#+title: corfu.el - Completion Overlay Region FUnction
#+author: Daniel Mendler
#+language: en
#+export_file_name: corfu.texi
#+texinfo_dir_category: Emacs
#+texinfo_dir_title: Corfu: (corfu).
#+texinfo_dir_desc: Completion Overlay Region FUnction
#+html:
#+html:
#+html:
* Introduction
Corfu enhances completion at point with a small completion popup. The current
candidates are shown in a popup below or above the point. Corfu is the
minimalistic ~completion-in-region~ counterpart of the [[https://github.com/minad/vertico][Vertico]] minibuffer UI.
Corfu is a small package, which relies on the Emacs completion facilities and
concentrates on providing a polished completion UI. Completions are either
provided by commands like ~dabbrev-completion~ or by pluggable backends
(~completion-at-point-functions~, Capfs). Most programming language major modes
implement a Capf. Furthermore the language server packages, [[https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot][Eglot]] and [[https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-mode][Lsp-mode]],
use Capfs which talk to the LSP server to retrieve the completions. Corfu does
not include its own completion backends. The Emacs built-in Capfs and the Capfs
provided by other programming language packages are usually sufficient. A few
additional Capfs and completion utilities are provided by the [[https://github.com/minad/cape][Cape]] package.
*NOTE*: Corfu uses child frames to show the popup. For now Corfu falls back to the
default setting of the ~completion-in-region-function~ on non-graphical displays.
[[https://github.com/minad/corfu/blob/screenshots/light.png?raw=true]]
[[https://github.com/minad/corfu/blob/screenshots/dark.png?raw=true]]
* Features
- Timer-based auto-completions (/off/ by default, set ~corfu-auto~).
- Popup display with scrollbar indicator and arrow key navigation.
- The popup can be summoned explicitly by pressing =TAB= at any time.
- The current candidate is inserted with =TAB= and selected with =RET=.
- Candidates sorting by prefix, string length and alphabetically.
- The selected candidate is previewed (configurable via ~corfu-preview-current~).
- The selected candidate automatically committed on further input by default.
(configurable via ~corfu-preview-current~).
- The [[https://github.com/oantolin/orderless][Orderless]] completion style is supported. The filter string can contain
arbitrary characters, after inserting a space via =M-SPC= (configurable via
~corfu-quit-at-boundary~ and ~corfu-separator~).
- Deferred completion style highlighting for performance.
- Jumping to location/documentation of current candidate.
- Support for candidate annotations and documentation in the echo area.
- Deprecated candidates are crossed out in the display.
- Icons can be provided by an external package via margin formatter functions.
* Installation and Configuration
Corfu is available from [[http://elpa.gnu.org/packages/corfu.html][GNU ELPA]], such that it can be installed directly via
~package-install~. After installation, the global minor mode can be enabled with
=M-x corfu-global-mode=. In order to configure Corfu and other packages in your
init.el, you may want to use ~use-package~.
Corfu is highly flexible and customizable via ~corfu-*~ customization variables,
such that you can adapt it precisely to your requirements. However in order to
quickly try out the Corfu completion package, it should be sufficient to
activate ~corfu-global-mode~. Then you experiment with manual completion for
example in an Elisp buffer or in an Eshell or Shell buffer. For auto completion,
set ~corfu-auto=t~ before turning on ~corfu-global-mode~.
Here is an example configuration:
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(use-package corfu
;; Optional customizations
;; :custom
;; (corfu-cycle t) ;; Enable cycling for `corfu-next/previous'
;; (corfu-auto t) ;; Enable auto completion
;; (corfu-separator ?\s) ;; Orderless field separator
;; (corfu-quit-at-boundary nil) ;; Never quit at completion boundary
;; (corfu-quit-no-match nil) ;; Never quit, even if there is no match
;; (corfu-preview-current nil) ;; Disable current candidate preview
;; (corfu-preselect-first nil) ;; Disable candidate preselection
;; (corfu-on-exact-match nil) ;; Configure handling of exact matches
;; (corfu-echo-documentation nil) ;; Disable documentation in the echo area
;; (corfu-scroll-margin 5) ;; Use scroll margin
;; You may want to enable Corfu only for certain modes.
;; :hook ((prog-mode . corfu-mode)
;; (shell-mode . corfu-mode)
;; (eshell-mode . corfu-mode))
;; Recommended: Enable Corfu globally.
;; This is recommended since dabbrev can be used globally (M-/).
:init
(corfu-global-mode))
;; Use dabbrev with Corfu!
(use-package dabbrev
;; Swap M-/ and C-M-/
:bind (("M-/" . dabbrev-completion)
("C-M-/" . dabbrev-expand)))
;; A few more useful configurations...
(use-package emacs
:init
;; TAB cycle if there are only few candidates
(setq completion-cycle-threshold 3)
;; Emacs 28: Hide commands in M-x which do not apply to the current mode.
;; Corfu commands are hidden, since they are not supposed to be used via M-x.
;; (setq read-extended-command-predicate
;; #'command-completion-default-include-p)
;; Enable indentation+completion using the TAB key.
;; `completion-at-point' is often bound to M-TAB.
(setq tab-always-indent 'complete))
#+end_src
If you start to configure the package more deeply, I recommend to give the
Orderless completion style a try for filtering. Orderless completion is
different from the familiar prefix TAB completion. Corfu can be used with the
default completion styles. The use of Orderless is not a necessity.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
;; Optionally use the `orderless' completion style.
(use-package orderless
:init
;; Configure a custom style dispatcher (see the Consult wiki)
;; (setq orderless-style-dispatchers '(+orderless-dispatch)
;; orderless-component-separator #'orderless-escapable-split-on-space)
(setq completion-styles '(orderless basic)
completion-category-defaults nil
completion-category-overrides '((file (styles . (partial-completion))))))
#+end_src
The =basic= completion style is specified as fallback in addition to =orderless= in
order to ensure that completion commands which rely on dynamic completion
tables, e.g., ~completion-table-dynamic~ or ~completion-table-in-turn~, work
correctly. See =+orderless-dispatch= in the [[https://github.com/minad/consult/wiki][Consult wiki]] for an advanced Orderless
style dispatcher. Additionally enable =partial-completion= for file path
expansion. =partial-completion= is important for file wildcard support. Multiple
files can be opened at once with =find-file= if you enter a wildcard. You may also
give the =initials= completion style a try.
See also the [[https://github.com/minad/corfu/wiki][Corfu Wiki]] for additional configuration tips. In particular the
Lsp-mode configuration is documented in the wiki. For more general documentation
read the chapter about completion in the [[https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Completion.html][Emacs manual]]. If you want to create
your own Capfs, you can find documentation about completion in the [[https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Completion.html][Elisp manual]].
** Auto completion
Auto completion is disabled by default, but can be enabled by setting
~corfu-auto=t~. Furthermore you may want to configure Corfu to quit completion
eagerly, such that the completion popup stays out of your way when it appeared
unexpectedly.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
;; Enable auto completion and configure quitting
(setq corfu-auto t
corfu-quit-no-match 'separator) ;; or t
#+end_src
In general, I recommend to experiment a bit with the various settings and key
bindings to find a configuration which works for you. There is no one size fits
all solution. Some people like auto completion, some like manual completion,
some want to cycle with TAB and some with the arrow keys...
** Completing with Corfu in the minibuffer
Corfu can be used for completion in the minibuffer, since it relies on child
frames to display the candidates. By default, ~corfu-global-mode~ does not
activate ~corfu-mode~ in the minibuffer, to avoid interference with specialised
minibuffer completion UIs like Vertico or Mct. However you may still want to
enable Corfu completion for commands like ~M-:~ (~eval-expression~) or ~M-!~
(~shell-command~), which read from the minibuffer. Activate ~corfu-mode~ only if
~completion-at-point~ is bound in the minibuffer-local keymap to achieve this
effect.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(defun corfu-enable-in-minibuffer ()
"Enable Corfu in the minibuffer if `completion-at-point' is bound."
(when (where-is-internal #'completion-at-point (list (current-local-map)))
;; (setq-local corfu-auto nil) Enable/disable auto completion
(corfu-mode 1)))
(add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook #'corfu-enable-in-minibuffer)
#+end_src
You can also enable Corfu more generally for every minibuffer, as long as no
other completion UI is active. If you use Mct or Vertico as your main minibuffer
completion UI, the following snippet should yield the desired result.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(defun corfu-enable-always-in-minibuffer ()
"Enable Corfu in the minibuffer if Vertico/Mct are not active."
(unless (or (bound-and-true-p mct--active)
(bound-and-true-p vertico--input))
;; (setq-local corfu-auto nil) Enable/disable auto completion
(corfu-mode 1)))
(add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook #'corfu-enable-always-in-minibuffer 1)
#+end_src
** Completing with Corfu in the Eshell or Shell
When completing in the Eshell I recommend conservative local settings without
auto completion, such that the completion behavior is similar to widely used
shells like Bash, Zsh or Fish.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(add-hook 'eshell-mode-hook
(lambda ()
(setq-local corfu-auto nil)
(corfu-mode)))
#+end_src
When pressing =RET= while the Corfu popup is visible, the ~corfu-insert~ command
will be invoked. This command does inserts the currently selected candidate, but
it does not send the prompt input to Eshell or the comint process. Therefore you
often have to press =RET= twice which feels like an unnecessary double
confirmation. Fortunately it is easy to improve this! In my configuration I
define the command ~corfu-insert-and-send~ which performs the two steps at once.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(defun corfu-insert-and-send ()
(interactive)
;; 1. First insert the completed candidate
(corfu-insert)
;; 2. Send the entire prompt input to the shell
(cond
((and (derived-mode-p 'eshell-mode) (fboundp 'eshell-send-input))
(eshell-send-input))
((and (derived-mode-p 'comint-mode) (fboundp 'comint-send-input))
(comint-send-input))))
(define-key corfu-map "\r" #'+corfu-insert-and-send)
#+end_src
Shell completion uses the flexible ~pcomplete~ mechanism internally, which allows
you to program the completions per shell command. If you want to know more, look
into this [[https://www.masteringemacs.org/article/pcomplete-context-sensitive-completion-emacs][blog post]], which shows how to configure pcomplete for git commands. I
recommend the [[https://github.com/JonWaltman/pcmpl-args.el][pcmpl-args]] package which extends Pcomplete with completion support
and helpful annotation support for more commands. Similar to the Fish shell,
pcmpl-args uses man page parsing and --help output parsing to dynamically
generate completions. This package brings Eshell completion to another level!
Unfortunately Pcomplete has a few technical issues, which we can work around
with the [[https://github.com/minad/cape][Cape]] library (Completion at point extensions). Cape provides wrappers,
which sanitize the pcomplete function. Ideally the bugs in pcomplete should be
fixed upstream. *For now these two advices are strongly recommended to achieve a
sane Eshell experience.*
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
;; Silence the pcomplete capf, no errors or messages!
(advice-add 'pcomplete-completions-at-point :around #'cape-wrap-silent)
;; Ensure that pcomplete does not write to the buffer
;; and behaves as a pure `completion-at-point-function'.
(advice-add 'pcomplete-completions-at-point :around #'cape-wrap-purify)
#+end_src
** Orderless completion
[[https://github.com/oantolin/orderless][Orderless]] is an advanced completion style that supports multi-component search
filters separated by a configurable character (space, by default). Normally,
entering characters like space which lie outside the completion region
boundaries (words, typically) causes Corfu to quit. This behavior is helpful
with auto-completion, which may pop-up when not desired, e.g. on entering a new
variable name. Just keep typing and Corfu will get out of the way.
But orderless search terms can contain arbitrary characters; they are also
interpreted as regular expressions. To use orderless, set ~corfu-separator~ (a
space, by default) to the primary character of your orderless component
separator.
Then, when a new orderless component is desired, use =M-SPC=
(~corfu-insert-separator~) to enter the /first/ component separator in the input,
and arbitrary orderless search terms and new separators can be entered
thereafter.
To treat the entire input as Orderless input, you can set the customization
option ~corfu-quit-at-boundary=t~. This disables the predicate which checks if the
current completion boundary has been left. In contrast, if you /always/ want to
quit at the boundary, simply set ~corfu-quit-at-boundary=nil~. By default
~corfu-quit-at-boundary~ is set to ~separator~ which quits at completion boundaries
as long as no separator has been inserted with ~corfu-insert-separator~.
Finally, there exists the user option ~corfu-quit-no-match~ which is set to
=separator= by default. With this setting Corfu stays alive as soon as you start
advanced filtering with a ~corfu-separator~ even if there are no matches, for
example due to a typo. As long as no separator character has been inserted with
~corfu-insert-separator~, Corfu will still quit if there are no matches. This
ensures that the Corfu popup goes away quickly if completion is not possible.
In the following we show two configurations, one which works best with auto
completion and one which may work better with manual completion if you prefer to
always use =SPC= to separate the Orderless components.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
;; Auto completion example
(use-package corfu
:custom
(corfu-auto t) ;; Enable auto completion
;; (corfu-separator ?_) ;; Set to orderless separator, if not using space
:bind
;; Another key binding can be used, such as S-SPC.
;; (:map corfu-map ("M-SPC" . corfu-insert-separator))
:init
(corfu-global-mode))
;; Manual completion example
(use-package corfu
:custom
;; (corfu-separator ?_) ;; Set to orderless separator, if not using space
:bind
;; Configure SPC for separator insertion
(:map corfu-map ("SPC" . corfu-insert-separator))
:init
(corfu-global-mode))
#+end_src
** TAB-and-Go completion
You may be interested in configuring Corfu in TAB-and-Go style. Pressing TAB
moves to the next candidate and further input will then commit the selection.
Note that further input will not expand snippets or templates, which may not be
desired but which leads overall to a more predictable behavior. In order to
force snippet expansion, confirm a candidate explicitly with ~RET~.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(use-package corfu
;; TAB-and-Go customizations
:custom
(corfu-cycle t) ;; Enable cycling for `corfu-next/previous'
(corfu-preselect-first nil) ;; Disable candidate preselection
;; Use TAB for cycling, default is `corfu-complete'.
:bind
(:map corfu-map
("TAB" . corfu-next)
([tab] . corfu-next)
("S-TAB" . corfu-previous)
([backtab] . corfu-previous))
:init
(corfu-global-mode))
#+end_src
** Transfer completion to the minibuffer
Sometimes it is useful to transfer the Corfu completion session to the
minibuffer, since the minibuffer offers richer interaction features. In
particular, [[https://github.com/oantolin/embark][Embark]] is available in the minibuffer, such that you can act on the
candidates or export/collect the candidates to a separate buffer. Hopefully we
can also add Corfu-support to Embark in the future, such that at least
export/collect is possible directly from Corfu. But in my opinion having the
ability to transfer the Corfu completion to the minibuffer is an even better
feature, since further completion can be performed there.
The command ~corfu-move-to-minibuffer~ is defined here in terms of
~consult-completion-in-region~, which uses the minibuffer completion UI via
~completing-read~.
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(defun corfu-move-to-minibuffer ()
(interactive)
(let ((completion-extra-properties corfu--extra)
completion-cycle-threshold completion-cycling)
(apply #'consult-completion-in-region completion-in-region--data)))
(define-key corfu-map "\M-m" #'corfu-move-to-minibuffer)
#+end_src
* Key bindings
Corfu uses a transient keymap ~corfu-map~ which is active while the popup is
shown. The keymap defines the following remappings and bindings:
- ~beginning-of-buffer~ -> ~corfu-first~
- ~end-of-buffer~ -> ~corfu-last~
- ~scroll-down-command~ -> ~corfu-scroll-down~
- ~scroll-up-command~ -> ~corfu-scroll-up~
- ~next-line~, =down=, =M-n= -> ~corfu-next~
- ~previous-line~, =up=, =M-p= -> ~corfu-previous~
- ~completion-at-point~, =TAB= -> ~corfu-complete~
- =RET= -> ~corfu-insert~
- =M-g= -> ~corfu-show-location~
- =M-h= -> ~corfu-show-documentation~
- =M-SPC= -> ~corfu-insert-separator~
- =C-g= -> ~corfu-quit~
- ~keyboard-escape-quit~ -> ~corfu-reset~
* Complementary packages
Corfu works well together with all packages providing code completion via the
~completion-at-point-functions~. Many modes and packages already provide a Capf
out of the box. Nevertheless you may want to look into complementary packages to
enhance your setup.
- [[https://github.com/oantolin/orderless][Orderless]]: Corfu supports completion styles, including the advanced
[[https://github.com/oantolin/orderless][Orderless]] completion style, where the filtering expressions are separated by
spaces or another character (see ~corfu-separator~).
- [[https://github.com/minad/cape][Cape]]: I collect additional Capf backends and =completion-in-region= commands
in my [[https://github.com/minad/cape][Cape]] package. The package provides a file path, a dabbrev completion
backend and a backend which allows you to enter unicode characters in the
form of TeX commands. Cape provides an adapter to reuse Company backends in
Corfu. Furthermore the function ~cape-super-capf~ can merge/groups multiple
Capfs, such that the candidates of multiple Capfs are displayed together at
the same time.
- [[https://github.com/jdtsmith/kind-icon][kind-icon]]: Icons are supported by Corfu via an external package. For example
the [[https://github.com/jdtsmith/kind-icon][kind-icon]] package provides beautifully styled SVG icons based on
monochromatic icon sets like material design.
- [[https://github.com/galeo/corfu-doc][corfu-doc]]: The corfu-doc package displays the candidate documentation in a
popup next to the Corfu popup, similar to =company-quickhelp=.
- [[https://github.com/JonWaltman/pcmpl-args.el][pcmpl-args]]: Extend the Eshell/Shell Pcomplete mechanism with support for many
more commands. Similar to the Fish shell, Pcomplete uses man page parsing to
dynamically retrieve the completions and helpful annotations. This package
brings Eshell completions to another level!
- [[https://github.com/minad/tempel][Tempel]]: Tiny template/snippet package with templates in Lisp syntax, which
can be used in conjunction with Corfu.
- [[https://github.com/minad/vertico][Vertico]]: You may also want to look into my [[https://github.com/minad/vertico][Vertico]] package. Vertico is the
minibuffer completion counterpart of Corfu.
* Alternatives
- [[https://github.com/company-mode/company-mode][Company]]: Company is a widely used and mature completion package, which
implements a similar interaction model and popup UI as Corfu. While Corfu
relies exclusively on the standard Emacs completion API (Capfs), Company
defines its own API for the backends. Furthermore Company includes its
completion backends, which are incompatible with the Emacs completion
infrastructure. As a result of this design, Company is a more complex package
than Corfu. Company by default uses overlays to display the popup in contrast
to the child frames used by Corfu. Overall both packages work well. Company is
more mature but the integration into Emacs is a bit less tight, since for
example the ~completion-at-point~ command (or the ~completion-in-region~ function)
does not invoke Company.
- [[https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/mct][Mct]]: Protesilaos' Minibuffer Confines Transcended package supports both
minibuffer completion and completion in region. It reuses the default
completion UI for this purpose and installs a timer which live updates the
completion buffer. The main advantage of Mct is that you work with a regular
Emacs buffer instead of with a popup. You can take advantage of the usual
Emacs commands to navigate in the completions buffer. On top, Mct enhances the
movement such that you can quickly switch between the completions buffer and
the minibuffer or the region which is being completed. Mct does not support
timer-based auto completion, but the integration into Emacs is naturally
tight.
- [[https://github.com/minad/consult][consult-completion-in-region]]: The Consult package provides the function
~consult-completion-in-region~ which can be set as ~completion-in-region-function~
such that it handles ~completion-at-point~. The function works by transferring
the in-buffer completion to the minibuffer. In the minibuffer, the minibuffer
completion UI, for example [[https://github.com/minad/vertico][Vertico]] takes over. If you prefer to perform all
your completions in the minibuffer ~consult-completion-in-region~ is your best
option.
* Caveats
Corfu is robust in most scenarios. There are a few known technical caveats.
- Corfu uses child frames to show the popup. For now Corfu falls back to the
default setting of the ~completion-in-region-function~ on non-graphical
displays. You can use one of the alternatives in terminals.
- Corfu does not sort by history, since ~completion-at-point~ does not maintain a
history (See branch =history= for a possible solution).
* Contributions
Since this package is part of [[http://elpa.gnu.org/packages/corfu.html][GNU ELPA]] contributions require a copyright
assignment to the FSF.