This is a minor mode for interacting with a Julia REPL running inside Emacs. The julia
process is started in an ANSI terminal (term
), which allows text formatting and colors, and interaction with the help system and the debugger.
It is recommended that you use this minor mode with julia-mode.
Please make sure you have at least Emacs 25. The term
code changed a bit since Emacs 24, and the package does not support that and earlier versions. For example, Ubuntu has had Emacs 25 since 18.04LTS.
Place this in your Emacs initialization files (eg .emacs
):
(add-to-list 'load-path path-to-julia-repl)
(require 'julia-repl)
(add-hook 'julia-mode-hook 'julia-repl-mode) ;; always use minor mode
If you want to use a Julia executable other than julia
in your path, see below.
If you are experiencing problems with Unicode characters in the Julia REPL, try setting the relevant coding/language environment, eg
(set-language-environment "UTF-8")
M-x julia-repl
, or C-c C-z
from a buffer in which the julia-repl
minor mode is active starts a new inferior Julia process. The keys below can be used to interact with this process.
key | action |
---|---|
C-c C-a |
activate if there is a Project.toml in parent directories |
C-u C-c C-a |
activate home project |
C-c C-b |
send whole buffer to REPL (using include) |
C-u C-c C-b |
send whole buffer to REPL (directly) |
C-c C-c |
send region (when applicable) or line to REPL |
C-c C-d |
invoke @doc on symbol |
C-c C-e |
invoke @edit on region (when applicable) or line |
C-c C-l |
list methods of a function |
C-c C-m |
expand macro |
C-c C-p |
change directory to that of the buffer |
C-c C-s |
prompt for buffer name suffix |
C-c C-t |
send whole buffer to REPL (using Revise.includet) |
C-c C-v |
prompt for Julia executable |
C-c C-z |
raise the REPL or create a new one (or switch back from REPL – only in vterm backend) |
C-RET |
send line to REPL (without bracketed paste) |
All actions that send something to the REPL terminate with a newline, triggering evaluation. If you want to avoid sending a newline (eg maybe because you want to edit an expression), use prefix arguments (C--
or C-u
, currently both have the same effect). This of course does not apply to C-c C-b
.
All commands send code using bracketed paste. When Julia is waiting for input, control characters like ^[[200~
may show up in your buffer, this is innocuous. If you input takes a long time to evaluate, you can step through it line-by-line with C-RET
.
Options for this package are exposed via the customize interface (M-x customize-group julia
).
You can set environment variables directly from your init.el
in Emacs, eg
(setenv "JULIA_NUM_THREADS" "4")
The minor mode allows the user to select a particular Julia executable and optionally a different inferior buffer for each source code buffer. This allows running two versions (eg stable and master) of Julia simultaneously, and/or running multiple inferior REPLs of the same Julia version. A typical use case is trying out something quickly, without changing the state of the current process.
Set julia-repl-executable-records
to a list of keys and executables. For example,
(setq julia-repl-executable-records
'((default "julia") ; in the executable path
(master "~/src/julia-git/julia"))) ; compiled from the repository
provides two executables. The first entry is always the default (it can have any other key).
Use C-c C-v
to select one of these (julia-repl-prompt-executable
). You can also set the value of julia-repl-executable-key
directly to a key in the julia-repl-executable-records
, eg using file variables, but make sure you select a correct value.
The name of the inferior buffer will reflect your choice: the default is *julia*
(indicator omitted), while the master
executable would map to *julia-master*
, and so on.
You can also set a suffix for the inferior buffer, if you want multiple ones in parallel. This can be a number, which will show up as <number>
, or a symbol, which appears as -symbol
.
It is recommended that you use C-c C-s
(julia-repl-prompt-inferior-buffer-name-suffix
), which prompts for a string by default. Prefix arguments modify it like this:
-
numerical prefixes select that integer: eg
C-3 C-c C-s
set the suffix to3
. -
the negative prefix picks the next unused integer: eg
C- C-c C-s
sets the suffix to4
if1
,2
,3
are in use.
Switches to the julia
process can be provided in the global variable julia-repl-switches
, for example
(setq julia-repl-switches "-p 4")
The function julia-repl-prompt-switches
will prompt for new switches, you can bind it to a key.
If you are using the same settings for a specific file, consider using file variables. For example, if you use add-file-local-variable
to create a block at the end of the Julia source file similar to
# Local Variables:
# julia-repl-executable-key: master
# julia-repl-inferior-buffer-name-suffix: tests
# julia-repl-switches: "-p 4"
# End:
then the next time you open a REPL, it will have the name *julia-master-tests*
, and 4 worker processes.
julia-repl
can use the terminal in different ways.
The default is ansi-term
, which is included in Emacs, but it is recommended that you use vterm
via emacs-libvterm
(it is not the default since you need to install an extra package and the binary).
You can also use eat
as a backend.
Note to Windows users: you may not be able to use eat
and/or vterm
directly from native Windows Emacs, but there have been reports of people using them successfully from WSL (Windows Subsistem for Linux) 2. Please understand that supporting those terminal emulators is outside the scope of this package; julia-repl
merely provides bindings for them conditional on availability on your system.
Note some keybindings for term
:
C-x C-j
switches to line mode, where you can kill/yank, move around the buffer, use standard Emacs keybindings,C-c C-k
switches back to char mode,- for scrolling, use
S-<prior>
andS-<next>
.
See the help of term
for more.
vterm
is now the recommended backend, but for now you have to enable it explicitly because dependencies need to be available. In the long run it is hoped that it will replace ansi-term
as the default backend for this package, fixing many outstanding issues.
-
Install
emacs-libvterm
and make sure you have a working installation (egM-x vterm
) should start a terminal -
Evaluate
(julia-repl-set-terminal-backend 'vterm)
in your config file after you loadjulia-repl
, but before you use it (and of coursevterm
should be loaded at some point). Switching terminal backends with already running Julia processes is not supported. -
You may want to
(setq vterm-kill-buffer-on-exit nil)
to prevent the buffers associated with terminated Julia processes being killed automatically. This allows you to retain output and see error messages if the process does not start. -
You can also install EmacsVterm.jl package, which improves integration between Julia REPL and Emacs.
Install eat
and use (julia-repl-set-terminal-backend 'eat)
in your config file.
The @edit
macro can be called with C-c C-e
when the julia-repl-mode
minor mode is enabled. The behavior depends on the value of the JULIA_EDITOR
envoronment variable in the Julia session. The command julia-repl-set-julia-editor
is provided to conveniently control this from emacs.
To use "emacsclient" as a default in each Julia REPL you open in emacs, add the following code to your ~/.julia/config/startup.jl
:
if haskey(ENV, "INSIDE_EMACS")
ENV["JULIA_EDITOR"] = "emacsclient"
end
If you cannot edit your startup.jl
, you can configure the editor in each repl after starting it with:
(add-hook 'julia-repl-hook #'julia-repl-use-emacsclient)
Julia uses more colors than the ones supported by term
by default. To get the full range of colors, use eterm-256color, available from MELPA.
ansi-term
is not supported on some (most?) Windows versions of Emacs. It has been confirmed to work with Emacs running in Cygwin. You can test whether your version works with M-x ansi-term
; if this errors then this package will not work for you.
Cygwin may require some rewriting of paths for include
to work. After loading this package, customize the rewrite rules as
(setq julia-repl-path-rewrite-rules julia-repl-cygwin-path-rewrite-rules)
as a reasonable default, or write custom rules for julia-repl-path-rewrites
.
See the issues.
A well-known alternative is ESS, which also supports Julia. ESS is however based on comint
, which does not allow a fully functioning terminal and therefore does not support the Julia REPL modes (shell, Pkg, debuggers...) and features. julia-repl
is instead based on term
, and so gets all the features from Julia's native REPL for free.