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This is writeroom-mode.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.1 from
writeroom-mode.texi.

INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Writeroom Mode: (writeroom-mode).        Distraction-free writing.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Top,  Next: Writeroom-mode,  Up: (dir)

Top
***

* Menu:

* Writeroom-mode::


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Writeroom-mode,  Prev: Top,  Up: Top

1 Writeroom-mode
****************

‘writeroom-mode’ is a minor mode for Emacs that implements a
distraction-free writing mode similar to the famous Writeroom editor for
OS X. ‘writeroom-mode’ is meant for GNU Emacs 24, lower versions are not
actively supported.
* Menu:

* Installation::
* Usage::
* Multiple writeroom-mode buffers::
* Frame effects::
* Customisation::
* Changing the width interactively::
* Text size adjustments::
* Displaying the mode line::
* Adding global effects::
* Other similar modes::


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Installation,  Next: Usage,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.1 Installation
================

‘writeroom-mode’ can be installed through the package manager from Melpa
(http://melpa.org/).  If installing manually, make sure to also install
its dependency ‘visual-fill-column’
(https://github.com/joostkremers/visual-fill-column).


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Usage,  Next: Multiple writeroom-mode buffers,  Prev: Installation,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.2 Usage
=========

‘writeroom-mode’ can be activated in a buffer by calling ‘M-x
writeroom-mode RET’.  By default, ‘writeroom-mode’ does the following
things:

   • activate fullscreen
   • disable transparency
   • disable the menu bar
   • disable the tool bar
   • disable the scroll bar
   • enable a bottom window divider of 1 pixel
   • maximise the current window (i.e., delete all other windows in the
     frame)
   • place the fringes outside the margins
   • disable the mode line
   • add window margins to the current buffer so that the text is 80
     characters wide

The last three effects are buffer-local.  The other effects apply to the
current frame.  Because ‘writeroom-mode’ is a minor mode, this isn’t
entirely on the up and up, since minor modes aren’t supposed to have
such global effects.  But ‘writeroom-mode’ is meant for distraction-free
writing, so these effects do make sense.

All these effects can be disabled or customised.  In addition, there are
several more options that are disabled by default but can be enabled in
the customisation buffer.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Multiple writeroom-mode buffers,  Next: Frame effects,  Prev: Usage,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.3 Multiple writeroom-mode buffers
===================================

It is possible to activate ‘writeroom-mode’ in more than one buffer.
The global effects are of course activated only once and they remain
active until ‘writeroom-mode’ is deactivated in _all_ buffers.
Alternatively, if you wish to use ‘writeroom-mode’ in all buffers that
have a particular major mode (e.g., ‘text-mode’, ‘markdown-mode’), you
can use the global minor mode ‘global-writeroom-mode’.  This function
enables the global effects and activates the buffer-local effects in all
(current and future) buffers that have a major mode listed in the user
option ‘writeroom-major-modes’ (by default only ‘text-mode’).

When ‘global-writeroom-mode’ is active, the function ‘writeroom-mode’
can still be called to enable or disable ‘writeroom-mode’ in individual
buffers (regardless of their major mode, of course).  Calling
‘global-writeroom-mode’ again disables ‘writeroom-mode’ in all buffers
in which it is active, also those in which it was activated manually.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Frame effects,  Next: Customisation,  Prev: Multiple writeroom-mode buffers,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.4 Frame effects
=================

Most of the global effects that ‘writeroom-mode’ enables are handled by
setting specific frame parameters.  This means that they apply to the
current frame.  If you switch to another frame and display a
‘writeroom-mode’ buffer, only the buffer-local effects will be visible.

‘writeroom-mode’ tries to make sure that it only affects one frame, and
that it restores that particular frame when it is deactivated in the
last buffer.  This means it should be safe to activate ‘writeroom-mode’
in one frame and deactivate it in another.  Killing the ‘writeroom-mode’
frame should also be safe.

The affected frame is always restored to its original state, before
‘writeroom-mode’ was activated, even if you change any of the frame
parameters manually while ‘writeroom-mode’ is active.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Customisation,  Next: Changing the width interactively,  Prev: Frame effects,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.5 Customisation
=================

* Menu:

* Global Writeroom Mode::
* Border Width::
* Extra Line Spacing::
* Fringes Outside Margins::
* Fullscreen Effect::
* Bottom Divider Width::
* Global Effects::
* Major Modes::
* Use Derived Modes::
* Major Modes Exceptions::
* Maximize Window::
* Mode Line::
* Mode Line Toggle Position::
* Restore Window Config::
* Width::


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Global Writeroom Mode,  Next: Border Width,  Up: Customisation

1.5.1 Global Writeroom Mode
---------------------------

Activate this option to automatically turn on ‘writeroom-mode’ in any
buffer that has one of the major modes matched any mask listed in
‘writeroom-major-modes’ and not in ‘writeroom-major-modes’.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Border Width,  Next: Extra Line Spacing,  Prev: Global Writeroom Mode,  Up: Customisation

1.5.2 Border Width
------------------

Width of the border around the text area.  Disabled by default, see
‘writeroom-global-effects’ to enable the border.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Extra Line Spacing,  Next: Fringes Outside Margins,  Prev: Border Width,  Up: Customisation

1.5.3 Extra Line Spacing
------------------------

Increase the line spacing.  Can be an absolute value (the number of
pixels to add to the line) or a number relative to the default line
height.  Disabled by default.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Fringes Outside Margins,  Next: Fullscreen Effect,  Prev: Extra Line Spacing,  Up: Customisation

1.5.4 Fringes Outside Margins
-----------------------------

If set, place the fringes outside the margins.  ‘writeroom-mode’ expands
the window margins, causing the fringes to be pushed inside, which may
be visually distracting.  This option keeps the fringes at the window’s
edges.  Unset it if you prefer to have the fringes close to the text.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Fullscreen Effect,  Next: Bottom Divider Width,  Prev: Fringes Outside Margins,  Up: Customisation

1.5.5 Fullscreen Effect
-----------------------

Effect to apply when ‘writeroom-mode’ activates fullscreen.  Can be
‘fullboth’, which uses the entire screen (i.e., window decorations are
disabled and the window manager’s panel or task bar is covered by the
Emacs frame) or ‘maximized’, in which case the Emacs frame is maximised
but keeps its window decorations and does not cover the panel.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Bottom Divider Width,  Next: Global Effects,  Prev: Fullscreen Effect,  Up: Customisation

1.5.6 Bottom Divider Width
--------------------------

Width in pixels of the bottom window divider.  Default value is 1.  The
bottom window divider helps in distinguishing the minibuffer from the
text area, and also in distinguishing two windows split top-to-bottom.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Global Effects,  Next: Major Modes,  Prev: Bottom Divider Width,  Up: Customisation

1.5.7 Global Effects
--------------------

List of global effects:

   • fullscreen
   • transparency
   • scroll bar
   • menu bar
   • tool bar
   • bottom window divider
   • border (add a border around the text area; disabled by default)
   • sticky (display the window on all virtual workspaces; disabled by
     default)

Each option can be enabled or disabled individually.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Major Modes,  Next: Use Derived Modes,  Prev: Global Effects,  Up: Customisation

1.5.8 Major Modes
-----------------

List of major modes in which ‘writeroom-mode’ should be activated
automatically.  Use in conjunction with ‘global-writeroom-mode’.

The elements in this list can be major-mode symbols, or regular
expressions (in which case they must of course be strings).


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Use Derived Modes,  Next: Major Modes Exceptions,  Prev: Major Modes,  Up: Customisation

1.5.9 Use Derived Modes
-----------------------

If this option is set, ‘global-writeroom-mode’ also activates
‘writeroom-mode’ in buffers whose major mode is a derived mode of one of
the modes in ‘writeroom-major-modes’.  (Only the major mode symbols in
‘writeroom-major-modes’ are relevant.)


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Major Modes Exceptions,  Next: Maximize Window,  Prev: Use Derived Modes,  Up: Customisation

1.5.10 Major Modes Exceptions
-----------------------------

List of major modes in which ‘writeroom-mode’ should not be activated by
‘global-writeroom-mode’.  (It is still possible to activate
‘writeroom-mode’ manually).  This can also be a mixed list of major-mode
symbols and regular expressions.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Maximize Window,  Next: Mode Line,  Prev: Major Modes Exceptions,  Up: Customisation

1.5.11 Maximize Window
----------------------

Maximise the current window in its frame, i.e., delete all other
windows.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Mode Line,  Next: Mode Line Toggle Position,  Prev: Maximize Window,  Up: Customisation

1.5.12 Mode Line
----------------

The mode line format to use.  This option can be ‘nil’, which disables
the mode line altogether (which is the default), it can be ‘t’, which
retains the mode line, or it can be set to a customised format to only
show some information.  If the latter option is chosen, the mode line
shows only the file name and the file modification status, but the
format can be customised.  See the documentation for the variable
‘mode-line-format’ for details.  If you set this option, it may be more
visually pleasing to set the option Bottom Divider Width to 0.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Mode Line Toggle Position,  Next: Restore Window Config,  Prev: Mode Line,  Up: Customisation

1.5.13 Mode Line Toggle Position
--------------------------------

If you disable or customise the mode line, you may sometimes want to see
the entire mode line.  ‘writeroom-mode’ provides the function
‘writeroom-toggle-mode-line’ (see below) to do this.  You can specify
where you want to make the mode line visible when using this function:
in the mode line itself, or in the header line.

Note that the default value of this option is to display the mode line
in the header line, because for some reason that is more reliable.
(Toggling the mode line multiple times in a row does not always work
very well.)


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Restore Window Config,  Next: Width,  Prev: Mode Line Toggle Position,  Up: Customisation

1.5.14 Restore Window Config
----------------------------

Restore the window configuration that existed before ‘writeroom-mode’
was activated.  This is primarily useful if you use ‘writeroom-mode’ in
only a single buffer, since the window configuration that is restored is
the one that existed at the moment when ‘writeroom-mode’ is called for
the first time.  Disabled by default.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Width,  Prev: Restore Window Config,  Up: Customisation

1.5.15 Width
------------

Width of the text area.  Can be specified as an absolute value (number
of characters) or as a fraction of the total window width (in which case
it should be a number between 0 and 1).


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Changing the width interactively,  Next: Text size adjustments,  Prev: Customisation,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.6 Changing the width interactively
====================================

The width of the text area in the current buffer can be changed
interactively with the commands ‘writeroom-increase-width’ and
‘writeroom-decrease-width’, which increase and decrease the text width
by 2 characters.  There is also a more general command
‘writeroom-adjust-width’, which adjusts the width of the text area by
the amount passed as prefix argument.  That is, calling it with ‘M-5 M-x
writeroom-adjust-width’ increases the text width by 5 characters.
Calling ‘writeroom-adjust-width’ without prefix argument resets the
width to the default value.

These commands are not bound to any keys, but you can bind them in the
following manner (the actual keys are just examples, of course; choose
any keys you like):

(with-eval-after-load 'writeroom-mode
  (define-key writeroom-mode-map (kbd "C-M-<") #'writeroom-decrease-width)
  (define-key writeroom-mode-map (kbd "C-M->") #'writeroom-increase-width)
  (define-key writeroom-mode-map (kbd "C-M-=") #'writeroom-adjust-width))


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Text size adjustments,  Next: Displaying the mode line,  Prev: Changing the width interactively,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.7 Text size adjustments
=========================

Text size adjustments are taken into account in calculating the margins,
which means that if the text size is increased, the margins are
decreased, so that the number of characters on the line remains more or
less the same.  Since it is not possible to detect interactive text size
adjustments (e.g., with ‘text-size-adjust’), the adjustments of the
margins cannot be made automatically.  You need to force a redisplay,
e.g., with the command ‘redraw-display’.

Alternatively, you can advise the command you use for adjusting the text
size (most likely ‘text-size-adjust’):

(advice-add 'text-scale-adjust :after
  #'visual-fill-column-adjust)


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Displaying the mode line,  Next: Adding global effects,  Prev: Text size adjustments,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.8 Displaying the mode line
============================

By default, ‘writeroom-mode’ disables the mode line.  If you
occasionally need to see the full mode line, you can use the command
‘writeroom-toggle-mode-line’, which makes the mode line visible.
Calling it again hides the mode line.  This command is bound to ‘s-?’
(‘s’ is the super key, i.e., the Windows key on PCs, the ⌘ key on Macs),
but it can be rebound by putting something like the following in your
‘init.el’:

(with-eval-after-load 'writeroom-mode
  (define-key writeroom-mode-map (kbd "s-?") nil)
  (define-key writeroom-mode-map (kbd "<some-key>") #’writeroom-toggle-mode-line))

The first ‘define-key’ disables the binding for ‘s-?’.  Substitute your
preferred key binding in the second line to bind
‘writeroom-toggle-mode-line’ to it.


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Adding global effects,  Next: Other similar modes,  Prev: Displaying the mode line,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.9 Adding global effects
=========================

It is possible to add your own global effects to ‘writeroom-mode’.  If
there is a global minor mode that you want turned on when
‘writeroom-mode’ is activated for the first time, you can simply add it
to the user option ‘writeroom-global-effects’ by checking the box
"Custom effects", clicking the [INS] button and adding the function to
the list.

Alternatively, you can also write your own function.  This function
should take one argument and enable the effect if the argument is ‘1’
and disable it if the argument is ‘-1’.  To give an example, if you want
to activate a minimalist colour theme in ‘writeroom-mode’, you can write
the following function:

(defun my-writeroom-theme (arg)
  (cond
   ((= arg 1)
    (enable-theme 'minimalist-dark))
   ((= arg -1)
    (disable-theme 'minimalist-dark))))

If your function affects the frame, you should make sure that it only
affects the ‘writeroom-mode’ frame by passing the variable
‘writeroom--frame’ to all frame-changing functions.  If your frame
effect involves changing the value of a frame parameter, you may be able
to use the macro ‘define-writeroom-global-effect’; see its doc string
for details.

In principle, it is not a good idea to define a custom global effect
function as a toggle, but if you are sure you’ll only ever use a single
frame, it should be safe enough.  For example, sometimes setting the
‘fullscreen’ frame parameter does not work.  In this case, if you’re on
Linux, you could send an X client message directly:

(defun my-toggle-fullscreen (_)
  (x-send-client-message nil 0 nil "_NET_WM_STATE" 32
                         '(2 "_NET_WM_STATE_FULLSCREEN" 0)))


File: writeroom-mode.info,  Node: Other similar modes,  Prev: Adding global effects,  Up: Writeroom-mode

1.10 Other similar modes
========================

There are two other modes that I know of that also implement a
distraction-free writing environment: Darkroom
(https://github.com/joaotavora/darkroom) and Olivetti
(https://github.com/rnkn/olivetti).  Both are narrower in scope than
‘writeroom-mode’.

In particular, both Darkroom and Olivetti only affect the buffer (or
more precisely, its window), not the frame.  They centre the text by
adding window margins, and optionally resize the text and hide the mode
line.  They do not make Emacs fullscreen and do not remove the menu and
tool bars, the scroll bar or the window decorations.  This is a
conscious choice (see, e.g., this pull request
(https://github.com/joaotavora/darkroom/pull/2) and this issue
(https://github.com/rnkn/olivetti/issues/6)), motivated by the fact that
affecting the frame in this way may lead to problems when using multiple
Emacs frames.

It is true that changing the appearance of the current frame (the global
effects, as ‘writeroom-mode’ calls them) is risky if you use multiple
frames.  ‘writeroom-mode’ applies its global effects to the frame that
is current when it is first activated and tries to make sure that _only_
this frame is ever affected.  Therefore, it should be safe to use
‘writeroom-mode’, even if you use multiple frames.  (If you do run into
issues, however, I would welcome a bug report.)  Alternatively, you can
turn off all global effects and use ‘writeroom-mode’ in much the same
way as Darkroom or Olivetti.

Another difference with Darkroom and Olivetti is that ‘writeroom-mode’
tries to be as customisable as possible.  It has a larger number of
customisation options than either of the other modes and also provides a
way to add custom global effects.  This may or may not be what you need,
of course.



Tag Table:
Node: Top222
Node: Writeroom-mode336
Ref: #writeroom-mode445
Node: Installation931
Ref: #installation1051
Node: Usage1295
Ref: #usage1441
Node: Multiple writeroom-mode buffers2547
Ref: #multiple-writeroom-mode-buffers2746
Node: Frame effects3764
Ref: #frame-effects3935
Node: Customisation4744
Ref: #customisation4916
Node: Global Writeroom Mode5251
Ref: #global-writeroom-mode5408
Node: Border Width5617
Ref: #border-width5783
Node: Extra Line Spacing5905
Ref: #extra-line-spacing6085
Node: Fringes Outside Margins6252
Ref: #fringes-outside-margins6447
Node: Fullscreen Effect6740
Ref: #fullscreen-effect6925
Node: Bottom Divider Width7284
Ref: #bottom-divider-width7466
Node: Global Effects7680
Ref: #global-effects7844
Node: Major Modes8199
Ref: #major-modes8354
Node: Use Derived Modes8619
Ref: #use-derived-modes8794
Node: Major Modes Exceptions9056
Ref: #major-modes-exceptions9247
Node: Maximize Window9499
Ref: #maximize-window9668
Node: Mode Line9743
Ref: #mode-line9903
Node: Mode Line Toggle Position10466
Ref: #mode-line-toggle-position10664
Node: Restore Window Config11217
Ref: #restore-window-config11403
Node: Width11740
Ref: #width11860
Node: Changing the width interactively12045
Ref: #changing-the-width-interactively12263
Node: Text size adjustments13268
Ref: #text-size-adjustments13475
Node: Displaying the mode line14132
Ref: #displaying-the-mode-line14334
Node: Adding global effects15120
Ref: #adding-global-effects15314
Node: Other similar modes16999
Ref: #other-similar-modes17158

End Tag Table


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