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outli

Simple and stylish comment-based outlines with speed keys for Emacs. image

outli is a simple Emacs outliner for code, documents, and more which provides hierarchical hide/show, styles your headings, and emulates org-mode navigation and structure editing. It builds on the built-in outline-minor-mode and is simple by design, providing just a few key additional features beyond what outline already offers:

  • Configurable heading syntax based on the concept of a stem (fixed first characters) and repeat-char (the number of which determines a heading's depth). Example level-two headers include classics such as ;;;; and # **, but anything's possible.
  • Default header syntax based on comment char that just works for most modes.
  • Header style options including color-matched overline and blended background color for the initial heading info.
  • Tab and Shift-Tab work just like you'd expect from org-mode to toggle headings or document visibility.
  • Speed keys mirroring org-mode for easy navigation, visibility, and structure editing at headlines. Hit ? for the list of available keys. Additions include h to hide sub-levels below the current level, and 1-5 to specify such a level directly.
  • Exposes headings to imenu. A fast imenu browser like consult-imenu is recommended.

Configuration

Not yet in a package database; simply clone and point use-package at the correct path (or use straight, etc.).

(use-package outli
  :load-path "~/code/emacs/outli"
  ;:after lispy ; uncomment only if you use lispy; it also sets speed keys on headers!
  :bind (:map outli-mode-map ; convenience key to get back to containing heading
	      ("C-c C-p" . (lambda () (interactive) (outline-back-to-heading))))
  :hook ((prog-mode text-mode) . outli-mode)) ; or whichever modes you prefer

You should probably not enable outli in org-mode (which by default is prevented), or with other packages which operate on headings or use similar short bindings, like outshine or pdf-tools. If you want to disable individual modes within some larger mode hierarchy (like text-mode), you can either opt-in by adding them one-by-one, or include those modes in outli-heading-config with a disable entry; see below.

Customization

Headline style

The main variable to customize is outli-heading-config, where you can set the stem and repeat char, and influence the styling, including whether to style the stem and repeat chars the same, whether to include the overline, or whether to omit styling altogether. Note that the t member of this alist is the default used for all modes whih are not explicitly specified.

Configured defaults are:

  • emacs-lisp-mode: stem ;;, repeat-char ;
  • tex-mode: %%, %
  • markdown-mode: (empty stem), #
  • org-mode: disabled
  • all others: comment-start + a space, *

The custom variable outli-blend controls whether a blended background is used to start the headline. After configuring outli-heading-config, you should restart outli-mode in any open buffers using it.

Style Defaults

You can set defaults for the STYLE and NOBAR properties for all modes, which take effect if these parameters are omitted or nil in the outli-heading-config; see outli-default-style and outli-default-nobar.

Speed keys

Customize outli-speed-commands to alter or disable speed keys, which work at the beginning of heading lines only (similar to org speed keys).

Folding/unfolding automatically when hopping around buffers

Try reveal-mode; see below.

FAQ

  • How does this relate to outline-minor-mode?

    outli is mostly a convenient wrapper around functionality that is already built-in to outline, adding a few things like narrow-to-subtree and insert-heading-respect-content (ala org). And of course the speed-key bindings, automatic comments-as-header patterns, and styling.

  • How does this relate to outshine?

    Mostly just conceptually. Outshine also provides (different) speed keys, for example. And a lot more, much of which isn't as relevant to modern emacs. Since it builds more directly on the built-in capabilities of outline-minor-mode, outli is a much smaller and simpler package.

  • I wish outli styling would update when I change themes: This should happen automatically in Emacs 29.1 and later. For earlier version, add the following to your use-package stanza:

       :config (advice-add 'load-theme :after #'outli-reset-all-faces) ```
  • What is the syntax of outli-heading-config?

    It's an alist, each entry of which looks like:

    (MAJOR-MODE STEM REPEAT-CHAR STYLE NO-BAR) to configure a mode. or

    (MAJOR-MODE . nil) to explicitly prevent outli from running in this mode.

    I recommend using the customize interface to configure outli: M-x customize-group outli. But it may help to know:

    • MAJOR-MODE: A symbol for a major mode, or parent mode from which the current mode inherits, like 'text-mode (note: omit the single apostrophe in the customize interface: it knows it's a symbol). A value of t is used to specify the default.
    • STEM: A string like "# ". The fixed "stem" of the headline pattern (omit quotes in customize interface). Can also be an elisp expression which evaluates to a string.
    • REPEAT-CHAR: A character like ?*. The repeating character which specifies the level of a headline (again: no ? needed in customize, just type the character). Can also be an elisp expression which evaluates to a character.
    • STYLE: A style flag. nil for default (maximum) styling, the symbol none for no special styling of headlines, and t for matched styling between stem and repeat char. Can be omitted (defaults to nil). See also outli-default-style.
    • NO-BAR: A flag for the overline bar. If non-nil, omit the overline. Can be omitted (defaults to nil). See also outli-default-nobar.

Tips

  • You can use arbitrary expressions for the stem and repeat chars; they'll get evaluated at run-time.

  • It's useful to target high-level modes like prog-mode or text-mode, from which many modes inherit (see mode-minder to get a list of your major mode hierarchy).

  • Try out the h key at headline start: it folds everything up to be no deeper than the current header's level.

  • To prevent outli from being enabled in a given mode (or family of derived modes), just include (MODE . nil) in outli-heading-config. By default, org-mode is excluded in this way.

  • Some emacs tools like isearch are smart about folding/unfolding text as you navigate through a buffer with them. But not all. To fix this, you can consider enabling reveal-mode in buffers where you use outli, then tools like xref, etc. will reveal folded targets, re-hiding them when you navigate away.

  • I recommend consult-heading for quickly browsing outli headings. If you use consult-imenu, you might like to separate headings, by adding this to the consult-imenu config:

      (push '(?h "Headings")
         (plist-get (cdr (assoc 'emacs-lisp-mode consult-imenu-config)) :types))

Related Packages

  • outline-minor-mode: The built-in minor mode for outlining documents on which outli builds.
  • orgmode: The do-everything outliner mode.
  • outshine: A feature-full outline-minor-mode enhancement from which outli took its inspiration. Has many legacy features.
  • outorg: Required by outshine, this mode enables editing comment blocks in temporary org-mode buffers (the inverse of code-blocks in org).
  • See more related packages for org-like behavior outside of org.

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Simple comment-based outline folding for Emacs

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