29

Does anyone know how if something like this Vim Relative Line Numbers exists for emacs? I use vimpulse, and man, that would be super handy to have! I know some lisp, so if it doesn't, I could try to make my own, if I got a point in the right direction.

Update: Thanks to the correct response, I came up with this, that will show 1 for the current line, and -1 for the previous line, for combining with vimpulse yanks and deletes.

Thanks a ton to all who helped! I know it is not exactly what Vim does, but what good is the Relative line numbers in vim that start at zero?? Silly vim.

(defvar my-linum-current-line-number 0)

(setq linum-format 'my-linum-relative-line-numbers)

(defun my-linum-relative-line-numbers (line-number)
  (let ((test2 (1+ (- line-number my-linum-current-line-number))))
    (propertize
     (number-to-string (cond ((<= test2 0) (1- test2))
                             ((> test2 0) test2)))
     'face 'linum)))

(defadvice linum-update (around my-linum-update)
  (let ((my-linum-current-line-number (line-number-at-pos)))
    ad-do-it))
(ad-activate 'linum-update)
4
  • Like Steve said, he uses vimpulse in Emacs. emacswiki.org/emacs/Vimpulse
    – phils
    Jul 29, 2011 at 16:52
  • @phils - ah, thanks, missed that bit of the post.
    – jtahlborn
    Jul 29, 2011 at 17:50
  • Steve, I've taken the liberty of updating your version with a bug fix to use the correct face for the linum-format function output.
    – phils
    Mar 13, 2012 at 13:09
  • BTW: Regarding such a "relative line number" feature, how should it behave when the buffer is displayed in several windows: should the "other windows" show line numbers relative to their respective points, or to the point in the currently selected window (and if so, what should happen if none of the buffer's windows is the selected window)?
    – Stefan
    Sep 29, 2015 at 13:45

6 Answers 6

42

In Emacs 26.1, there's a built-in line number mode (display-line-numbers-mode). Enable it and set (setq display-line-numbers 'relative) to use relative line numbers.

3
  • 9
    For me (setq display-line-numbers-type 'relative) enabled it globally. (Emacs 26.3)
    – loki
    Jan 11, 2021 at 14:49
  • 1
    @loki display-line-numbers-type works perfectly
    – rox
    May 11, 2021 at 4:35
  • 2
    Should also add (global-display-line-numbers-mode) to enable number for all buffer automatically.
    – jdhao
    Sep 11, 2021 at 15:26
14

(2012-03-16: line numbers are now right-aligned, and displayed in the correct face.)

The problem here is that by the time a custom linum-format function is called, point has already been moved (by linum-update-window) to the line in question, so we can no longer use it to establish the difference between the two lines; it would just print a zero for every line.

There is a linum-before-numbering-hook, but this is run after point has been moved to the start of the buffer, so that's not useful for our purpose.

The following code solves the problem by using advice for linum-update to store the current line number, so that it will be available to the custom linum-format function.

To right-align the numbers I initially used a hard-coded format string of %3d on the basis that a single window showing more than 100 lines of code was not terribly likely. If you're a fan of follow-mode, however (or simply have multiple windows on the same buffer), that circumstance becomes exceedingly likely; so the code now calculates the number of columns required dynamically. The use of linum-before-numbering-hook makes this more efficient than the approach taken by the default dynamic linum format.

Note that if you comment out the add-hook, the faster non-dynamic approach is used.

(defvar my-linum-format-string "%3d")

(add-hook 'linum-before-numbering-hook 'my-linum-get-format-string)

(defun my-linum-get-format-string ()
  (let* ((width (1+ (length (number-to-string
                             (count-lines (point-min) (point-max))))))
         (format (concat "%" (number-to-string width) "d")))
    (setq my-linum-format-string format)))

(defvar my-linum-current-line-number 0)

(setq linum-format 'my-linum-relative-line-numbers)

(defun my-linum-relative-line-numbers (line-number)
  (let ((offset (- line-number my-linum-current-line-number)))
    (propertize (format my-linum-format-string offset) 'face 'linum)))

(defadvice linum-update (around my-linum-update)
  (let ((my-linum-current-line-number (line-number-at-pos)))
    ad-do-it))
(ad-activate 'linum-update)
10
  • Two questions. How can I have the negative line numbers without the - prefix? And how can I avoid the line numbers getting the same face settings at the line they represent? For example, line numbers for commented out lines get the same color applied as the comments themselves.
    – jimeh
    Mar 13, 2012 at 12:06
  • 1
    To remove the minus sign, just call abs to get the absolute value of the number. i.e.: (number-to-string (abs (- line-number my-linum-current-line-number)))
    – phils
    Mar 13, 2012 at 12:32
  • For question two, my code was missing a trick: when linum-format is a function, the return value is not automatically propertized with the linum face. I've updated the code above to take care of that. You can then M-x customize-group RET linum RET if you wish to modify the face further.
    – phils
    Mar 13, 2012 at 13:01
  • Thanks, works great :)... I just have one last question, how do you right-align or left-pad the line numbers? For example, the line-numbers look left-aligned here: cl.ly/2J1i1T2B0Q0N13181g24
    – jimeh
    Mar 14, 2012 at 15:15
  • 1
    juanjux: Try running emacs -Q and see if you still have that issue after loading this code. At the time I wrote it, this was actually more efficient than the default linum (but I think that's been sorted out in the interim). In any case, I'd be surprised if you were having issues with this code that you weren't having with un-modified linum? Try byte-compiling the code, if you hadn't already done so. You might also investigate the nlinum package, which was written by an Emacs maintainer to be a more efficient replacement for linum.
    – phils
    Sep 12, 2014 at 8:07
11

I just came across Scott Jaderholm's code for this, and remembered seeing this question, so I decided to post a link to the relevant lines in his .emacs.

Update: If you're using MELPA (and you should be!), just M-x package-install RET linum-relative.

6
  • 1
    The most complete and up-to-date library providing this functionality actually appears to be linum-relative, for which Melpa provides a snapshot ELPA package.
    – sanityinc
    Dec 10, 2012 at 19:57
  • @sanityinc linum-relative doesn't install from melpa for me with package.el or el-get. How did you get it to work?
    – Sam Hasler
    Feb 6, 2013 at 17:30
  • @Sam Installing linum-relative from Melpa works fine for me. What do you mean by "doesn't install"? You get an error, or you don't see it in your package lists?
    – sanityinc
    Feb 7, 2013 at 10:29
  • Same redraws problems on emacs24 + windows than phils' code.
    – juanjux
    Sep 12, 2014 at 8:27
  • PS: but works perfectly on linux GUI & console, the problem seems to be Windows Emacs only.
    – juanjux
    Sep 12, 2014 at 18:28
5

On a related note, if you're only looking to move to a specific line, ace-jump-mode provides a command ace-jump-line-mode that lets you jump to a specific line visible on screen. It uses letters rather than numbers for lines, however:

ace-jump-mode screenshot

4

Look at M-x linum-mode and the linum-format variable.

linum-format is a variable defined in `linum.el'.
Its value is dynamic

Documentation:

Format used to display line numbers.
Either a format string like "%7d", `dynamic' to adapt the width as needed, or a function that is called with a line number as its argument and should evaluate to a string to be shown on that line.
See also `linum-before-numbering-hook'.

1
  • Ah, I didn't see that before, that I can just give it a function to create the string shown on the line... good call, I might try making my own this weekend.
    – Steve
    Jul 29, 2011 at 17:50
4

emacs 28, this worked for me

(global-display-line-numbers-mode 1)
(setq display-line-numbers-type 'relative)

might be helpful

Earlier I was using "linum-relative" package, which was conflicting with "diff-hl": line numbers were not visible in version controlled diff regions, native line numbers are working fine!.

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