alphapapa / activities.el

Activities for Emacs (suspend and resume activities, i.e. frames/tabs and their windows, buffers)

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activities.el

https://elpa.gnu.org/packages/activities.svg

Inspired by Genera’s and KDE’s concepts of “activities”, this library allows the user to select an “activity”, the loading of which restores a window configuration into a tab-bar tab or frame, along with the buffers shown in each window. Saving an activity saves the state for later restoration. Switching away from an activity saves the last-used state for later switching back to, while still allowing the activity’s initial or default state to be restored on demand. Resuming an activity loads the last-used state, or the initial/default state when a universal argument is provided.

The implementation uses the bookmark system to save buffers’ states–that is, any major mode that supports the bookmark system is compatible. A buffer whose major mode does not support the bookmark system (or does not support it well enough to restore useful state) is not compatible and can’t be fully restored, or perhaps not at all; but solving that is as simple as implementing bookmark support for the mode, which is usually trivial.

Integration with Emacs’s tab-bar-mode is provided: a window configuration or can be restored to a tab-bar tab or to a frame.

Various hooks are (or will be–feedback is welcome) provided, both globally and per-activity, so that the user can define functions to be called when an activity is saved, restored, or switched from/to. For example, this could be used to limit the set of buffers offered for switching to within an activity, or to track the time spent in an activity.

Contents

Installation

GNU ELPA

activities may be installed into Emacs versions 29.1 or later from GNU ELPA by using the command M-x package-install RET activities RET. This will install the latest stable release, which is recommended.

Quelpa

To install directly from git (e.g. to test a pre-release version), it’s recommended to use Quelpa:

  1. Install quelpa-use-package (which can be installed directly from MELPA).
  2. Add this form to your init file (see Configuration for more details):
(use-package activities
  :quelpa (activities :fetcher github :repo "alphapapa/activities.el"))

If you choose to install it otherwise, please note that the author can’t offer help with manual installation problems.

Configuration

This is the recommended configuration, in terms of a use-package form to be placed in the user’s init file:

(use-package activities
  :init
  (activities-mode)
  (activities-tabs-mode)

  :bind
  (("C-x C-a n" . activities-new)
   ("C-x C-a g" . activities-revert)
   ("C-x C-a s" . activities-suspend)
   ("C-x C-a C-k" . activities-kill)    ; Alias for `-suspend'
   ("C-x C-a a" . activities-resume)
   ;; For convenience, we also bind `activities-resume' to "C-x C-a
   ;; C-a", so the user need not lift the Control key.
   ("C-x C-a C-a" . activities-resume)
   ("C-x C-a RET" . activities-switch)
   ("C-x C-a l" . activities-list)))

Usage

Activities

For the purposes of this library, an “activity” is a window configuration and its associated buffers. When an activity is “resumed,” its buffers are recreated and loaded into the window configuration, which is loaded into a frame or tab.

From the user’s perspective, an “activity” should be thought of as something like, “reading my email,” “working on my Emacs library,” “writing my book,” “working for this client,” etc. The user arranges a set of windows and buffers according to what’s needed, then saves it as a new activity. Later, when the user wants to return to doing that activity, the activity is “resumed,” which restores the activity’s last-seen state, allowing the user to pick up where the activity was left off; but the user may also revert the activity to its default state, which may be used as a kind of entry point to doing the activity in general.

Compatibility

This library is designed to not interfere with other workflows and tools; it is intended to coexist and allow integration with them. For example, when activities-tabs-mode is enabled, non-activity-related tabs are not affected by it; and the user may close any tab using existing tab commands, regardless of whether it is associated with an activity.

Modes

activities-mode
Automatically saves activities’ states when Emacs is idle and when Emacs exits. Should be enabled while using this package (otherwise you would have to manually call activities-save-all, which would defeat much of the purpose of this library).
activities-tabs-mode
Causes activities to be managed as tab-bar tabs rather than frames (the default). (This is what the author uses; bugs present when this mode is not enabled are less likely to be found, so please report them.)

Workflow

An example of a workflow using activities:

  1. Arrange windows in a tab according to an activity you’re performing.
  2. Call activities-new (C-x C-a n) to save the activity under a name.
  3. Perform the activity for a while.
  4. Change window configuration, change tab, close the tab, or even restart Emacs.
  5. Call activities-resume (C-x C-a C-a) to resume the activity where you left off.
  6. Return to the original activity state with activities-revert (C-x C-a g).
  7. Rearrange windows and buffers.
  8. Call activities-new with a universal prefix argument (C-u C-x C-a n) to redefine an activity’s default state.
  9. Suspend the activity with activities-suspend (C-x C-a s) (which saves its last state and closes its frame/tab).

Commands

activities-list (C-x C-a l)
List activities in a vtable buffer in which they can be managed with various commands.
activities-new (C-x C-a n)
Define a new activity whose default state is the current frame’s or tab’s window configuration. With prefix argument, overwrite an existing activity (thereby updating its default state to the current state).
activities-suspend (C-x C-a s)
Save an activity’s state and close its frame or tab.
activities-kill (C-x C-a C-k)
Alias for activities-suspend.
activities-resume (C-x C-a C-a)
Resume an activity, switching to a new frame or tab for its window configuration, and restoring its buffers. With prefix argument, restore its default state rather than its last.
activities-revert (C-x C-a g)
Revert an activity to its default state.
activities-switch (C-x C-a RET)
Switch to an already-active activity.
activities-discard
Discard an activity permanently.
activities-save-all
Save all active activities’ states. (activities-mode does this automatically, so this command should rarely be needed.)

Bookmarks

When option activities-bookmark-store is enabled, an Emacs bookmark is stored when a new activity is made. This allows the command bookmark-jump (C-x r b) to be used to resume an activity (helping to universalize the bookmark system).

FAQ

How is this different from Burly.el or Bufler.el?
Burly is a well-polished tool for restoring window and frame configurations, which could be considered an incubator for some of the ideas furthered here. Bufler’s bufler-workspace library uses Burly to provide some similar functionality, which is at an exploratory stage. activities hopes to provide a longer-term solution more suitable for integration into Emacs.
How does this differ from “workspace” packages?
Yes, there are many Emacs packages that provide “workspace”-like features in one way or another. To date, only Burly and Bufler seem to offer the ability to restore one across Emacs sessions. As mentioned, activities is intended to be more refined and easier to use (e.g. automatically saving activities’ states when activities-mode is enabled). Comparisons to other packages are left to the reader; suffice to say that activities is intended to provide what other tools haven’t, in an idiomatic, intuitive way. (Feedback is welcome.)
How does this differ from the built-in desktop-mode?
As best this author can tell, desktop-mode saves and restores one set of buffers, with various options to control its behavior. It does not use bookmark internally, which prevents it from restoring non-file-backed buffers. As well, it is not intended to be used on-demand to switch between sets of buffers, windows, or frames (i.e. “activities”).
“Activities” haven’t seemed to pan out for KDE. Why would they in Emacs?
KDE Plasma’s Activities system requires applications that can save and restore their state through Plasma, which only (or mostly only?) KDE apps can do, limiting the usefulness of the system. However, Emacs offers a coherent environment, similar to Lisp machines of yore, and its bookmark library offers a way for any buffer’s major mode to save and restore state, if implemented (which many already are).
Why did a buffer not restore correctly?
Most likely because that buffer’s major mode does not support Emacs bookmarks (which activities uses internally to save and restore buffer state). But many, if not most, major modes do; and for those that don’t, implementing such support is usually trivial (and thereby benefits Emacs as a whole, not just activities). So contact the major mode’s maintainer and ask that bookmark support be implemented.
Why did I get an error?
Because activities is at an early stage of development and some of these features are not simple to implement. But it’s based on Burly, which has already been through much bug-fixing, so it should proceed smoothly. Please report any bugs you find.

Changelog

v0.4-pre

Additions

  • Option activities-anti-save-predicates prevents saving activity states at inappropriate times.

Fixes

  • Don’t save activity state if a minibuffer is active.
  • Offer only active activities for suspending.

v0.3.3

Fixes

  • Command activities-list shows a helpful message if no activities are defined. (#11. Thanks to fuzy112 for reporting.)
  • Link in documentation (which works locally but not on GNU ELPA at the moment).

v0.3.2

Updated documentation, etc.

v0.3.1

Fixes

  • Handle case in which activities-tabs-mode is enabled again without having been disabled (which caused an error in tab-bar-mode). (#7)

v0.3

Additions

  • Command activities-list lists activities in a vtable buffer in which they can be managed.
  • Offer current activity name by default when redefining an activity with activities-new.
  • Record times at which activities’ states were updated.

v0.2

Additions

  • Offer current project name by default for new activities. (Thanks to Joseph Turner.)
  • Use current activity as default for various completions. (Thanks to Joseph Turner.)

Fixes

  • Raise frame after selecting it. (Thanks to JD Smith for suggesting.)

v0.1.3

Fixes

  • Autoloads.
  • Command aliases.

v0.1.2

Fixes

  • Some single-window configurations were not restored properly.

v0.1.1

Fixes

  • Silence message about non-file-visiting buffers.

v0.1

Initial release.

Development

activities is developed on GitHub. Suggestions, bug reports, and patches are welcome.

Copyright assignment

This package is part of GNU Emacs, being distributed in GNU ELPA. Contributions to this project must follow GNU guidelines, which means that, as with other parts of Emacs, patches of more than a few lines must be accompanied by having assigned copyright for the contribution to the FSF. Contributors who wish to do so may contact emacs-devel@gnu.org to request the assignment form.

About

Activities for Emacs (suspend and resume activities, i.e. frames/tabs and their windows, buffers)

License:GNU General Public License v3.0


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