Skip to content

Alexander-Miller/treemacs

Repository files navigation

https://badges.gitter.im/Alexander-Miller/treemacs.png https://melpa.org/packages/treemacs-badge.svg https://stable.melpa.org/packages/treemacs-badge.svg https://travis-ci.org/Alexander-Miller/treemacs.svg?branch=master https://cdn.rawgit.com/syl20bnr/spacemacs/442d025779da2f62fc86c2082703697714db6514/assets/spacemacs-badge.svg

Treemacs - a tree layout file explorer for Emacs

screenshots/screenshot.png

Content

Quick Feature Overview

Treemacs is a file and project explorer similar to NeoTree or vim’s NerdTree, but largely inspired by the Project Explorer in Eclipse. It shows the file system outlines of your projects in a simple tree layout allowing quick navigation and exploration, while also possessing basic file management utilities. Specifically a quick feature overview looks as follows:

Project management
Treemacs lets you view multiple file trees - projects - at once and quickly add or remove them, and groups projects in workspaces.
Easy navigation
quickly move between projects or use shortcuts to jump to parent or neighbouring nodes.
Versatile file access
decide exactly how and where a file will be opened, including using ace-window to choose a window or launching an external application.
Understanding of frames
every frame will receive its own treemacs buffer that will live and die with that frame.
Finding of files and tags
Treemacs can follow along and keep in focus the currently selected file or even the tag at point using, either manually or automatically using either treemacs-follow-mode or treemacs-tag-follow-mode.
Git Integration
Treemacs can use different faces for files and directories based on their git status. The git process is run asynchronously, minimizing its performance impact.
Winum & ace-window compatibility
The presence of treemacs will not interfere with winum’s and ace-window’s usual layouts.
Projectile integration
the treemacs-projectile package lets you quickly add your projectile projects to the treemacs workspace.
Simple mouse interface
Left clicks will work the same as you’re used to from with graphical applications
Session persistence
Treemacs automatically saves and restores your workspaces.
Dashing good looks
Treemacs uses (optionally resizable) png images in HD 22x22 resolution for its icons (quantity is, of course, another matter). When run in a terminal a simple fallback is used.
Tag view
Treemacs can display files’ tags. All file types that Emacs can generate a (semantic) imenu index for are supported.
Visual feedback
When it would otherwise be difficult to see the message in the minibuffer success/failure is indicated with pulse.el.
Theming support
Treemacs supports using multiple icon themes that can be changed at will.
Ease of use
Treemacs offers many configuration options, but comes with a set of (what hopefully should be) sane defaults. Installation aside there are two obligatory pieces of setup: 1) Choosing convenient keybindings to run treemacs and 2) If you use evil: requiring treemacs-evil to integrate treemacs with evil and enable j/k navigation. More on both below. You can also summon a helpful hydra with ? that will remind you of treemacs’ many keybindings and features.
Bookmark integration
Running bookmark-set on a Treemacs item will store a bookmark to Treemacs buffer for that item.

Fancy Gifs!

Various ways to open files: screenshots/open-files.gif

Workspace administration with org-mode: screenshots/workspace-edit.gif

Automatic reaction to changes in the file system: screenshots/filewatch.gif

Automatic reaction to changes in git: screenshots/git.gif

Full-featured mouse interface: screenshots/mouse-interface.gif

Resizable icons: screenshots/icon-resize.gif

Quick Start

If you don’t care about reading the full readme here’s a list of some bare bones basics to get you started:

  • First of all: press ? to summon the helpful hydra: screenshots/hydra.png
  • If you use evil don’t forget to also install treemacs-evil
  • If you use projectile you can install treemacs-projectile to allow quickly add your projectile projects to treemacs.
  • Treemacs doesn’t bind any global keys, you need to use whatever fits you best. A full install setup can be found below. Otherwise just add a keybind for treemacs.
  • For navigation use n/p (j/k when evil), M-n/M-p to move to same-height neighbour u to go to parent, and C-n/C-k to move between projects.
  • There’s half a dozen different ways to open nodes, all bound under o as prefix. Pick your favourite.
  • TAB and RET are particularly configurable. See treemacs-TAB/RET-actions-config.
  • Projects administration is bound under the C-c C-p prefix.

Detailed Feature List

Projects and Workspaces

If you’ve previously used a different explorer like NeoTree or NerdTree - or an earlier version of treemacs for that matter - you are probably used to a display system wherein you see exactly a single file tree whose exact root you can arbitrarily change. This system makes it difficult to work on and switch between multiple projects. Treemacs used to (and still does) remedy that limitation by making every treemacs buffer unique to its frame, but it has now been redesigned to be able to display multiple file trees - projects - at once.

In treemacs a workspace is simply a (named) collection of projects, while a project mostly consists of 2 things: its location in the file system and its name. This is the info that you need to provide when you want to add a new project to your workspace. Just like projects you can add, remove, rename and switch between workspaces at any time.

This design approach has various advantages and disadvantages. It is now no longer possible to “free roam” in the file system with treemacs, i.e. you can no longer arbitrarily switch the single file tree’s root to the directory at point or the current root’s parent. Another restriction is that the same part of the file system may not appear more than once as part of the workspace. For example it is not possible to have both /Documents and /Documents/ProjectX as projects in the same workspace, since internally treemacs heavily relies on every node having a unique natural key in its absolute path. Nonetheless the pros certainly outweigh the cons, as a multiroot setup allows to work on multiple projects with any combination concern/buffer separating frameworks, be it persp, eyebrowse, or projectile. It also opens the potential for concurrent display not only of the file system, but e.g. the currently open buffers.

Workspace Selection

When a workspace is first needed, treemacs will select a workspace in the following manner:

If the current buffer is editing a file then treemacs will try to find the first workspace with a project containing that file. If that fails treemacs will resort to using the fallback workspace which is defined as simply the first element in the list of all workspace.

The order of workspaces is the same that you see when calling treemacs-edit-workspaces (see next chapter). You can interactively set the fall backback workspace by calling treemacs-set-fallback-workspace.

This selection will happen when treemacs is first started (with a command like treemacs-select-window) or when a function that requires the current workspace to be known is used (like adding or removing a project).

Conveniently Editing Your Projects and Workspaces

There are two ways to edit your projects and workspaces: call up single add/remove/rename/switch commands under either the C-c C-p or C-c C-w prefix, or call treemacs-edit-workspaces and edit your entire layout in the form of a single org-mode buffer.

The used org-format is quite simple: level 1 headlines are names of workspaces, level 2 headlines are names of projects in a workspace, and every project’s path is given as a description list, starting with a - (and an optional leading space). Empty lines and lines starting with # are ignored, and everything else leads to an error.

You needn’t worry about making mistakes either. If there’s something wrong when you call treemacs-finish-edit (C-c C-c) then treemacs will point you at the incorrect line and tell you what’s missing:

screenshots/workspace-edit.png

(Note that the list with the path property allows an indentation of 0 or 1 spaces only. The much greater visible indentation is caused by org-indent-mode)

Navigation without Projects and Workspaces

If a strict workspace and project structure, as described above, is too stringent for your use-case you can, under certain circumstances, use treemacs to freely navigate through your your file system, similar to dired: When your workspace contains exactly a single project you can use h and l (or treemacs-root-up and treemacs-root-down) to arbitrarily change the single project’s root. h will navigate one level upward in the file system, l will move into the directory at point.

Frame Locality

Treemacs buffers have a limited scope they are visible in: the frames they are created in. A treemacs buffer, once created, lives alongside and inside its frame, and is also destroyed with that frame. Calling treemacs while inside a new frame will create a new buffer for it, regardless how many other treemacs buffers already exist. While there can be multiple unique treemacs buffer they will all still show the same workspace and the same projects.

A treemacs buffer that does not belong to a frame may still be made visible by manually selecting in the buffer list. This would break various assumptions in treemacs’ code base and effectively falls under undefined behaviour - a bad idea all around.

Mouse Interface

Treemacs handles left clicks in much the same way as modern graphical applications do: a single click sets the focus, a double click expands or collapses a directory or tag section node and visits a file/moves to a tag for a file/tag node.

Additionally tag sections can be expanded or collapsed by a single click on the file/tag section icon.

If you prefer to expand/collpase nodes with a single mouse click you can also use treemacs-single-click-expand-action:

(define-key treemacs-mode-map [mouse-1] #'treemacs-single-click-expand-action)

A right click popup-menu is also available:

screenshots/right-click.png

You can also open a file in a specific window by dragging using left click from treemacs to the required window.

Follow-mode

treemacs-follow-mode is a global minor mode which allows the treemacs view to always move its focus to the currently selected file. This mode runs on an idle timer - the exact duration of inactivity (in seconds) before a move is called is determined by treemacs-tag-follow-delay.

Tag-follow-mode

treemacs-tag-follow-mode is a global minor mode which extends and effectively replaces treemacs-follow-mode. When activated it follows not just the current file, but also the current tag. This works alongside treemacs’ integration with imenu, so all file types providing an imenu implementation are compatible.

This mode, like follow-mode, runs on an idle timer - the exact duration of inactivity (in seconds) before a move is called is determined by treemacs-tag-follow-delay.

Note that in order to move to a tag in treemacs the treemacs buffer’s window needs to be temporarily selected, which will reset blink-cursor-mode’s timer if it is enabled. This will result in the cursor blinking seemingly pausing for a short time and giving the appearance of the tag follow action lasting much longer than it really does.

Fringe-indicator-mode

treemacs-fringe-indicator-mode is a global minor mode that displays a little icon in the fringe that moves with the cursor. It can make the selected line more visible if hl-line-mode doesn’t stand out with your theme.

Git-mode

treemacs-git-mode is a global minor mode which enables treemacs to check for files’ and directories’ git status information and highlight them accordingly (see also the treemacs-git-... faces). The mode is available in 3 variants: simple, extended and deferred:

  • The simple variant starts a git status process and parses its output in elisp. The parsing is kept quick and simple, so some info is missed: this version includes git status information only for files, but not directories.
  • The extended variant highlights both files and directories. This greatly increases the complexity and length of the parsing process, and is therefore done in an asynchronous python process for the sake of performance. The extended variant requires python3 to work.
  • The deferred variant is the same as extended, except the tasks of rendering nodes and highlighting them are separated. The former happens immediately, the latter after treemacs-deferred-git-apply-delay seconds of idle time. This may be faster (if not in truth then at least in appereance) as the git process is given a much greater amount of time to finish. The downside is that the effect of nodes changing their colors may be somewhat jarring, though this effect is largely mitigated due to the use of a caching layer.

When called interactively treemacs-git-mode will ask for the variant to use. In lisp code an appropriate symbol can be directly passed to the minor mode function:

(treemacs-git-mode 'deferred)

All versions use an asynchronous git process and are optimized to not do more work than necessary, so their performance cost should, for the most part, be the constant amount of time it takes to fork a subprocess. For repositories where this is not the case treemacs-max-git-entries (default value 5000) will limit the number of git status entries treemacs will process before ignoring the rest.

Filewatch-mode

treemacs-filewatch-mode is a global minor mode which enables treemacs to watch the files it is displaying for changes and automatically refresh itself when it detects a change in the file system that it decides is relevant.

A change event is relevant for treemacs if a new file has been created or deleted or a file has been changed and treemacs-git-mode is enabled. Events caused by files that are ignored as per treemacs-ignored-file-predicates are likewise counted as not relevant.

The refresh is not called immediately after an event was received, treemacs instead waits treemacs-file-event-delay ms to see if any more files have changed to avoid having to refresh multiple times over a short period of time. Treemacs will not refresh the entire view to make the detected changes visible, but will instead only make updates to the directories where the change(s) happened. Using this mode is therefore by far not as expensive as a full refresh on every change and save.

The mode only applies to directories opened after this mode has been activated. This means that to enable file watching in an already existing treemacs buffer it needs to be killed and rebuilt. Turning off this mode is, on the other hand, instantaneous - it will immediately turn off all existing file watch processes and outstanding refresh actions.

Known limitations: Staging and committing changes does not produce any file change events of its own, if you use treemacs-git-mode you still need to do a manual refresh to see your files’ faces go from ‘changed’ and ‘untracked’ to ‘unchanged’ after a commit.

Session Persistence

Treemacs’ sessions - your workspace and the projects it contains - are saved when Emacs shuts down and restored when treemacs is first loaded. This persistence process is fully automatic and independant, and should therefore be fully compatible with desktop-save-mode.

The persisted state is saved under user-emacs-directory/.cache/treemacs-persist by default. The exact file location is saved in the variable treemacs-persist-file.

If something goes wrong when loading the file the erroneous state will be saved in treemacs-last-error-persist-file for debugging.

Terminal Compatibility

When run in a terminal treemacs will fall back to a much simpler rendering system, foregoing its usual png icons and using simple + and - characters instead. The exact characters used are highly customizable.

Tag View

Treemacs is able to display not only the file system, but also tags found in individual files. The tags list is sourced using emacs’ builtin imenu functionality, so all file types that emacs can generate an imenu index for are supported.

Imenu caches its result, so to avoid stale tag lists setting imenu-auto-rescan to t is recommended. Tags generated with the help of semantic-mode are likewise supported.

ggtags

Treemacs can show the tags produced by ggtags if you switch a buffer’s imenu index function to use ggtags:

(setq-local imenu-create-index-function #'ggtags-build-imenu-index)

Current-Directory Awareness

Treemacs always sets the default-directory variable based on the (nearest) path at the current node, falling back to your home directory when there is no node or path at point. That means that various commands like find-file, magit-status or helm-projectile-ag will correctly act based on the current directory or project context.

Tramp Support

Treemacs supports projects on remote directories, e.g. /scp:remote-server:path/to/directory.

However tramp support has some restrictions: treemacs-use-collapsed-directories has no effect on remote directories.

Org Support

Treemacs supports storing links to its file nodes by means of org-store-link.

Theme Support

Using a different treemacs theme works the same way as using a different Emacs theme: just call treemacs-load-theme, either programmatically or interactively. In the former case you need to supply the name of the theme as a string, like this:

(treemacs-load-theme "Default")

Do keep in mind that by default treemacs’ theme support is all theory: the standard installation includes only the default theme; this feature is meant to easily allow others to extend, create and distribute themes for treemacs.

A detailed explanation on modifying themes and icons can be found in the Configuration section.

Additional Packages

Next to treemacs itself you can optionally install:

treemacs-evil

Must be installed and loaded if you use evil. The keybindings and the cursor will not be setup properly otherwise. It’ll also enable navigation with j/k instead of n/p.

treemacs-projectile

Allows to quickly add your projectile projects to the treemacs workspace.

treemacs-magit

A small utility package to fill the small gaps left by using filewatch-mode and git-mode in conjunction with magit: it will inform treemacs about (un)staging of files and commits happening in magit.

treemacs-icons-dired

Allows you to use treemacs icons in dired buffers with treemacs-icons-dired-mode: screenshots/dired-icons.png

treemacs-persp

Integration with persp-mode that allows treemacs buffers to be unique inside the active perspective instead of the default frame-based buffer scope.

Treemacs as a Framework

Treemacs can be extended to display arbitrary nodes as well as be used as a general rendering backend for any tree-like structures. See here for an extended tutorial and demonstration.

Installation

Treemacs is included in Spacemacs (for now only on the dev branch). If you are using the development version of Spacemacs you can simply add treemacs to dotspacemacs-configuration-layers to replace the default NeoTree. Check SPC h SPC treemacs for details. Otherwise you will need to add treemacs to dotspacemacs-additional-packages.

Treemacs is also available on MELPA. If you just want to quickly start using it grab the use-package example below, and customize it as needed (remove treemacs-evil if you don’t use it, customize the keybindings to you taste, etc).

Either way keep in mind that treemacs has no default keybindings for its globally callable initialization functions. Each user is supposed to select keybindings for functions like treemacs-find-file based on whatever they find convenient.

You can find an exhaustive overview of all functions, their keybindings and functions you need to bind yourself below.

The following use-package snippet includes a list of all of treemacs’ configuration variables in their default setting. Setting them all yourself is not necessary, they are only listed here to encourage discoverability.

(use-package treemacs
  :ensure t
  :defer t
  :init
  (with-eval-after-load 'winum
    (define-key winum-keymap (kbd "M-0") #'treemacs-select-window))
  :config
  (progn
    (setq treemacs-collapse-dirs                 (if treemacs-python-executable 3 0)
          treemacs-deferred-git-apply-delay      0.5
          treemacs-directory-name-transformer    #'identity
          treemacs-display-in-side-window        t
          treemacs-eldoc-display                 t
          treemacs-file-event-delay              5000
          treemacs-file-extension-regex          treemacs-last-period-regex-value
          treemacs-file-follow-delay             0.2
          treemacs-file-name-transformer         #'identity
          treemacs-follow-after-init             t
          treemacs-git-command-pipe              ""
          treemacs-goto-tag-strategy             'refetch-index
          treemacs-indentation                   2
          treemacs-indentation-string            " "
          treemacs-is-never-other-window         nil
          treemacs-max-git-entries               5000
          treemacs-missing-project-action        'ask
          treemacs-no-png-images                 nil
          treemacs-no-delete-other-windows       t
          treemacs-project-follow-cleanup        nil
          treemacs-persist-file                  (expand-file-name ".cache/treemacs-persist" user-emacs-directory)
          treemacs-position                      'left
          treemacs-recenter-distance             0.1
          treemacs-recenter-after-file-follow    nil
          treemacs-recenter-after-tag-follow     nil
          treemacs-recenter-after-project-jump   'always
          treemacs-recenter-after-project-expand 'on-distance
          treemacs-show-cursor                   nil
          treemacs-show-hidden-files             t
          treemacs-silent-filewatch              nil
          treemacs-silent-refresh                nil
          treemacs-sorting                       'alphabetic-asc
          treemacs-space-between-root-nodes      t
          treemacs-tag-follow-cleanup            t
          treemacs-tag-follow-delay              1.5
          treemacs-user-mode-line-format         nil
          treemacs-width                         35)

    ;; The default width and height of the icons is 22 pixels. If you are
    ;; using a Hi-DPI display, uncomment this to double the icon size.
    ;;(treemacs-resize-icons 44)

    (treemacs-follow-mode t)
    (treemacs-filewatch-mode t)
    (treemacs-fringe-indicator-mode t)
    (pcase (cons (not (null (executable-find "git")))
                 (not (null treemacs-python-executable)))
      (`(t . t)
       (treemacs-git-mode 'deferred))
      (`(t . _)
       (treemacs-git-mode 'simple))))
  :bind
  (:map global-map
        ("M-0"       . treemacs-select-window)
        ("C-x t 1"   . treemacs-delete-other-windows)
        ("C-x t t"   . treemacs)
        ("C-x t B"   . treemacs-bookmark)
        ("C-x t C-t" . treemacs-find-file)
        ("C-x t M-t" . treemacs-find-tag)))

(use-package treemacs-evil
  :after treemacs evil
  :ensure t)

(use-package treemacs-projectile
  :after treemacs projectile
  :ensure t)

(use-package treemacs-icons-dired
  :after treemacs dired
  :ensure t
  :config (treemacs-icons-dired-mode))

(use-package treemacs-magit
  :after treemacs magit
  :ensure t)

(use-package treemacs-persp
  :after treemacs persp-mode
  :ensure t
  :config (treemacs-set-scope-type 'Perspectives))

Configuration

Variables

Treemacs offers the following configuration options (describe-variable will usually offers more details):

Variable Default Description
treemacs-indentation 2 The number of times each level is indented in the file tree. If specified as ‘(INTEGER px), indentation will be a single INTEGER pixels wide space.
treemacs-indentation-string ” ” The string that is used to create indentation when treemacs-indentation is not specified as pixels.
treemacs-width 35 Width of the treemacs window.
treemacs-show-hidden-files t Dotfiles will be shown if this is set to t and be hidden otherwise.
treemacs-follow-after-init nil When t follow the currently selected file after initializing the treemacs buffer, regardless of treemacs-follow-mode setting.
treemacs-sorting alphabetic-asc Indicates how treemacs will sort its files and directories. (Files will always be shown after directories.)
treemacs-ignored-file-predicates (treemacs–std-ignore-file-predicate) List of predicates to test for files and directories ignored by Emacs. Ignored files will never be shown in the treemacs buffer.
treemacs-pre-file-insert-predicates nil List of predicates to test for files and directories not to be rendered. Unlike treemacs-ignored-file-predicates these predicates apply when files’ git status information is available.
treemacs-file-event-delay 5000 How long (in milliseconds) to collect file events before refreshing. See also treemacs-filewatch-mode.
treemacs-goto-tag-strategy refetch-index Indicates how to move to a tag when its buffer is dead.
treemacs-default-visit-action treemacs-visit-node-no-split Default action for opening a node (e.g. file, directory, tag). treemacs-visit-file-default action in treemacs-*-actions-config calls this function.
treemacs-RET-actions-config Prefers visiting nodes over closing/opening Alist defining the behaviour of treemacs-RET-action.
treemacs-TAB-actions-config Prefers closing/opening nodes over visiting Alist defining the behaviour of treemacs-TAB-action.
treemacs-doubleclick-actions-config Closes/opens tags and visits files Alist defining the behaviour of treemacs-doubleclick-action.
treemacs-collapse-dirs 0 Collapse this many directories into one, when possible. A directory is collapsible when its content consists of nothing but another directory.
treemacs-silent-refresh nil When non-nil a completed refresh will not be announced with a log message. This applies both to manual refreshing as well as automatic (due to treemacs-filewatch-mode).
treemacs-silent-filewatch nil When non-nil a refresh due to filewatch-mode will cause no log message.
treemacs-is-never-other-window nil Prevents treemacs from being selected with other-window.
treemacs-position left Position of treemacs buffer. Valid values are left, right.
treemacs-tag-follow-delay 1.5 Delay in seconds of inactivity for treemacs-tag-follow-mode to trigger.
treemacs-tag-follow-cleanup t When non-nil treemacs-tag-follow-mode will keep only the current file’s tags visible.
treemacs-project-follow-cleanup nil When non-nil treemacs-follow-mode will keep only the current project expanded and all others closed.
treemacs-no-png-images nil When non-nil treemacs will use TUI string icons even when running in a GUI.
treemacs-python-executable (treemacs–find-python3) Python 3 binary used by treemacs.
treemacs-recenter-after-file-follow nil Decides if and when to call recenter when treemacs-follow-mode moves to a new file.
treemacs-recenter-after-tag-follow nil Decides if and when to call recenter when treemacs-tag-follow-mode moves to a new tag.
treemacs-recenter-after-project-jump ‘always Decides if and when to call recenter when navigating between projects.
treemacs-recenter-after-project-expand ‘on-distance Decides if and when to call recenter when expanding a project node.
treemacs-recenter-distance 0.1 Minimum distance from window top/bottom (0.1 = 10%) before treemacs calls recenter in tag/file-follow-mode.
treemacs-pulse-on-success t When non-nil treemacs will pulse the current line as a success indicator, e.g. when creating a file.
treemacs-pulse-on-failure t When non-nil treemacs will pulse the current line as a failure indicator, e.g. when failing to find a file’s tags.
treemacs-elisp-imenu-expression [too large to list] The imenu expression treemacs uses in elisp buffers.
treemacs-persist-file ~/.emacs.d/.cache/treemacs-persist Path to the file treemacs uses to persist its state.
treemacs-last-error-persist-file ~/.emacs.d/.cache/treemacs-persist-at-last-error Path to the file treemacs uses to persist its state.
treemacs-space-between-root-nodes t When non-nil treemacs will separate root nodes with an empty line.
treemacs-wrap-around t When non-nil treemacs will wrap around at the buffer edges when moving between lines.
treemacs–fringe-indicator-bitmap [vertical bar] The fringe bitmap used by the fringe-indicator minor mode.
treemacs-deferred-git-apply-delay 0.5 Seconds of idle time for git highlighting to apply when using the deferred treemacs-git-mode.
treemacs-file-follow-delay 0.2 Delay in seconds of idle time for treemacs to follow the selected window.
treemacs-display-in-side-window t When non-nil treemacs will use a dedicated side-window.
treemacs-max-git-entries 5000 Maximum number of git status entries treemacs will process. Anything above that number will be ignored.
treemacs-missing-project-action ask When a persisted project is missing from filesystem, ask will prompt for action, keep will keep the project in the project list, and remove will remove it from it without prompt.
treemacs-show-cursor nil When non-nil the cursor will stay visible in the treemacs buffer.
treemacs-git-command-pipe ”” Text to be appended to treemacs’ git command. Useful for filtering with something like grep.
treemacs-no-delete-other-windows t Prevents the treemacs window from being deleted by commands like delete-other-windows and magit-status.
treemacs-eldoc-display t Enables eldoc display of the file path at point. Requires eldoc-mode.
treemacs-bookmark-title-template “Treemacs - ${project}: ${label}” When using bookmark-set in Treemacs, the default template for a bookmark label. The following patterns are available: “${project}”, “${label}”, “${label:N}”, ${label-path}”, “${label-path:N}”, “${file-path}”, “${file-path:N}”.
treemacs-file-extension-regex Text after last period Determines how treemacs detects a file extension. Can be set to use text after first or last period.
treemacs-directory-name-transformer identity Transformer function that is applied to directory names before rendering for any sort of cosmetic effect.
treemacs-file-name-transformer identity Transformer function that is applied to file names before rendering for any sort of cosmetic effect.
treemacs-user-mode-line-format nil When non-nil treemacs will use it as a mode line format (otherwise format provided by spaceline, moody-mode-line and doom-modeline will be used or, finally, “Treemacs” text will be displayed)

Faces

Treemacs defines and uses the following faces:

FaceBased onDescription
treemacs-directory-facefont-lock-function-name-faceFace used for directories.
treemacs-directory-collapsed-facetreemacs-directory-faceFace used for collapsed part of directories.
treemacs-file-facedefaultFace used for files.
treemacs-root-facefont-lock-constant-faceFace used for project roots.
treemacs-root-unreadable-facetreemacs-root-faceFace used for local unreadable project roots.
treemacs-root-remote-facefont-lock-function-name-face, treemacs-root-faceFace used for readable remote (Tramp) project roots.
treemacs-root-remote-unreadable-facetreemacs-root-unreadable-faceFace used for unreadable remote (Tramp) project roots.
treemacs-root-remote-disconnected-facewarning, treemacs-root-faceFace used for disconnected remote (Tramp) project roots.
treemacs-tags-facefont-lock-builtin-faceFace used for tags.
treemacs-help-title-facefont-lock-constant-faceFace used for the title of the helpful hydra.
treemacs-help-column-facefont-lock-keyword-faceFace used for the column headers of the helpful hydra.
treemacs-git-*-facevarious font lock facesFaces used by treemacs for various git states.
treemacs-term-node-facefont-lock-string-faceFace for directory node symbols used by treemacs when it runs in a terminal.
treemacs-on-success-pulse-face:fg #111111 :bg #669966Pulse face used when pulsing on a successful action.
treemacs-on-failure-puse-face:fg #111111 :bg #ab3737Pulse face used when pulsing on a failed action.

Evil compatibility

To make treemacs get along with evil-mode you need to install and load treemacs-evil. It does not define any functions or offer any configuration options, making sure it is loaded is sufficient.

Customizing Themes and Icons

Creating and Modifying Themes

Creating and modifying themes and icons is all done in a single step using dedicated macros.

To create a theme use treemacs-create-theme. It requires the name of the theme and accepts 3 optional keyword arguments: the directory the theme’s icons are stored in (if it’s using png icons), the name of the theme it’s extending and the config, a final form that’s responsible for creating all the theme’s icons. A config will typically consist of nothing but calls to treemacs-create-icon:

(treemacs-create-theme "Default"
  :icon-directory (f-join treemacs-dir "icons/default")
  :config
  (progn
    (treemacs-create-icon :file "root.png"   :fallback ""            :extensions (root))
    (treemacs-create-icon :file "emacs.png"  :fallback "🗏 "          :extensions ("el" "elc"))
    (treemacs-create-icon :file "readme.png" :fallback "🗏 "          :extensions ("readme.md"))
    (treemacs-create-icon :icon (all-the-icons-icon-for-file "yaml") :extensions ("yml" "yaml"))))

The :file argument is relative to the icon directory of the theme being created. When not using image icons the :icon-directory argument can be omitted and the :file argument can be switched for :icon to supply the icon string directly. The TUI fallback is also optional, ” ” is used by default. Finally the list of extensions determines which file extensions the icon should be used for.

For treemacs an extension is either the entire file name or the text after the last period (unless treemacs-file-extension-regex is customized). This means it can match normal file names like “init.el”, extensionless file names like “Makefile”. Because the full name is checked first it is possible to give special files their own icon, for example “Readme.md” can use a different icon than normal markdown files.

Instead of a string extension a symbol can also be used. In this case treemacs will also create a variable for that icon named treemacs-icon-$symbol. Treemacs uses several such icon variables and any new theme should define their own versions (it it’s not extending the default theme). The following icons are used:

  • root
  • dir-closed
  • dir-open
  • fallback
  • tag-open
  • tag-closed
  • tag-leaf
  • error
  • info
  • warning

Analogous to creating a new theme treemacs-modify-theme can be used to change, or add to, an existing theme:

(treemacs-modify-theme "Default"
  :icon-directory "/other/icons/dir"
  :config
  (progn
    (treemacs-create-icon :icon "+" :extensions (dir-closed))
    (treemacs-create-icon :icon "-" :extensions (dir-open))))

Finally keep in mind that treemacs’ icons are all buffer-local values, and will most likely not be defined when trying to access their values directly. When you need to programmatically access some of treemacs’ icons you should use treemacs-get-icon-value:

(treemacs-get-icon-value 'root nil "Default")
(treemacs-get-icon-value "org" t)

Custom Icons

Treemacs also offers a quick and straighforward way to add a (gui) icon to the currently active theme, without caring for its name or declaring icon directories:

(defvar treemacs-custom-html-icon (all-the-icons-icon-for-file "name.html"))
(treemacs-define-custom-icon treemacs-custom-html-icon "html" "htm")

Important: There is a restriction that all icons must must be exactly 2 characters long. That’s including the space that will separate an icon from the filename.

Icons according to auto-mode-alist

For some file extensions, like “.cc” or “.hh”, it is not immediately obvious which major mode will open these files, and thus which icon they should be assigned. Treemacs offers the option that automate this decision based on auto-mode-alist. You can use the function treemacs-map-icons-with-auto-mode-alist to change the assigned icons for a list of file extensions based on the major mode the icons are mapped to in auto-mode-alist.

treemacs-map-icons-with-auto-mode-alist takes 2 arguments: first a list of file extensions, then an alist that decides which icon should be used for which mapped major mode. For example the code to decide the icons for “.hh” and “.cc” files with auto-mode-alist would look like this:

(treemacs-map-icons-with-auto-mode-alist
 '(".cc" ".hh")
 '((c-mode   . (treemacs-get-icon-value "c"))
   (c++-mode . (treemacs-get-icon-value "cpp"))))

GUI vs TUI

It is possible to force treemacs to use the simple TUI icons in GUI mode by setting treemacs-no-png-images to t.

Resizing Icons

If your emacs has been compiled with imagemagick support you can arbitrarily change the size of treemacs’ icons by (interactively or programmatically) calling treemacs-resize-icons.

Indent guide

Not really part of the icons, but a useful visual feature nonetheless: An indent guide like effect can be created by selecting appropriate values for treemacs-indentation and treemacs-indentation-string:

(setq treemacs-indentation-string (propertize "" 'face 'font-lock-comment-face)
      treemacs-indentation 1)

Keymap

Unbound functions

These functions are not bound to any keys by default. It’s left up to users to find the most convenient key binds.

ActionDescription
treemacsShow/Hide/Initialize treemacs.
treemacs-bookmarkFind a bookmark in treemacs.
treemacs-find-fileFind and focus the current file in treemacs.
treemacs-find-tagFind and focus the current tag in treemacs.
treemacs-select-windowSelect the treemacs window if it is visible. Call treemacs if it is not.
treemacs-delete-other-windowsSame as delete-other-windows, but will not delete the treemacs window.
treemacs-show-changelogOpens a buffer showing the changelog.
treemacs-load-themeLoad a different icon theme.
treemacs-projectileAdd a project from projectile to treemacs.
treemacs-add-and-display-current-projectAdd current project to treemacs and open it.
treemacs-select-scope-typeSelect the scope of treemacs buffers in which they are unique

Default keymaps

Treemacs’ keybindings are distributed to several keymaps, based on common keybindings:

Project Keybinds (Prefix C-c C-p)

KeyActionDescription
C-c C-p atreemacs-add-project-to-workspaceSelect a new project to add to the treemacs workspace.
C-c C-p ptreemacs-projectileSelect a projectile project to add to the workspace.
C-c C-p dtreemacs-remove-project-from-workspaceRemove project at point from the workspace.
C-c C-p rtreemacs-rename-projectRename project at point.
C-c C-p c ctreemacs-collapse-projectCollapse project at point.
C-c C-p c o/S-TABtreemacs-collapse-all-projectsCollapse all projects.
C-c C-p c otreemacs-collapse-all-projectsCollapse all projects except the project at point.

Workspaces Keybinds (Prefix C-c C-w)

KeyActionDescription
C-c C-w rtreemacs-rename-workspaceRename a workspace.
C-c C-w atreemacs-create-workspaceCreate a new workspace.
C-c C-w dtreemacs-remove-workspaceDelete a workspace.
C-c C-w streemacs-switch-workspaceSwitch the current workspace.
C-c C-w etreemacs-edit-workspacesEdit workspace layout via org-mode.
C-c C-w ftreemacs-set-fallback-workspaceSelect the default fallback workspace.

Node Visit Keybinds (Prefix o)

KeyActionDescription
ovtreemacs-visit-node-vertical-splitOpen current file or tag by vertically splitting next-window.
ohtreemacs-visit-node-horizontal-splitOpen current file or tag by horizontally splitting next-window.
oo/RETtreemacs-visit-node-no-splitOpen current file or tag, performing no split and using next-window directly.
oaatreemacs-visit-node-aceOpen current file or tag, using ace-window to decide which window to open the file in.
oahtreemacs-visit-node-ace-horizontal-splitOpen current file or tag by horizontally splitting a window selected by ace-window.
oavtreemacs-visit-node-ace-vertical-splitOpen current file or tag by vertically splitting a window selected by ace-window.
ortreemacs-visit-node-in-most-recently-used-windowOpen current file or tag in the most recently used window.
oxtreemacs-visit-node-in-external-applicationOpen current file according to its mime type in an external application. Linux, Windows and Mac are supported.

Toggle Keybinds (Prefix t)

KeyActionDescription
thtreemacs-toggle-show-dotfilesToggle the hiding and displaying of dotfiles.
twtreemacs-toggle-fixed-widthToggle whether the treemacs window should have a fixed width. See also treemacs-width.
tftreemacs-follow-modeToggle treemacs-follow-mode.
tatreemacs-filewatch-modeToggle treemacs-filewatch-mode.
tvtreemacs-fringe-indicator-modeToggle treemacs-fringe-indicator-mode.

Copy Keybinds (Prefix y)

KeyActionDescription
yytreemacs-copy-path-at-pointCopy the absolute path of the node at point.
yrtreemacs-copy-project-rootCopy the absolute path of the project root for the node at point.
yftreemacs-copy-fileCopy the file at point.

General Keybinds

Key Action Description
? treemacs-helpful-hydra Summon the helpful hydra to show you the treemacs keymap.
j/n treemacs-next-line Go to the next line.
k/p treemacs-previous-line Go to the previous line.
M-J/N treemacs-next-line-other-window Go to the next line in next-window.
M-K/P treemacs-previous-line-other-window Go to the previous line in next-window..
<PgUp> treemacs-next-page-other-window Go to the next page in next-window.
<PgDn> treemacs-previous-page-other-window Go to the previous page in next-window..
M-j/M-n treemacs-next-neighbour Go to the next same-level neighbour of the current node.
M-k/M-p treemacs-previous-neighbour Go to the previous same-level neighbour of the current node.
u treemacs-goto-parent-node Go to parent of node at point, if possible.
<M-Up> treemacs-move-project-up Switch positions of project at point and the one above it.
<M-Down> treemacs-move-project-down Switch positions of project at point and the one below it.
w treemacs-set-width Set a new value for the width of the treemacs window.
RET treemacs-RET-action Run the action defined in treemacs-RET-actions-config for the current node.
TAB treemacs-TAB-action Run the action defined in treemacs-TAB-actions-config for the current node.
g/r/gr treemacs-refresh Refresh the project at point.
d treemacs-delete Delete node at point.
R treemacs-rename Rename node at point.
cf treemacs-create-file Create a file.
cd treemacs-create-dir Create a directory.
q treemacs-quit Hide the treemacs window.
Q treemacs-kill-buffer Delete the treemacs buffer.
P treemacs-peek Peek at the file (or tag) at point without fully opening it.
yy treemacs-copy-path-at-point Copy the absolute path of the node at point.
yr treemacs-copy-project-root Copy the absolute path of the project root for the node at point.
yf treemacs-copy-file Copy the file at point.
m treemacs-move-file Move the file at point.
s treemacs-resort Set a new value for treemacs-sorting.
b treemacs-add-bookmark Bookmark the currently selected files’s, dir’s or tag’s location.
h treemacs-root-up Move treemacs’ root one level upward. Only works with a single project in the workspace.
l treemacs-root-down Move treemacs’ root into the directory at point. Only works with a single project in the workspace.
H treemacs-collapse-parent-node Collapse the parent of the node at point.
\! treemacs-run-shell-command-for-current-node Run an asynchronous shell command on the current node, replacing “$path” with its path.
M-! treemacs-run-shell-command-in-project-root Run an asynchronous shell command in the root of the current project, replacing “$path” with its path.

Compatibility

The correctness of treemacs’ display behaviour is, to a large degree, ensured through window properties and reacting to changes in the window configuration. The packages most likely to cause trouble for treemacs are therefore those that interfere with Emacs’ buffer spawning and window splitting behaviour. Treemacs is included in Spacemacs and I am a Spacemacs user, therefore treemacs guarantees first-class support & compatibility for window-managing packages used in Spacemacs, namely persp, eyebrowse, popwin and window-purpose, as well as shackle. For everything else there may be issues and, depending on the complexity of the problem, I may decide it is not worth fixing.

Aside from this there are the following known incompatibilities:

  • Any package invoking font-lock-ensure in the treemacs buffer. This will reset the faces of treemacs’ buttons (once) and is a known emacs bug.
  • A possible cause of this issue using an old version of swiper.
  • Rainbow mode activated in treemacs will likewise produce this behaviour. Make sure not to include rainbow-mode as part of special-mode-hook, since this is the mode treemacs-mode is derived from.

FAQ

  • How do I hide files I don’t want to see?

    You need to define a predicate function and add it to treemacs-ignored-file-predicates. This function accepts two arguments, a file’s name and its absolute path, and must return non-nil when treemacs should hide that file.

    For example the code to ignore files eiter called “foo” or located in ”x/y/z” would look like this:

    (with-eval-after-load 'treemacs
    
      (defun treemacs-ignore-example (filename absolute-path)
        (or (string-equal filename "foo")
            (string-prefix-p "/x/y/z/" absolute-path)))
    
      (add-to-list 'treemacs-ignored-file-predicates #'treemacs-ignore-example))
        
  • How do I keep treemacs from showing files that are ignored by git?

    Short answer:

    (with-eval-after-load 'treemacs
      (add-to-list 'treemacs-pre-file-insert-predicates #'treemacs-is-file-git-ignored?))
        

    A slightly longer explanation about how you can hook into the render process can be found in the documentation string of treemacs-pre-file-insert-predicates.

  • Why am I seeing no file icons and only +/- for directories?

    Treemacs will permanently fall back on its simple TUI icons if it detects that the emacs instance it is run in cannot create images. You can test this by evaluating (create-image "" 'png). If this code returns an error like “Invalid image type ´png´” your emacs does not support images.

  • How do I get treemacs to stop telling me when it’s been refreshed, especially with filewatch-mode?

    See treemacs-silent-refresh and treemacs-silent-filewatch.

  • ENOSPC / No space left on device

    You may run into this error when you use filewatch-mode. The solution is to increase the number of allowed user watches, as described in this link. You’ll also want to see what’s responsible for setting all those file watches in the first place, since treemacs only watches the directories it is displaying and so won’t produce more than a couple dozen watches at best.

  • Why is treemacs warning me about not being able to find some background colors and falling back to something else?

    Treemacs needs those colors to make sure that background colors of its icons correctly align with hl-line-mode. Png images’ backgrounds are not highlighted by hl-line-mode by default, treemacs is manually correcting this every time hl-line’s overlay is moved. To make that correction work it needs to know two colors: the current theme’s default background, and its hl-line background color. If treemacs cannot find hl-lines’s background color it falls back to the default background color. If it cannot even find the default background it will fall back to #2d2d31. The warnings serve to inform you of that fallback.

    If your theme does not define a required color you can set it yourself before treemacs loads like this:

    (set-face-attribute 'hl-line nil :background "#333333")
        

    If you just want to disable the warnings you can do so by defining the variable treemacs-no-load-time-warnings. Its exact value is irrelevant, all that matters is that it exists at all. Since the warnings are issues when treemacs is first being loaded the variable must be defined before treemacs is initialized. This is best achieved by adding the line (defvar treemacs-no-load-time-warnings t) to treemacs’ use-package :init block.

  • Can I expand everything under a node?

    Yes, you just need to expand it with a prefix argument. Closing nodes with a prefix argument works as well. In this case treemacs will forget about the nodes opened below the one that was closed and not reopen them automatically.

Contributing

Contributions are very much welcome, but should fit the general scope and style of treemacs. The following is a list of guidelines that should be met (exceptions confirm the rule):

  • There should be one commit per feature.
  • Commit messages should start with a note in brackets that roughly describes the area the commit relates to, for example [Icons] if you add an icon.
  • Code must be in the right place (what with the codebase being split in many small files). If there is no right place it probably goes into treemacs-core-utils.el which is where all the general implementation details go.
  • New features must be documented in the readme (for example mentioning new config options in the Config Table).
  • There must not be any compiler warnings.
  • The test suite must pass.

Treemacs uses cask to setup a local testing environment and a Makefile that simplifies compiling and testing the codebase. First run cask install to locally pull treemacs’ dependencies. Then you can use the following Makefile targets:

make prepare
Downloads and updates Cask’s dependencies. Is a dependency of the test and compile targets.
make compile
Compiles the code base (and treats compiler warnings as errors).
make clean
Removes the generated .elc files.
make lint
Runs first compile then clean, even if the former fails.
make test
Runs the testsuite, once in a graphical environment and once in the terminal.

Finally if you want to just add an icon you can take this commit as an example (though the icons have since been moved into their own module in treemacs-icons.el).

Working With The Code Base

If you want to delve into the treemacs’ code base, check out the wiki for some general pointers.

Dependencies

  • emacs >= 25.2
  • f.el
  • s.el
  • dash
  • cl-lib
  • ace-window
  • pfuture
  • ht
  • hydra
  • (optionally) evil
  • (optionally) projectile
  • (optionally) winum
  • (optionally) python(3)