How to start emacs in “nothing” mode The Next CEO of Stack Overflowemacs major mode for INF filesMajor mode map in emacsHow to detect mode, then execute?How can I make emacs ignore part of the file name when deciding major mode?Set “Edit with Emacs” major mode to markdown-modeDetermine if emacs knows the mode for a fileHow do I get the current major mode?How to define “mode-specific” functions?How to read wikipedia in EmacsHow should I test my new mode?
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How to start emacs in “nothing” mode
The Next CEO of Stack Overflowemacs major mode for INF filesMajor mode map in emacsHow to detect mode, then execute?How can I make emacs ignore part of the file name when deciding major mode?Set “Edit with Emacs” major mode to markdown-modeDetermine if emacs knows the mode for a fileHow do I get the current major mode?How to define “mode-specific” functions?How to read wikipedia in EmacsHow should I test my new mode?
If I type emacs test.sh Emacs insists on putting me in Shell-script mode. Another time I want to edit the file help.txt and then Emacs puts me in Text mode. But sometimes I don't want any of this, especially when I am doing a large paste into Emacs from some other source.
How do I start Emacs in "nothing" mode? No special indenting, spacing, etc., and Emacs simply takes the characters in as they are entered.
major-mode
add a comment |
If I type emacs test.sh Emacs insists on putting me in Shell-script mode. Another time I want to edit the file help.txt and then Emacs puts me in Text mode. But sometimes I don't want any of this, especially when I am doing a large paste into Emacs from some other source.
How do I start Emacs in "nothing" mode? No special indenting, spacing, etc., and Emacs simply takes the characters in as they are entered.
major-mode
add a comment |
If I type emacs test.sh Emacs insists on putting me in Shell-script mode. Another time I want to edit the file help.txt and then Emacs puts me in Text mode. But sometimes I don't want any of this, especially when I am doing a large paste into Emacs from some other source.
How do I start Emacs in "nothing" mode? No special indenting, spacing, etc., and Emacs simply takes the characters in as they are entered.
major-mode
If I type emacs test.sh Emacs insists on putting me in Shell-script mode. Another time I want to edit the file help.txt and then Emacs puts me in Text mode. But sometimes I don't want any of this, especially when I am doing a large paste into Emacs from some other source.
How do I start Emacs in "nothing" mode? No special indenting, spacing, etc., and Emacs simply takes the characters in as they are entered.
major-mode
major-mode
asked 4 hours ago
rlandsterrlandster
1162
1162
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add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
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When you use M-x find-file-literally Emacs will not invoke any modes based on file name. From the command line you can use something like:
emacs --eval '(find-file-literally "yourfile.ext")'
add a comment |
Emacs modes are established for each file you open, so opening Emacs in "nothing mode" doesn't necessarily accomplish what you're after. Each file you open after starting Emacs will get its own mode applied.
You can use the command @clemera provides to open a file in fundamental mode from the command line. You can do the same from an already-running Emacs via M-x find-file-literally. You can "turn-off" the major mode for a file you've already opened by selecting fundamental mode (which is basically "nothing mode"): M-x fundamental-mode
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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active
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votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
When you use M-x find-file-literally Emacs will not invoke any modes based on file name. From the command line you can use something like:
emacs --eval '(find-file-literally "yourfile.ext")'
add a comment |
When you use M-x find-file-literally Emacs will not invoke any modes based on file name. From the command line you can use something like:
emacs --eval '(find-file-literally "yourfile.ext")'
add a comment |
When you use M-x find-file-literally Emacs will not invoke any modes based on file name. From the command line you can use something like:
emacs --eval '(find-file-literally "yourfile.ext")'
When you use M-x find-file-literally Emacs will not invoke any modes based on file name. From the command line you can use something like:
emacs --eval '(find-file-literally "yourfile.ext")'
edited 2 hours ago
answered 4 hours ago
clemeraclemera
1,768522
1,768522
add a comment |
add a comment |
Emacs modes are established for each file you open, so opening Emacs in "nothing mode" doesn't necessarily accomplish what you're after. Each file you open after starting Emacs will get its own mode applied.
You can use the command @clemera provides to open a file in fundamental mode from the command line. You can do the same from an already-running Emacs via M-x find-file-literally. You can "turn-off" the major mode for a file you've already opened by selecting fundamental mode (which is basically "nothing mode"): M-x fundamental-mode
add a comment |
Emacs modes are established for each file you open, so opening Emacs in "nothing mode" doesn't necessarily accomplish what you're after. Each file you open after starting Emacs will get its own mode applied.
You can use the command @clemera provides to open a file in fundamental mode from the command line. You can do the same from an already-running Emacs via M-x find-file-literally. You can "turn-off" the major mode for a file you've already opened by selecting fundamental mode (which is basically "nothing mode"): M-x fundamental-mode
add a comment |
Emacs modes are established for each file you open, so opening Emacs in "nothing mode" doesn't necessarily accomplish what you're after. Each file you open after starting Emacs will get its own mode applied.
You can use the command @clemera provides to open a file in fundamental mode from the command line. You can do the same from an already-running Emacs via M-x find-file-literally. You can "turn-off" the major mode for a file you've already opened by selecting fundamental mode (which is basically "nothing mode"): M-x fundamental-mode
Emacs modes are established for each file you open, so opening Emacs in "nothing mode" doesn't necessarily accomplish what you're after. Each file you open after starting Emacs will get its own mode applied.
You can use the command @clemera provides to open a file in fundamental mode from the command line. You can do the same from an already-running Emacs via M-x find-file-literally. You can "turn-off" the major mode for a file you've already opened by selecting fundamental mode (which is basically "nothing mode"): M-x fundamental-mode
answered 45 mins ago
TylerTyler
12.2k12354
12.2k12354
add a comment |
add a comment |
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