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Unobtrusively trim extraneous white-space *ONLY* in lines edited.

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Build Status NonGNU ELPA

ws-butler -- an unobtrusive way to trim spaces from end of line

  • Only lines touched get trimmed. If the white space at end of buffer is changed, then blank lines at the end of buffer are truncated respecting require-final-newline.

  • Trimming only happens when saving.

What does unobtrusive mean?

The user is not made explicitly aware when trimming happens. You keep working and the butler takes care of whitespace for you.

This means if point is at a location that was trimmed, point is not moved, but the data on disk has been cleaned up (revert the buffer to confirm).

Not moving point because of space deletion.

By default, ws-butler preserves "virtual spaces" in front of point if necessary. The file on disk is cleaned up however.

This can be disabled with ws-butler-keep-whitespace-before-point.

Trimming only specific lines.

There might be lines you don't want to get trimmed, e.g. spaces in multiline strings. The behavior can be customized through ws-butler-trim-predicate. This variable should hold a function that expects 2 arguments (region beginning and end) and should return true only for regions that one wants to get trimmed. As an example

(setq ws-butler-trim-predicate
      (lambda (beg end)
        (not (eq 'font-lock-string-face
                 (get-text-property end 'face)))))

Installation

Debian 9 or later or Ubuntu 16.10 or later

apt-get install elpa-ws-butler

Configuration

To use ws-butler, require it and add ws-butler-mode as a hook on any mode where you would like it to be enabled. For example, to enable for all programming language modes, add this to your .emacs:

(require 'ws-butler)
(add-hook 'prog-mode-hook #'ws-butler-mode)

Alternatively, you can use ws-butler-global-mode to turn it on everywhere.

History

  1. I started by trimming all spaces at EOL in source code in a "write-file-hook" when I started programming. It seemed like a great idea.

  2. Then I got a job working on a code base where no one else trimmed spaces, so my commits became super noisy. I wanted to stop being the "white space" police, so switched to ws-trim.

    • ws-trim works in a post-command-hook and trims white space while you edit.
    • This was too eager for me. For example, I would stop and scroll away to look at some code, and when I get back to continue, my indentation is gone.
    • It caused some problems with other customizations which also rely on post-command-hook.
  3. I started experimenting with using highlight-changes-mode to trim only lines I touch on save.

  4. Now, the dependency on highlight-changes-mode has been removed and we handle change changing through text properties ourselves.

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Unobtrusively trim extraneous white-space *ONLY* in lines edited.

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