Awesome
julia-mode
Emacs major mode for the Julia programming language.
Installation
Installing from MELPA
Unless you want to develop this package, it is recommended that you use it from MELPA:
-
Enable the MELPA repository.
-
Enable the package by adding these lines to to your Emacs init file, e.g.,
~/.emacs
:
(package-install 'julia-mode)
(require 'julia-mode)
Alternatively, if you are using use-package
, which has been part of Emacs since version 29.1, you can use
(use-package julia-mode
:ensure t)
A note on versioning
The code has been on a “rolling release” model before version 1.0: not all code changes were accompanied by a version increment. From version 1.0, we follow semantic versioning.
Installing from Source
To get the latest version of julia-mode
, clone this repository and then use:
(add-to-list 'load-path "<path-to-julia-mode>")
(require 'julia-mode)
Contributing
Contributions are welcome, in the form of pull requests.
We do our best to provide feedback within 2 weeks. Feel free bump the PR thread with a comment after that.
Submitting Pull Requests
-
Do add unit tests whenever possible. Consider breaking functions into an interface and a backend function for convenient testing.
-
Do add a short summary in the Unreleased section of the CHANGELOG.
-
Do use the
rx
macro (S-expressions) whenever rewriting regular expressions or introducing new ones. This keeps the code much more readable.
Working With Tests
It's easy to add new ERT tests to the julia-mode
test suite.
You only need to prepare a new ert-deftest
definition in julia-mode-tests.el
.
You can run the test suite from the command line with:
emacs -batch -L . -l ert -l julia-mode-tests.el -f ert-run-tests-batch-and-exit