clojure-mode
is an Emacs major mode that provides font-lock (syntax
highlighting), indentation, navigation and refactoring support for the
Clojure(Script) programming language.
This documentation tracks the master
branch of clojure-mode
. Some of
the features and settings discussed here might not be available in
older releases (including the current stable release). Please, consult
the relevant git tag (e.g. 5.1.0) if you need documentation for a
specific clojure-mode
release.
Available on the major package.el
community maintained repos -
MELPA Stable and MELPA repos.
MELPA Stable is the recommended repo as it has the latest stable version. MELPA has a development snapshot for users who don't mind (infrequent) breakage but don't want to run from a git checkout.
You can install clojure-mode
using the following command:
M-x package-install [RET] clojure-mode [RET]
or if you'd rather keep it in your dotfiles:
(unless (package-installed-p 'clojure-mode)
(package-install 'clojure-mode))
If the installation doesn't work try refreshing the package list:
M-x package-refresh-contents
The clojure-mode
package actually bundles together several major modes:
clojure-mode
is a major mode for editing Clojure codeclojurescript-mode
is a major mode for editing ClojureScript codeclojurec-mode
is a major mode for editing.cljc
source files
All the major modes derive from clojure-mode
and provide more or less the same
functionality. Differences can be found mostly in the font-locking -
e.g. ClojureScript has some built-in constructs that are not present in Clojure.
The proper major mode is selected automatically based on the extension of the file you're editing.
Having separate major modes gives you the flexibility to attach different hooks
to them and to alter their behavior individually (e.g. add extra font-locking
just to clojurescript-mode
) .
Note that all modes derive from clojure-mode
, so things you add to
clojure-mode-hook
and clojure-mode-map
will affect all the derived modes as
well.
In the spirit of Emacs, pretty much everything you can think of in clojure-mode
is configurable.
To see a list of available configuration options do M-x customize-group RET clojure
.
The default indentation rules in clojure-mode
are derived from the
community Clojure Style Guide.
Please, refer to the guide for the general Clojure indentation rules.
By default multi-line docstrings are indented with 2 spaces, as this is a
somewhat common standard in the Clojure community. You can however adjust this
by modifying clojure-docstring-fill-prefix-width
. Set it to 0 if you don't
want multi-line docstrings to be indented at all (which is pretty common in most lisps).
The indentation of function forms is configured by the variable
clojure-indent-style
. It takes three possible values:
always-align
(the default)
(some-function
10
1
2)
(some-function 10
1
2)
always-indent
(some-function
10
1
2)
(some-function 10
1
2)
align-arguments
(some-function
10
1
2)
(some-function 10
1
2)
Note: Prior to clojure-mode 5.10 the configuration options for clojure-indent-style
used to be
keywords, but now they are symbols. Keywords will still be supported at least until clojure-mode 6.
The indentation of special forms and macros with bodies is controlled via
put-clojure-indent
, define-clojure-indent
and clojure-backtracking-indent
.
Nearly all special forms and built-in macros with bodies have special indentation
settings in clojure-mode
. You can add/alter the indentation settings in your
personal config. Let's assume you want to indent ->>
and ->
like this:
(->> something
ala
bala
portokala)
You can do so by putting the following in your config:
(put-clojure-indent '-> 1)
(put-clojure-indent '->> 1)
This means that the body of the ->/->>
is after the first argument.
A more compact way to do the same thing is:
(define-clojure-indent
(-> 1)
(->> 1))
To indent something like a definition (defn
) you can do something like:
(put-clojure-indent '>defn :defn)
You can also specify different indentation settings for symbols prefixed with some ns (or ns alias):
(put-clojure-indent 'do 0)
(put-clojure-indent 'my-ns/do 1)
The bodies of certain more complicated macros and special forms
(e.g. letfn
, deftype
, extend-protocol
, etc) are indented using
a contextual backtracking indentation method, require more sophisticated
indent specifications. Here are a few examples:
(define-clojure-indent
(implement '(1 (1)))
(letfn '(1 ((:defn)) nil))
(proxy '(2 nil nil (1)))
(reify '(:defn (1)))
(deftype '(2 nil nil (1)))
(defrecord '(2 nil nil (1)))
(specify '(1 (1)))
(specify '(1 (1))))
These follow the same rules as the :style/indent
metadata specified by cider-nrepl.
For instructions on how to write these specifications, see
this document.
The only difference is that you're allowed to use lists instead of vectors.
The indentation of special arguments is controlled by
clojure-special-arg-indent-factor
, which by default indents special arguments
a further lisp-body-indent
when compared to ordinary arguments.
An example of the default formatting is:
(defrecord MyRecord
[my-field])
Note that defrecord
has two special arguments, followed by the form's body -
namely the record's name and its fields vector.
Setting clojure-special-arg-indent-factor
to 1, results in:
(defrecord MyRecord
[my-field])
clojure-mode
differentiates between comments like ;
, ;;
, etc.
By default clojure-mode
treats ;
as inline comments and always indents those.
You can change this behaviour like this:
(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook (lambda () (setq-local comment-column 0)))
You might also want to change comment-add
to 0 in that way, so that Emacs comment
functions (e.g. comment-region
) would use ;
by default instead of ;;
.
Note: Check out this section of the Clojure style guide to understand better the semantics of the different comment levels and why clojure-mode
treats them differently by default.
You can vertically align sexps with C-c SPC
. For instance, typing
this combo on the following form:
(def my-map
{:a-key 1
:other-key 2})
Leads to the following:
(def my-map
{:a-key 1
:other-key 2})
This can also be done automatically (as part of indentation) by
turning on clojure-align-forms-automatically
. This way it will
happen whenever you select some code and hit TAB
.
clojure-mode
features static font-locking (syntax highlighting) that you can extend yourself
if needed. As typical for Emacs, it's based on regular expressions. You can find
the default font-locking rules in clojure-font-lock-keywords
. Here's how you can add font-locking for built-in Clojure functions and vars:
(defvar clojure-built-in-vars
'(;; clojure.core
"accessor" "aclone"
"agent" "agent-errors" "aget" "alength" "alias"
"all-ns" "alter" "alter-meta!" "alter-var-root" "amap"
;; omitted for brevity
))
(defvar clojure-built-in-dynamic-vars
'(;; clojure.test
"*initial-report-counters*" "*load-tests*" "*report-counters*"
"*stack-trace-depth*" "*test-out*" "*testing-contexts*" "*testing-vars*"
;; clojure.xml
"*current*" "*sb*" "*stack*" "*state*"
))
(font-lock-add-keywords 'clojure-mode
`((,(concat "(\\(?:\.*/\\)?"
(regexp-opt clojure-built-in-vars t)
"\\>")
1 font-lock-builtin-face)))
(font-lock-add-keywords 'clojure-mode
`((,(concat "\\<"
(regexp-opt clojure-built-in-dynamic-vars t)
"\\>")
0 font-lock-builtin-face)))
Note: The package clojure-mode-extra-font-locking
provides such additional
font-locking for Clojure built-ins.
As you might imagine one problem with this font-locking approach is that because
it's based on regular expressions you'll get some false positives here and there
(there's no namespace information, and no way for clojure-mode
to know what
var a symbol resolves to). That's why clojure-mode
's font-locking defaults are
conservative and minimalistic.
Precise font-locking requires additional data that can obtained from a running REPL (that's how CIDER's dynamic font-locking works) or from static code analysis.
When it comes to definitions, clojure-mode
employs a simple heuristic and will treat every symbol named def
something as a built-in keyword. Still, you'll need to
teach clojure-mode
manually how to handle the docstrings of non built-in definition forms. Here's an example:
(put '>defn 'clojure-doc-string-elt 2)
Note: The clojure-doc-string-elt
attribute is processed by the function clojure-font-lock-syntactic-face-function
.
The available refactorings were originally created and maintained by the
clj-refactor.el
team. The ones implemented in Elisp only are gradually migrated
to clojure-mode
.
clojure-thread
: Thread another form into the surrounding thread. Both ->>
and ->
variants are supported.
clojure-unwind
: Unwind a threaded expression. Supports both ->>
and ->
.
clojure-thread-first-all
: Introduce the thread first macro (->
) and rewrite
the entire form. With a prefix argument do not thread the last form.
clojure-thread-last-all
: Introduce the thread last macro and rewrite the
entire form. With a prefix argument do not thread the last form.
clojure-unwind-all
: Fully unwind a threaded expression removing the threading
macro.
clojure-cycle-privacy
: Cycle privacy of def
s or defn
s. Use metadata
explicitly with setting clojure-use-metadata-for-privacy
to t
for defn
s
too.
clojure-cycle-not
: Add or remove a not
form around the current form.
clojure-cycle-when
: Find the closest when
or when-not
up the syntax tree
and toggle it.
clojure-cycle-if
: Find the closest if
or if-not
up the syntax tree and
toggle it. Also transpose the else
and then
branches, keeping the semantics
the same as before.
Convert any given collection at point to list, quoted list, map, vector or set.
clojure-introduce-let
: Introduce a new let
form. Put the current form into
its binding form with a name provided by the user as a bound name. If called
with a numeric prefix put the let form Nth level up in the form hierarchy.
clojure-move-to-let
: Move the current form to the closest let
's binding
form. Replace all occurrences of the form in the body of the let.
clojure-let-forward-slurp-sexp
: Slurp the next form after the let
into the
let
. Replace all occurrences of the bound forms in the form added to the let
form. If called with a prefix argument slurp the next n forms.
clojure-let-backward-slurp-sexp
: Slurp the form before the let
into the
let
. Replace all occurrences of the bound forms in the form added to the let
form. If called with a prefix argument slurp the previous n forms.
paredit-convolute-sexp
is advised to replace occurrences of bound forms with their bound names when convolute is used on a let form.
clojure-rename-ns-alias
: Rename an alias inside a namespace declaration,
and all of its usages in the buffer
If there is an active selected region, only rename usages of aliases within the region, without affecting the namespace declaration.
clojure-add-arity
: Add a new arity to an existing single-arity or multi-arity function.
- clojure-mode-extra-font-locking provides additional font-locking for built-in methods and macros. The font-locking is pretty imprecise, because it doesn't take namespaces into account and it won't font-lock a function at all possible positions in a sexp, but if you don't mind its imperfections you can easily enable it:
(require 'clojure-mode-extra-font-locking)
The code in clojure-mode-font-locking
used to be bundled with
clojure-mode
before version 3.0.
You can also use the code in this package as a basis for extending the font-locking further (e.g. functions/macros from more namespaces). Generally you should avoid adding special font-locking for things that don't have fairly unique names, as this will result in plenty of incorrect font-locking. CIDER users should avoid this package, as CIDER does its own dynamic font-locking, which is namespace-aware and doesn't produce almost any false positives.
-
clj-refactor provides refactoring support.
-
Enabling
CamelCase
support for editing commands(likeforward-word
,backward-word
, etc) inclojure-mode
is quite useful since we often have to deal with Java class and method names. The built-in Emacs minor modesubword-mode
provides such functionality:
(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook #'subword-mode)
- The use of paredit when editing Clojure (or any other Lisp) code is highly recommended. It helps ensure the structure of your forms is not compromised and offers a number of operations that work on code structure at a higher level than just characters and words. To enable it for Clojure buffers:
(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook #'paredit-mode)
- smartparens is an excellent
(newer) alternative to paredit. Many Clojure hackers have adopted it
recently and you might want to give it a try as well. To enable
smartparens
use the following code:
(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook #'smartparens-strict-mode)
- RainbowDelimiters is a
minor mode which highlights parentheses, brackets, and braces
according to their depth. Each successive level is highlighted in a
different color. This makes it easy to spot matching delimiters,
orient yourself in the code, and tell which statements are at a
given depth. Assuming you've already installed
RainbowDelimiters
you can enable it like this:
(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook #'rainbow-delimiters-mode)
- aggressive-indent-mode automatically adjust the indentation of your code,
while you're writing it. Using it together with
clojure-mode
is highly recommended. Provided you've already installedaggressive-indent-mode
you can enable it like this:
(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook #'aggressive-indent-mode)
One of the fundamental aspects of Lisps in general, and Clojure in particular, is the notion of interactive programming - building your programs by continuously changing the state of the running Lisp program (as opposed to doing something more traditional like making a change and re-running the program afterwards to see the changes in action). To get the most of clojure-mode you'll have to combine it with some tool which will allow you to interact with your Clojure program (a.k.a. process/REPL).
A number of options exist for connecting to a running Clojure process and evaluating code interactively.
inf-clojure provides basic interaction with a Clojure REPL process.
It's very similar in nature and supported functionality to inferior-lisp-mode
for Common Lisp.
CIDER is a powerful Clojure interactive development environment, similar to SLIME for Common Lisp.
If you're into Clojure and Emacs you should definitely check it out.
Tutorials, targeting Emacs beginners, are available at clojure-doc.org and Clojure for the Brave and the True. Keep in mind, however, that they might be out-of-date.
An extensive changelog is available here.
Copyright © 2007-2021 Jeffrey Chu, Lennart Staflin, Phil Hagelberg, Bozhidar Batsov, Artur Malabarba and contributors.
Distributed under the GNU General Public License; type C-h C-c to view it.