Dealing with CamelCase, or mixed case, code can be difficult on the eyes. As you are poring over thousands of lines of code for your website or app, it can be difficult to decipher mixed case code, especially if you have a font that does not easily distinguish lower from upper case characters very well.
The Emacs text editor provides some special editing modes that make working with mixed case code easier:
These are technically “minor” modes, meaning modes that are meant to be enabled within a major mode.
The technical term for “mixed case code” is “CamelCase.” CamelCase code is not uncommon but it varies by coding style. (Always be sure to observe in advanced the preferred coding style of any project to which you are planning on contributing.) Some languages recommend CamelCase for naming functions.
See this CamelCase statement example:
thisIsCamelCaseInAction
Notice that while all of these words are jammed together, each unique word begins with a capital letter to distinguish it from the others in the statement.
Underscore CamelCase Code With Glasses Mode
In some coding styles, CamelCase code is written with underscores to help differentiate the individual words. But not always. If you’re working on a project that requires all CamelCase to be written in the former style, you cannot change how everyone else is working, but Emacs can help you out.
What Glasses Mode Does
Emacs provides a minor mode called glasses-mode
, which takes your CamelCase code and puts underscores between the words. This is merely for display purposes, so you can see the underscores but the final code will have those underscores omitted. This way, you can work with underscores without disturbing or disrupting the coding style that has been officially adopted by the project.
How To Enable Glasses Mode
Like all Emacs minor modes, glasses-mode
can be enabled via the meta-X (M-x
) command prompt. Open a prompt with M-x
and type:
glasses-mode
When glasses-mode
is enabled in your buffer you will see a o^o
indicator in the modeline.
To disable glasses-mode
follow the exact same procedure you went through to enable it.
Subword Mode
Subword mode treats upper case letters as words. This can help you giving full word editing functionality to CamelCase statements and symbols. Remember that Emacs treats words with a whole unique set of editing commands.
How Subword Mode Works
Emacs has thousands of functions that help you perform various operations on your text. Many of these functions run as commands given to the Emacs Lisp interpreter. And many of them are specifically designed to operate on words.
With subword-mode
enabled, all of the many Emacs word commands will now treat uppercase letters as words. This means that CamelCase code, interspersed as it is with capital letters, will be treated as a string of multiple words instead of as one long word.
How to Enable Subword mode
To enable subword-mode
all you need to do is open your command prompt with M-x
and type in:
subword-mode
When subword-mode
is enabled you will see a ,
in the mode line to indicate that the minor mode is active.
For more information about using the Emacs text editor, make sure to check out the Emacs education channel. And if you’re wondering if Emacs is installed in your VPS server feel free to contact 24/7 live support anytime. Learn more about the differences between VPS vs dedicated.