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Interactively highlight which buffer is active by dimming the others.

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dimmer.el

Visually highlight the selected buffer.

MELPA Stable MELPA CircleCI

Description

This package provides a minor mode that indicates which buffer is currently active by dimming the faces in the other buffers. It does this nondestructively, and computes the dimmed faces dynamically such that your overall color scheme is shown in a muted form without requiring you to define what is a "dim" version of every face.

dimmer.el can be configured to adjust foreground colors (default), background colors, or both.

Demo

Demo Video

(click thumbnail for higher quality)

Go here to see a gallery of dimmer effects based on different customizations.

Usage Example

 (require 'dimmer)
 (dimmer-configure-which-key)
 (dimmer-configure-helm)
 (dimmer-mode t)

Customization

  • dimmer-adjustment-mode controls what aspect of the color scheme is adjusted when dimming. Choices are :foreground (default), :background, or :both.

  • dimmer-fraction controls the degree to which buffers are dimmed. Typical range is 0.0 - 1.0, and default is 0.20. Increase value if you like the other buffers to be more dim. Some users have pointed out to me that this value can actually be negative(!) with interesting effects.

  • dimmer-buffer-exclusion-regexps can be used to specify buffers that should never be dimmed. If the buffer name matches any regexp in this list then dimmer.el will not dim that buffer. Note, this variable replaces dimmer-exclusion-regexp and dimmer-exclusion-regexp-list, which are now obsolete.

  • dimmer-buffer-exclusion-predicates can be used to specify buffers that should never be dimmed. If any predicate function in this list returns true for the buffer then dimmer.el will not dim that buffer.

  • dimmer-prevent-dimming-predicates can be used to prevent dimmer from altering the dimmed buffer list. This can be used to detect cases where a package pops up a window temporarily, and we don't want the dimming to change. If any function in this list returns a non-nil value, dimming state will not be changed. (Note, this variable replaces dimmer-exclusion-predicates which was introduced in snapshots prior to release 0.4.0 of this package.)

  • dimmer-watch-frame-focus-events controls whether dimmer will dim all buffers when Emacs no longer has focus in the windowing system. This is enabled by default. Some users may prefer to set this to nil, and have the dimmed / not dimmed buffers stay as-is even when Emacs doesn't have focus.

  • dimmer-use-colorspace allows you to specify what color space the dimming calculation is performed in. In the majority of cases you won't need to touch this setting. See Troubleshooting below ("dimmed colors look wrong") for an example where you might need to set this.

Configuration

By default dimmer excludes the minibuffer and echo areas from consideration, so that most packages that use the minibuffer for interaction will behave as users expect.

  • dimmer-configure-company-box is a convenience function for users of company-box. It prevents dimming the buffer you are editing when a company-box popup is displayed.

  • dimmer-configure-gnus is a convenience function for gnus users to ensure article buffers are not dimmed.

  • dimmer-configure-helm is a convenience function for helm users to ensure helm buffers are not dimmed.

  • dimmer-configure-hydra is a convenience function for hydra users to ensure *LV* buffers are not dimmed.

  • dimmer-configure-magit a convenience function for magit users to ensure transients are not dimmed.

  • dimmer-configure-org is a convenience function for org users to ensure org-mode buffers are not dimmed.

  • dimmer-configure-posframe is a convenience function for posframe users to ensure posframe buffers are not dimmed.

  • dimmer-configure-which-key is a convenience function for which-key users to ensure which-key popups are not dimmed.

Please submit pull requests with configurations for other packages!

How colors are adjusted

This package chooses a "dimmed" version of the foreground (and/or the background color) of each of your defined faces. It does this by shifting those face some fraction of the way toward the colors defined in the default face.

In spite of the name I chose for this package, the newly adjusted color isn't always "dimmer" that the original. It's more accurate to say we're reducing the contrast of your color theme by bringing the foreground and background colors closer together.

Here are a few examples of that.

  • Let's say you have a theme with "black" text on a "white" background. When dimmer acts on a buffer like that, the text becomes a "dark gray" (when in :foreground mode), or the background becomes a "light gray" (when in :background mode). The result is that the overall contrast between the foreground and background is reduced because the dark and light grays are closer in value than then original black and white.

  • Conversely, if your theme is "white" text on "black" background, then the dimmed version of that is "light gray" text on a "dark gray" background.

  • Finally, it's not just the lightness but also the hue that is adjusted. So if your theme is "light yellow" text on a "dark blue" background then imagine a color gradient between those two colors. The "dimmed" text will be darker, with a bit of blue added. The background will be lighter with a little bit of yellow added.

Perhaps this all sounds complicated but rest assured that in practice, the dimmed colors will look natural and (most importantly) will be consistent with your selected theme. It'll just seem like the selected buffer "pops" visually compared to the rest.

Troubleshooting

Windows aren't dimming when I switch from one to another.

Do you have different buffers in those windows? It's very common to test this package by installing it, launching emacs, and splitting *scratch* into two windows and then toggling between the two windows. Users may be surprised to find nothing happens.

Why not? This module makes use of the face-remap-* APIs in Emacs, and these APIs work on buffers rather than windows. If you have multiple windows displaying the same buffer they will dim or undim together. Which means, until and unless you switch the other window to a new buffer, you won't see the dimming effect.

If/when Emacs offers the controls I need to do window-specific face remaps, I'll gladly put this feature in. In the meantime, my configuration combines this package with global-hl-line-mode so I still have a visual cue which window is active.

It doesn't dim enough. I can barely see it.

Users of light themes may need to increase dimmer-fraction in order to see the effect. I may someday increase the default.

Dimmed colors sometimes look "wrong". They're getting shifted to the wrong hue.

Try customizing dimmer-use-colorspace and choose RGB instead. Customize this variable and read the documentation in the customization screens for more background on this issue.

License

Copyright (C) 2017-2021 Neil Okamoto

Distributed under the GNU General Public License, Version 3

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Interactively highlight which buffer is active by dimming the others.

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