When you start Emacs, it loads your .emacs file unless you tell
it not to by specifying ‘-q’ on the command line. (The
emacs -q
command gives you a plain, out-of-the-box Emacs.)
A .emacs file contains Lisp expressions. Often, these are no more than expressions to set values; sometimes they are function definitions.
See The Init File ~/.emacs in The GNU Emacs Manual, for a short description of initialization files.
This chapter goes over some of the same ground, but is a walk among extracts from a complete, long-used .emacs file—my own.
The first part of the file consists of comments: reminders to myself. By now, of course, I remember these things, but when I started, I did not.
;;;; Bob's .emacs file ; Robert J. Chassell ; 26 September 1985
Look at that date! I started this file a long time ago. I have been adding to it ever since.
; Each section in this file is introduced by a ; line beginning with four semicolons; and each ; entry is introduced by a line beginning with ; three semicolons.
This describes the usual conventions for comments in Emacs Lisp. Everything on a line that follows a semicolon is a comment. Two, three, and four semicolons are used as subsection and section markers. (See Comments in The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, for more about comments.)
;;;; The Help Key ; Control-h is the help key; ; after typing control-h, type a letter to ; indicate the subject about which you want help. ; For an explanation of the help facility, ; type control-h two times in a row.
Just remember: type C-h two times for help.
; To find out about any mode, type control-h m ; while in that mode. For example, to find out ; about mail mode, enter mail mode and then type ; control-h m.
“Mode help”, as I call this, is very helpful. Usually, it tells you all you need to know.
Of course, you don’t need to include comments like these in your .emacs file. I included them in mine because I kept forgetting about Mode help or the conventions for comments—but I was able to remember to look here to remind myself.