@node The REPL, Between the parens, Installation, Top @chapter The REPL @anchor{quick-start} If you've followed the instructions in @ref{Installation}, your Emacs is now ready to start playing. Otherwise, i'll wait for you: when you're ready, just come back here and proceed to the following sections. @menu * Starting the REPL:: * First aids:: * Switching context:: * Completion and error handling:: * Autodoc and friends:: * Seeing is believing:: * Customization and tips:: @end menu @node Starting the REPL, First aids, The REPL, The REPL @section Starting the REPL @cindex REPL To start a Scheme REPL (meaning, a Scheme process offering you a Read-Eval-Print Loop), Geiser provides the generic interactive command @command{run-geiser}. If you invoke it (via, as is customary in Emacs, @kbd{M-x run-geiser}), you'll be saluted by a prompt asking which one of the supported implementations you want to launch---yes, you can stop the asking, see @altr{active-implementations,below,Customization and tips,.} Tabbing for completion will offer you, as of this writing, @code{guile}, @code{racket}, @code{chicken}, @code{mit}, @code{chibi} and @code{chez}. Just choose your poison, and a new REPL buffer will pop up (by default, the REPL will appear in a new window: if that annoys you, just set @code{geiser-repl-use-other-window} to @code{nil} and the current window will be used). @imgc{repls} If all went according to plan, you'll be facing an implementation-dependent banner, followed by an interactive prompt. Going according to plan includes having the executable of the Scheme you chose in your path. If that's not the case, you can tell Emacs where it is, as described in @altr{impl-binary,a moment,Customization and tips,.} Returning to our REPL, the first thing to notice is that the funny prompt is telling you your current module: its name is the part just after the @@ sign (in Guile, that means @code{guile-user}, while Racket's and Chicken's top namespaces don't have a name; cf. discussion in @altr{Switching context,,Switching context,).} Other than that, this is pretty much equivalent to having a command-line interpreter in a terminal, with a bunch of add-ons that we'll be reviewing below. You can start typing sexps right there: Geiser will only dispatch them for evaluation when they're complete, and will indent new lines properly until then. It will also keep track of your input, maintaining a history file that will be reloaded whenever you restart the REPL. @cindex REPL, faces @cindex faces, in the REPL If you're not happy with the faces Geiser is using for the REPL's prompt and evaluated input, you can customise @code{geiser-font-lock-repl-prompt} and @code{geiser-font-lock-repl-input} to better-looking faces. @subsubheading Connecting to an external Scheme @cindex remote REPL @cindex connect to server There's an alternative way of starting a Geiser REPL: you can connect to an external Scheme process, provided it's running a REPL server at some known port. How to make that happen depends on the Scheme implementation. @cindex Guile's REPL server If you use Guile, you just need to start your Guile process (possibly outside Emacs) passing to it the flag @code{--listen}. This flag accepts an optional port as argument (as in @code{--listen=1969}), if you don't want to use the default. @cindex Racket's REPL server In Racket, you have to use the REPL server that comes with Geiser. To that end, put Geiser's Racket @file{scheme} directory in Racket's collection search path and invoke @code{start-geiser} (a procedure in the module @code{geiser/server}) somewhere in your program, passing it the desired port and, if desired, network interface name. This procedure will start the REPL server in a separate thread. For an example of how to do that, see the script @file{bin/geiser-racket.sh} in the source distribution, or, if you've compiled Geiser, @file{bin/geiser-racket-noinst} in the build directory, or, if you've installed Geiser, @file{geiser-racket} in @file{/bin}. These scripts start a new interactive Racket that is also running a REPL server (they also load the errortrace library to provide better diagnostics, but that's not strictly needed). With your external Scheme process running and serving, come back to Emacs and execute @kbd{M-x geiser-connect}, @kbd{M-x connect-to-guile} or @kbd{M-x connect-to-racket}. You'll be asked for a host and a port, and, voila, you'll have a Geiser REPL that is served by the remote Scheme process in a dedicated thread, meaning that your external program can go on doing whatever it was doing while you tinker with it from Emacs. Note, however, that all Scheme threads share the heap, so that you'll be able to interact with those other threads in the running Scheme from Emacs in a variety of ways. For starters, all your (re)definitions will be visible everywhere. That's dangerous, but will come in handy when you need to debug your running web server. @cindex remote connections The connection between Emacs and the Scheme process goes over TCP, so it can be as remote as you need, perhaps with the intervention of an SSH tunnel. @node First aids, Switching context, Starting the REPL, The REPL @section First aids @img{repl-menu, right} @cindex REPL commands A quick way of seeing what else Geiser's REPL can do for you, is to display the corresponding entry up there in your menu bar. No, i don't normally use menus either; but they can come in handy until you've memorized Geiser's commands, as a learning device. And yes, i usually run Emacs inside a terminal, but one can always use @uref{http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/LaCarte, La Carte} to access the menus in a convenient enough fashion. Or just press @kbd{C-h m} and be done with that. Among the commands at your disposal, we find the familiar input navigation keys, with a couple twists. By default, @kbd{M-p} and @kbd{M-n} are bound to @i{matching} items in your input history. That is, they'll find the previous or next sexp that starts with the current input prefix (defined as the text between the end of the prompt and your current position, a.k.a. @dfn{point}, in the buffer). For going up and down the list unconditionally, just use @kbd{C-c M-p} and @kbd{C-c M-n}. In addition, navigation is sexp-based rather than line-based. There are also a few commands to twiddle with the Scheme process. @kbd{C-c C-q} will gently ask it to quit, while @kbd{C-u C-c C-q} will mercilessly kill the process (but not before stowing your history in the file system). Unless you're using a remote REPL, that is, in which case both commands will just sever the connection and leave the remote process alone. If worse comes to worst and the process is dead, @kbd{C-c C-z} will restart it. However, the same shortcut, issued when the REPL is alive, will bring you back to the buffer you came from, as explained in @altr{switching-repl-buff,this section,The source and the REPL,.} The remaining commands are meatier, and deserve sections of their own. @node Switching context, Completion and error handling, First aids, The REPL @section Switching context @cindex current module, in REPL @cindex ,enter vs. enter! In tune with Geiser's @ifhtml @ref{current-module,,modus operandi}, @end ifhtml @ifnothtml @i{modus operandi}, @end ifnothtml evaluations in the REPL take place in the namespace of the current module. As noted above, the REPL's prompt tells you the name of the current module. To switch to a different one, you can use the command @command{geiser-repl-switch-to-module}, bound to @kbd{C-c C-m}. You'll notice that Geiser simply uses a couple of meta-commands provided by the Scheme REPL (the stock @command{,m} in Guile and Chicken and the (geiser-defined) @command{,enter} in Racket), and that it doesn't even try to hide that fact. That means that you can freely use said native ways directly at the REPL, and Geiser will be happy to oblige. In Racket, @command{,enter} works like Racket's standard @code{enter!} form, but you can also provide a path string as its argument (e.g., @command{,enter "/tmp/foo.rkt"} is equivalent to @command{,enter (file "/tmp/foo.rkt")}). Like @code{enter!}, @command{,enter} accepts also module names (as in, say, @command{,enter geiser/main}). As mentioned, in Guile and Chicken, @command{,m} is used @i{as is}. @cindex current module, change Once you enter a new module, only those bindings visible in its namespace will be available to your evaluations. All Schemes supported by Geiser provide a way to import new modules in the current namespace. Again, there's a Geiser command, @command{geiser-repl-import-module}, to invoke such functionality, bound this time to @kbd{C-c C-i}. And, again, you'll see Geiser just introducing the native incantation for you, and you're free to use such incantations by hand whenever you want. One convenience provided by these two Geiser commands is that completion is available when introducing the new module name, using the @kbd{@key{TAB}} key. Pressing it at the command's prompt will offer you a prefix-aware list of available module names. @imgc{mod-completion} Which brings me to the next group of REPL commands. @node Completion and error handling, Autodoc and friends, Switching context, The REPL @section Completion and error handling @cindex completion, at the REPL We've already seen Geiser completion of module names in action at the minibuffer. You won't be surprised to know that it's also available at the REPL buffer itself. There, you can use either @kbd{C-.} or @kbd{M-`} to complete module names, and @kbd{@key{TAB}} or @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} to complete identifiers. Geiser will know what identifiers are bound in the current module and show you a list of those starting with the prefix at point. Needless to say, this is not a static list, and it will grow as you define or import new bindings in the namespace at hand. If no completion is found, @kbd{@key{TAB}} will try to complete the prefix after point as a module name. REPL buffers use Emacs' compilation mode to highlight errors reported by the Scheme interpreter, and you can use the @command{next-error} command (@kbd{M-g n}) to jump to their location. By default, every time you enter a new expression for evaluation old error messages are forgotten, so that @kbd{M-g n} will always jump to errors related to the last evaluation request, if any. If you prefer a not-so-forgetful REPL, set the customization variable @code{geiser-repl-forget-old-errors-p} to @code{nil}. Note, however, that even when that variable is left as @kbd{t}, you can always jump to an old error by moving to its line at the REPL and pressing @kbd{@key{RET}}. When your cursor is away from the last prompt, @kbd{@key{TAB}} will move to the next error in the buffer, and you can use @kbd{@key{BACKTAB}} everywhere to go to the previous one. @subheading Caveat about completion & the REPL @anchor{completion-caveat} It is possible for Geiser to hang your Emacs process when trying to complete symbols. This can happen in the REPL itself or even in a Scheme buffer that is attached to the REPL process. If this happens, you've probably entered a module that changes the REPL prompt from what Geiser was expecting to see. Unfortunately, there's no general solution for this issue right now (as it is a daunting task to try to make a regexp that can encompass all possible REPL prompts). The best solution for now is to fix this issue on a case-by-case basis by adjusting your prompt regexp variable so that it matches the default prompt as well as your Scheme module's special prompt. For example, XREPL is a Racket module that implements a better Racket REPL. You might be interested in toying around with some of its functions, but when you try to enter XREPL via, say, @kbd{C-c C-m xrepl}, you'll notice that the REPL prompt has changed to something like this: @example /xrepl-lib/xrepl/main> @end example If you start typing symbols, and then you try to auto-complete those symbols, your Emacs process may hang. This is because Geiser expects the REPL prompt to match this regexp (for Racket): @example "\\(mzscheme\\|racket\\)@@[^ ]*> " @end example Therefore, we can fix this issue by changing our default prompt regexp like so: @example (setq geiser-racket--prompt-regexp ".*> \\|\\(mzscheme\\|racket\\)@@[^ ]*> ") @end example Note that you may have to run @kbd{M-x geiser-reload} after setting this variable so that your changes will take effect. Again, you'll have to change the regexp to fit every prompt that causes this issue, but the only alternative (that we can think of right now) is to create a regexp that will match every possible prompt. Obviously, that is going to be more than a little tricky. However, if you have a better solution than that, please share it with the Geiser developers; we'll be more than happy to hear it. @node Autodoc and friends, Seeing is believing, Completion and error handling, The REPL @section Autodoc and friends Oftentimes, there's more you'll want to know about an identifier besides its name: What module does it belong to? Is it a procedure and, if so, what arguments does it take? Geiser tries to help you answering those questions too. @cindex autodoc, in the REPL Actually, if you've been playing with the REPL as you read, you might have notice some frantic activity taking place in the echo area every now and then. That was Geiser trying to be helpful (while, hopefully, not being clippy), or, more concretely, what i call, for want of a better name, its @dfn{autodoc} mode. Whenever it's active (did you notice that @i{A} in the mode-line?), Geiser's gerbils will be scanning what you type and showing (unless you silence them with @kbd{C-c C-d C-a}) information about the identifier nearest to point. @imgc{repl-autodoc} If that identifier corresponds to a variable visible in the current namespace, you'll see the module it belongs to and its value. For procedures and macros, autodoc will display, instead of their value, the argument names (or an underscore if Geiser cannot determine the name used in the definition). Optional arguments are surrounded by parentheses. When the optional argument has a default value, it's represented by a list made up of its name and that value. When the argument is a keyword argument, its name has ``#:'' as a prefix. @cindex help on identifier If that's not enough documentation for you, @kbd{C-c C-d d} will open a separate documentation buffer with help on the symbol at point. This buffer will contain implementation-specific information about the identifier (e.g., its docstring for Guile, or its contract, if any, for Racket), and a handy button to open the corresponding manual entry for the symbol, which will open an HTML page (for Racket and Chicken) or the texinfo manual (for Guile). If you'd rather go directly to the manual, try @kbd{C-c C-d i}, which invokes @code{geiser-doc-look-up-manual} as the handy button does. @cindex module exports @anchor{repl-mod} Geiser can also produce for you a list, classified by kind, of the identifiers exported by a given module: all you need to do is press @kbd{C-c C-d m}, and type or complete the desired module's name. @imgc{repl-mod} The list of exported bindings is shown, again, in a buffer belonging to Geiser's documentation browser, where you have at your disposal a bunch of navigation commands listed in @altr{Documentation browser,our cheat-sheet,Documentation browser,.} We'll have a bit more to say about the documentation browser in @altr{doc-browser,a later section,Documentation helpers,.} @cindex jump, at the REPL If that's still not enough, Geiser can jump, via @kbd{M-.}, to the symbol's definition. A buffer with the corresponding file will pop up, with its point resting upon the identifier's defining form. When you're done inspecting, @kbd{M-,} will bring you back to where you were. As we will see, these commands are also available in Scheme buffers. @kbd{M-.} also works for modules: if your point is on an unambiguous module name, the file where it's defined will be opened for you. @node Seeing is believing, Customization and tips, Autodoc and friends, The REPL @section Seeing is believing @cindex image support In schemes that support images as values (currently, that means Racket), the REPL will display them inline if you're using them in a graphics-aware Emacs. @imgc{repl-images} @cindex external image viewer @cindex image viewer For the terminal, images will appear as buttons: press return on them to invoke an external viewer (configurable via @code{geiser-image-viewer}) that will show you the image at hand. You can also ask for the same behaviour on all emacsen by customising @code{geiser-repl-inline-images-p} to @code{nil}. @cindex image cache Geiser keeps a cache of the last displayed images in the directory @code{geiser-image-cache-dir}, which defaults to the system's temp directory, with up to @code{geiser-image-cache-keep-last} files. You can invoke the external image viewer on any of them with @command{M-x geiser-view-last-image}, which takes a prefix argument to indicate which image number you want, 0 corresponding to the newest one. @node Customization and tips, , Seeing is believing, The REPL @section Customization and tips @cindex REPL customization The looks and ways of the REPL can be fine-tuned via a bunch of customization variables. You can see and modify them all in the corresponding customization group (by using the menu entry or the good old @kbd{M-x customize-group geiser-repl}), or by setting them in your Emacs initialisation files (as a rule, all knobs in Geiser are tunable this way: you don't need to use customization buffers if you don't like them). I'm documenting below a proper subset of those settings, together with some related tips. @subsubheading Choosing a Scheme implementation @cindex scheme implementation, choosing @anchor{choosing-impl} Instead of using the generic @command{run-geiser} command, you can directly start your Scheme of choice using any of the following commands: @itemize @bullet @item @command{run-racket} @item @command{run-guile} @item @command{run-chicken} @item @command{run-mit} @item @command{run-chibi} @item @command{run-chez} @end itemize @anchor{active-implementations} In addition, the variable @code{geiser-active-implementations} contains a list of those Schemes Geiser should be aware of. Thus, if you happen to be, say, a racketeer not to be beguiled by other schemes, you can tell Geiser to forget about the richness of the Scheme ecosystem with something like: @example (setq geiser-active-implementations '(racket)) @end example @noindent in your initialisation files. @cindex scheme binary @cindex scheme executable path @anchor{impl-binary} When starting a new REPL, Geiser assumes, by default, that the corresponding Scheme binary is in your path. If that's not the case, the variables to tweak are (depending on which Scheme you choose): @itemize @bullet @item @code{geiser-guile-binary} @item @code{geiser-racket-binary} @item @code{geiser-chicken-binary} @item @code{geiser-mit-binary} @item @code{geiser-chibi-binary} @item @code{geiser-chez-binary} @end itemize They should be set to a string with the full path to the requisite binary. @cindex Version checking Before starting the REPL, Geiser will check whether the version of your Scheme interpreter is good enough. This means that it will spend a couple tenths of a second launching and quickly discarding a Scheme process, but also that the error message you'll get if you're on the wrong Scheme version will be much more informative. If you one to avoid version checks, just check @code{geiser-repl-skip-version-check-p} to @code{t} in your configuration. @cindex scheme load path @cindex scheme init file @cindex GUILE_LOAD_PATH @cindex GUILE_LOAD_COMPILED_PATH @cindex geiser-add-to-load-path @cindex geiser-repl-add-project-paths @subsubheading Init files and load paths The startup behaviour of the REPL can be also fine tuned with a couple more initialisation parameters. Many Scheme implementations provide a configuration variable to specify a Geiser-specific init file (e.g., @code{geiser-guile-init-file} for Guile), and, sometimes a global list of paths to add to the interpreter's load path (that'd be @code{geiser-guile-load-path} for Guile). @cindex default directory There is also a generic mechanism to specify how to add directories to the initial load path when @code{geiser-repl-current-project-function} is set: you can then customize @code{geiser-repl-add-project-paths} to a list of subdirectories of the project's root to add to the load path. When this option is set, the working directory of the REPL's buffer (i.e., the value of the elisp variable @code{default-directory}) will be set to the directory returned by @code{geiser-repl-current-project-function}). These variables controlling your scheme's initialisation process are good candidates for an entry in a project's @file{.dir-locals.el} file, so that they are automatically set to a sensible value whenever you start a REPL in the project's directory. @subsubheading Startup waiting time @cindex startup timeout @cindex timeout When starting a scheme implementation in old or very busy computers, Geiser might have to wait a bit more than it expects (which is ten seconds, or ten thousand milliseconds, by default). If you find that Geiser is giving up too quickly and complaining that no prompt was found, try to increase the value of @code{geiser-repl-startup-time} to, say, twenty seconds: @example (setq geiser-repl-startup-time 20000) @end example @noindent If you prefer, you can use the customize interface to, well, customise the above variable's value. @subsubheading History By default, Geiser won't record duplicates in your input history. If you prefer it did, just set @code{geiser-repl-history-no-dups-p} to @code{nil}. History entries are persistent across REPL sessions: they're saved in implementation-specific files whose location is controlled by the variable @code{geiser-repl-history-filename}. For example, my Geiser configuration includes the following line: @example (setq geiser-repl-history-filename "~/.emacs.d/geiser-history") @end example @noindent which makes the files @file{geiser-history.guile} and @file{geiser-history.racket} to live inside my home's @file{.emacs.d} directory. @subsubheading Autodoc @cindex autodoc, disabling @cindex peace and quiet If you happen to love peace and quiet and prefer to keep your REPL's echo area free from autodoc's noise, @code{geiser-repl-autodoc-p} is the customization variable for you: set it to @code{nil} and autodoc will be disabled by default in new REPLs. You can always bring the fairies back, on a per-REPL basis, using @kbd{C-c C-d C-a}. @subsubheading Remote connections @cindex port, default @cindex host, default When using any of the connection commands (e.g. @code{geiser-connect}, @code{connect-to-guile}, @code{connect-to-racket}, etc.) you'll be prompted for a host and a port, defaulting to ``localhost'' and 37146. You can change those defaults customizing @code{geiser-repl-default-host} and @code{geiser-repl-default-port}, respectively. @subsubheading Killing REPLs @cindex ask on kill, don't If you don't want Emacs to ask for confirmation when you're about to kill a live REPL buffer (as will happen, for instance, if you're exiting Emacs before closing all your REPLs), you can set the flag @code{geiser-repl-query-on-kill-p} to @code{nil}. On a related note, the customizable variable @code{geiser-repl-query-on-exit-p} controls whether Geiser should ask for confirmation when you exit the REPL explicitly (via, say, @kbd{C-c C-q}, as opposed to killing the buffer), and is set to @code{nil} by default. @c Local Variables: @c mode: texinfo @c TeX-master: "geiser" @c End: