I'm using Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot). When I type the command "emacs" in the terminal, it opens Emacs as a separate window. How can I open it inside the terminal, like the nano editor?
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As always when I see a such question, I wonder why you would want to do that. With a graphical emacs you could use every fonts you want, nice colorscheme, use the image support, etc … – Daimrod Jan 5 '12 at 19:40
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33@Daimrod: sometimes a new window popping up harrasses the concentrated mind. Sometimes you want to do a quick one in an existing window and sometimes you want to reserve a whole room for your thing. – mike3996 Jan 5 '12 at 22:24
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10@Daimrod because sometimes you're editing files across two ssh hops on a slow link and the X version of emacs is too much for your connection. – Trebor Rude Mar 5 '15 at 22:07
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2Also, one might want to practice using Emacs in terminal mode. – cammil Oct 30 '16 at 9:50
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2@Daimrod it's also useful for pairing across a service like tmate – Paul Byrne May 11 '19 at 5:45
Emacs takes many launch options. The one that you are looking for is
emacs -nw
. This will open Emacs inside the terminal disregarding the DISPLAY environment variable even if it is set.
The long form of this flag is emacs --no-window-system
.
More information about Emacs launch options can be found in the manual.
In the spirit of providing functionality, go to your .profile
or .bashrc
file located at /home/usr/
and at the bottom add the line:
alias enw='emacs -nw'
Now each time you open a terminal session you just type, for example, enw
and you have the Emacs no-window option with three letters :).
If you need to open Emacs without X:
emacs -nw
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1In the future, note that you need a newline for the code formatting to work properly. It got me the first couple times I used it too :) – Tikhon Jelvis Jan 5 '12 at 22:19
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1
I didn't like the alias solution for my purposes. For one, it didn't work for setting export EDITOR="emacs -nw"
.
But you can pass --without-x
to configure and then just the regular old Emacs will always open in terminal.
curl http://gnu.mirrors.hoobly.com/emacs/emacs-25.3.tar.xz
tar -xvzf emacs-25.3.tar.xz && cd emacs-25.3
./configure --without-x
make && sudo make install
It can be useful also to add the option --no-desktop
to avoid launching several buffers saved.
Try emacs —daemon
to have Emacs running in the background, and emacsclient
to connect to the Emacs server.
It’s not much time overhead saved on modern systems, but it’s a lot better than running several instances of Emacs.