-^ on a german keyboard is best input as ESC ^ SPC
    – JohnDoe
    Apr 8, 2022 at 10:50
40

M-x join-line will join two lines. Just bind it to a convenient keystroke.

5
  • Yes. It works. However, it is of no use to a block of several lines(3 lines or more). Any useful command for this purpose?
    – jcadam
    Jul 2, 2009 at 5:48
  • 8
    But if you go to the last line of the block and hit M-^ (the key binding for join-line) several times you will have the same effect. Goes pretty fast, so unless you have hundreds of lines to join I would prefer it over the fill-column hack. Otherwise do as Tal suggests, mark the block and replace newline (C-Q C-J) with nothing.
    – danielpoe
    Jul 2, 2009 at 6:37
  • I have tried to bind join-line to M-1. It works fine also. As you you suggested, many solutions here for the purpose, so I'll try to use them all in a flexible way. Thank you very much!
    – jcadam
    Jul 3, 2009 at 8:31
  • 2
    This is exactly the same thing as pressing M-^, because join-line is aliased to delete-indentation, which is bound to M-^. Jan 12, 2013 at 3:27
  • With my emacs version (29.0.50) this worked for more 2 lines. I highlighted all the lines then ran M-x join-line
    – krm
    Apr 14, 2023 at 10:22
12

Multiple Cursors combined with M-^ will collapse all selected lines into one with all extraneous white-space removed.

For example to select an entire buffer, invoke multiple cursors mode, collapse into one line, and then disable multiple cursors mode:

C-x h
M-x mc/edit-lines
M-^
C-g
2
  • My love for multiple cursors grows.
    – Bae
    Aug 11, 2017 at 2:58
  • Thanks for the nice tip! works like magic.
    – ychaouche
    Sep 26, 2022 at 13:41
11

The Emacs conventional name for "join" is "fill". Yes, you can join two lines with M-^ -- and that's handy -- but more generally you'll want to join n lines. For this, see the fill* commands, such as fill-region, fill-paragraph, etc.

See this for more info on selecting things which can then be filled.

Also, you can join multiple lines with M-^ by selecting those lines first. (Note that the universal argument does not work with this.)

3
  • 2
    Would vote this to be the idiomatically correct answer
    – JohnDoe
    Sep 24, 2017 at 11:12
  • fill-region worked well, but not M-^ (nor C-j as a matter of fact) even when selecting the region first.
    – ychaouche
    Sep 26, 2022 at 13:44
  • Also, not sure that fill=join. fill is join to a certain limit defined by fill-width.
    – ychaouche
    Sep 26, 2022 at 13:59
9

Just replace newlines with nothing.

5

I like the way Sublime text Join line with Command J so I do it this way:

(defun join-lines (arg)
  (interactive "p")
  (end-of-line)
  (delete-char 1)
  (delete-horizontal-space)
  (insert " "))
1
  • Nice, but how not to insert space when line below consisted only white spaces or was empty?
    – rofrol
    Aug 6, 2021 at 17:04
4

You could define a new command for this, temporarily adjusting the fill width before using the the Esc-q command:

;; -- define a new command to join multiple lines together --
(defun join-lines () (interactive)
 (setq fill-column 100000)
 (fill-paragraph nil)
 (setq fill-column 78)
)

Obviously this only works, if your paragraph has less than 100000 characters.

4
  • 10
    Without clobbering fill-column, that would be (defun join-lines () (interactive) (let ((fill-column 999999)) (fill-paragraph nil)))
    – huaiyuan
    Jul 2, 2009 at 10:31
  • Yeah. This should be more graceful.
    – jcadam
    Jul 3, 2009 at 8:33
  • What about this ? (defun unfill-paragraph () "Does the opposite of fill-paragraph" (interactive) (let ((fill-column (point-max))) (fill-paragraph nil)))
    – Gyom
    Jul 9, 2009 at 1:37
  • 1
    Ray Vega's answer (below) should be the accepted one tbh.
    – gypsydave5
    Jul 2, 2018 at 11:53
3

I use the following function and bind it to 'M-J'.

(defun concat-lines ()
  (interactive)
  (next-line)
  (join-line)
  (delete-horizontal-space))

If you prefer to keep your cursor position, you can use save-excursion.

2

The most simplest way ever:

  1. Select paragraph/lines by M-h or C-SPC
  2. Press M-q
  3. Witness the Emagics (Emacs Magic)!!
2

Because join-line will left one space between two lines, also it only support join two lines. In case of you want to join plenty of lines without one space left, you can use "search-replace" mode to solve, as follows:

  1. C-%
  2. Query: input C-q C-j Enter
  3. Replace: Enter
  4. Run the replacement. Enter

Done.

1

Two ways come to mind:

  1. Once you think of it, the most obvious (or at least easiest to remember) way is to use M-q format-paragraph with a long line length C-x-f 1000.

  2. There is also a built-in tool M-^ join-line. More usefully, if you select a region then it will combine them all into one line.

0

"how could I get it to revert without UNDO?":

(defun toggle-fill-paragraph ()
  ;; Based on http://xahlee.org/emacs/modernization_fill-paragraph.html
  "Fill or unfill the current paragraph, depending upon the current line length.
When there is a text selection, act on the region.
See `fill-paragraph' and `fill-region'."
  (interactive)
  ;; We set a property 'currently-filled-p on this command's symbol
  ;; (i.e. on 'toggle-fill-paragraph), thus avoiding the need to
  ;; create a variable for remembering the current fill state.
  (save-excursion
    (let* ((deactivate-mark nil)
           (line-length (- (line-end-position) (line-beginning-position)))
           (currently-filled (if (eq last-command this-command)
                                 (get this-command 'currently-filled-p)
                               (< line-length fill-column)))
           (fill-column (if currently-filled
                            most-positive-fixnum
                          fill-column)))
      (if (region-active-p)
          (fill-region (region-beginning) (region-end))
        (fill-paragraph))
      (put this-command 'currently-filled-p (not currently-filled)))))
(global-set-key (kbd "M-q") 'toggle-fill-paragraph)
0

From EmacsWiki: Unfill Paragraph

 ;;; Stefan Monnier <foo at acm.org>. It is the opposite of fill-paragraph    
    (defun unfill-paragraph (&optional region)
      "Takes a multi-line paragraph and makes it into a single line of text."
      (interactive (progn (barf-if-buffer-read-only) '(t)))
      (let ((fill-column (point-max))
            ;; This would override `fill-column' if it's an integer.
            (emacs-lisp-docstring-fill-column t))
        (fill-paragraph nil region)))
0

A basic join of 2 lines:

(delete-indentation)

I like to line below to be joined to the current without moving the cursor:

("C-j" .
  (lambda (iPoint)
    "Join next line onto current line"
    (interactive "d")
    (next-line)
    (delete-indentation)
    (goto-char iPoint)))
0

This one behaves like in vscode. So it add space only if join line consisted something else than whitespace. And I bind it to alt+shift+j.

Shorter version based on crux-top-join-line:

(global-set-key (kbd "M-J") (lambda () (interactive) (delete-indentation 1)))

Longer version based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/33005183/588759.

;; https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1072662/by-emacs-how-to-join-two-lines-into-one/68685485#68685485
(defun join-lines ()
  (interactive)
  (next-line)
  (join-line)
  (delete-horizontal-space)
  (unless (looking-at-p "\n") (insert " ")))

(global-set-key (kbd "M-J") 'join-lines)

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