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clj-refactor.el

clj-refactor provides powerful refactoring functionality for Clojure projects. It complements the refactoring functionality you'd find in clojure-mode and CIDER.

Here's a small teaser, helping you add a missing libspec:

Installation

It's highly recommended to install clj-refactor through package.el.

It's available on MELPA and MELPA Stable:

M-x package-install clj-refactor

Better IDO completions

If you are a IDO user, you will get better completions by installing the ido-completing-read+ package:

M-x package-install ido-completing-read+

...if you use a framework other than IDO, for best results, please check that it can take over completing-read automatically.

Setup

(require 'clj-refactor)

(defun my-clojure-mode-hook ()
    (clj-refactor-mode 1)
    (yas-minor-mode 1) ; for adding require/use/import statements
    ;; This choice of keybinding leaves cider-macroexpand-1 unbound
    (cljr-add-keybindings-with-prefix "C-c C-m"))

(add-hook 'clojure-mode-hook #'my-clojure-mode-hook)

The more advanced refactorings require our nREPL middleware refactor-nrepl. From version 2.2.0 onwards if cider-jack-in is used it is injected automatically.

profiles.clj or profile.boot don't need to be modified anymore for the above usecase!

On the other hand if a standalone REPL or an embedded nREPL server is used you will need to manually add this dependency (see below).

Either in your project's project.clj or in the :user profile found at ~/.lein/profiles.clj:

:plugins [[refactor-nrepl "3.10.0"]
          [cider/cider-nrepl "0.45.0"]]

Check out the much longer installation page in the wiki for a less opinionated approach.

clj-refactor has quite a few settings you can tweak to change the behavior of various commands. You can read more about that here.

Compatibility

clj-refactorrefactor-nreplCIDERClojureJava
2.4.02.4.00.17, 0.181.7+8+
2.5.02.5.00.241.8+8+
3.0.0+3.0.0+1.01.9+11+

Middleware

Most users will not need to worry about this, but if you wish to configure middleware yourself, the name of the middleware is:

refactor-nrepl.middleware/wrap-refactor

Unlike cider-nrepl which defines many middleware with a handful of related ops, refactor-repl defines a single middleware which houses all of the provided nREPL ops.

In case refactor-nrepl is used for advanced (AST-based) refactorings

The analyzer refactor-nrepl uses needs to eval the code too in order to be able to build the AST we can work with. If that causes side effects like writing files, opening connections to servers, modifying databases, etc. performing certain refactoring functions on your code will do that, too.

By default the user is warned about this when an AST dependent feature is invoked. If this warning is an annoyance and the project can be evalled without any risks set cljr-warn-on-eval to nil so cljr-eagerly-build-asts-on-startup can take effect.

We create ASTs for all the namespaces at REPL start up if cljr-warn-on-eval is set to nil. If that is not desired set cljr-eagerly-build-asts-on-startup to nil in your emacs configuration. AST dependent features at the moment are find usages, rename symbol, extract function, inline symbol, rename file or dir, change function signature, promote function.

Usage

All functions in clj-refactor have a two-letter mnemonic shortcut. E.g. rs for cljr-rename-symbol. Given the prefix choice in the example setup you'd call this function by hitting C-c C-m rs

See the wiki for a complete list of available refactorings, demonstrations and customization points.

If you're having trouble remembering the mnemonic shortcuts, check out the hydra powered popup menus. They are described here.

Changelog

An extensive changelog is available here.

Contribute

Yes, please do. There's a suite of tests, so remember to add tests for your specific feature, or we might break it later.

You'll find the repo at:

https://github.com/clojure-emacs/clj-refactor.el

Run the tests with:

$ make test

Before submitting a patch, or a pull request, make sure all tests are passing and that your patch is in line with the contribution guidelines.

Thanks to everyone who's contributed so far!

Get Help

Due to clj-refactor's kinship with CIDER, you can get help for it in most CIDER-related support channels.

Slack

CIDER has an official Clojurians Slack - #cider. The channel is very active and is a great way to get a handle on some of the maintainers and interact with other CIDER/clj-refactor users. If you need an invite you can go here.

There's also another channel named #emacs for generic Emacs discussions.

License

Copyright © 2012-2014 Magnar Sveen

Copyright © 2014-2023 Magnar Sveen, Lars Andersen, Benedek Fazekas, Bozhidar Batsov

Author: Magnar Sveen magnars@gmail.com Lars Andersen expez@expez.com Benedek Fazekas Keywords: convenience, clojure, cider

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.