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              MARGINALIA.EL - MARGINALIA IN THE MINIBUFFER
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This package provides `marginalia-mode' which adds marginalia to the
minibuffer completions. [Marginalia] are marks or annotations placed at
the margin of the page of a book or in this case helpful colorful
annotations placed at the margin of the minibuffer for your completion
candidates. Marginalia can only add annotations to the completion
candidates. It cannot modify the appearance of the candidates
themselves, which are shown unaltered as supplied by the original
command.

The annotations are added based on the completion category. For example
`find-file' reports the `file' category and `M-x' reports the `command'
category. You can cycle between more or less detailed annotators or even
disable the annotator with command `marginalia-cycle'.

Table of Contents
─────────────────

1. Configuration
2. Information shown by the annotators
3. Adding custom annotators or classifiers
4. Disabling annotators, builtin or lightweight annotators
5. Icons in the minibuffer
6. Contributions


[Marginalia] <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marginalia>


1 Configuration
═══════════════

  It is recommended to use Marginalia together with either the
  [Vertico], [Mct], [Icomplete] or the default completion
  UI. Furthermore Marginalia can be combined with [Embark] for action
  support and [Consult], which provides many useful commands.

  ┌────
  │ ;; Enable rich annotations using the Marginalia package
  │ (use-package marginalia
  │   ;; Bind `marginalia-cycle' locally in the minibuffer.  To make the binding
  │   ;; available in the *Completions* buffer, add it to the
  │   ;; `completion-list-mode-map'.
  │   :bind (:map minibuffer-local-map
  │ 	 ("M-A" . marginalia-cycle))
  │ 
  │   ;; The :init section is always executed.
  │   :init
  │ 
  │   ;; Marginalia must be activated in the :init section of use-package such that
  │   ;; the mode gets enabled right away. Note that this forces loading the
  │   ;; package.
  │   (marginalia-mode))
  └────


[Vertico] <https://github.com/minad/vertico>

[Mct] <https://github.com/protesilaos/mct>

[Icomplete]
<https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Icomplete.html>

[Embark] <https://github.com/oantolin/embark>

[Consult] <https://github.com/minad/consult>


2 Information shown by the annotators
═════════════════════════════════════

  In general, to learn more about what different annotations mean, a
  good starting point is to look at `marginalia-annotators', and follow
  up to the annotation function of the category you are interested in.

  For example the annotations for Elisp symbols include their symbol
  class - `v' for variable, `f' for function, `c' for command, etc. For
  more information on what the different classifications mean, see the
  docstring of `marginalia--symbol-class'.


3 Adding custom annotators or classifiers
═════════════════════════════════════════

  *IMPORTANT NOTICE FOR PACKAGE AUTHORS*: The intention of the
  Marginalia package is to give the user means to overwrite completion
  categories and to add custom annotators for existing commands in their
  user configuration. *Marginalia is a user facing package and is not
  intended to be used as a library*. Therefore Marginalia does not
  expose library functions as part of its public API. If you add your
  own completion commands to your package we recommend to specify an
  `annotation-function' or an `affixation-function', avoiding the
  Marginalia dependency this way. The `annotation-function' and
  `affixation-function' are documented in the [Elisp manual]. If you use
  `consult--read', you can specify an `:annotate' keyword argument.

  There is an exception to our recommendation: If you want to implement
  annotations for an existing package `hypothetic.el', which does not
  have annotations and where annotations cannot be added, then the
  creation of a `marginalia-hypothetic.el' package is a good idea, since
  Marginalia provides the facilities to enhance existing commands from
  the outside.

  Commands that support minibuffer completion use a completion table of
  all the available candidates. Candidates are associated with a
  *category* such as `command', `file', `face', or `variable' depending
  on what the candidates are. Based on the category of the candidates,
  Marginalia selects an *annotator* to generate annotations for display
  for each candidate.

  Unfortunately, not all commands (including Emacs' builtin ones)
  specify the category of their candidates. To compensate for this
  shortcoming, Marginalia hooks into the Emacs completion framework and
  runs the *classifiers* listed in the variable
  `marginalia-classifiers', which use the command's prompt or other
  properties of the candidates to specify the completion category.

  For example, the `marginalia-classify-by-prompt' classifier checks the
  minibuffer prompt against regexps listed in the
  `marginalia-prompt-categories' alist to determine a category. The
  following is already included but would be a way to assign the
  category `face' to all candidates from commands with prompts that
  include the word "face".

  ┌────
  │ (add-to-list 'marginalia-prompt-categories '("\\<face\\>" . face))
  └────

  The `marginalia-classify-by-command-name' classifier uses the alist
  `marginalia-command-categories' to specify the completion category
  based on the command name. This is particularly useful if the prompt
  classifier yields a false positive.

  Completion categories are also important for [Embark], which
  associates actions based on the completion category and benefits from
  Marginalia's classifiers.

  Once the category of the candidates is known, Marginalia looks in the
  `marginalia-annotators' to find the associated annotator to use. An
  annotator is a function that takes a completion candidate string as an
  argument and returns an annotation string to be displayed after the
  candidate in the minibuffer. More than one annotator can be assigned
  to each each category, displaying more, less or different
  information. Use the `marginalia-cycle' command to cycle between the
  annotations of different annotators defined for the current category.

  Here's an example of a basic face annotator:

  ┌────
  │ (defun my-face-annotator (cand)
  │   (when-let (sym (intern-soft cand))
  │     (concat (propertize " " 'display '(space :align-to center))
  │ 	    (propertize "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" 'face sym))))
  └────

  After defining a new annotator, associate it with a category in the
  annotator registry as follows:

  ┌────
  │ (add-to-list 'marginalia-annotators
  │ 	     '(face my-face-annotator marginalia-annotate-face builtin none))
  └────

  This makes the `my-face-annotator' the first of four annotators for
  the face category. The others are the annotator provided by Marginalia
  (`marginalia-annotate-face'), the `builtin' annotator as defined by
  Emacs and the `none' annotator, which disables the annotations. With
  this setting, after invoking `M-x describe-face RET' you can cycle
  between all of these annotators using `marginalia-cycle'.


[Elisp manual]
<https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Completion.html>

[Embark] <https://github.com/oantolin/embark>


4 Disabling annotators, builtin or lightweight annotators
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════

  Marginalia activates rich annotators by default. Depending on your
  preference you may want to use the builtin annotators or even no
  annotators by default and only activate the annotators on demand by
  invoking `marginalia-cycle'.

  In order to disable an annotator permanently, the
  `marginalia-annotators' can be modified. For example if you prefer to
  never see file annotations, you can delete all file annotators from
  the registry.

  ┌────
  │ (setq marginalia-annotators
  │       (assq-delete-all 'file marginalia-annotators))
  └────

  To use the builtin annotators by default, you can run the following
  code.  Replace `builtin' by `none' to disable annotators by default.

  ┌────
  │ (mapc (lambda (x)
  │ 	(setcdr x (cons 'builtin (remq 'builtin (cdr x)))))
  │       marginalia-annotators)
  └────

  As an alternative to `marginalia-cycle', if a completion category
  supports two annotators, you can toggle between them using the
  following command.

  ┌────
  │ (defun marginalia-toggle ()
  │   (interactive)
  │   (mapc
  │    (lambda (x)
  │      (setcdr x (append (reverse (remq 'none
  │ 				      (remq 'builtin (cdr x))))
  │ 		       '(builtin none))))
  │    marginalia-annotators))
  └────

  After cycling the annotators you may want to automatically save the
  configuration. This can be achieved using an advice which calls
  `customize-save-variable'.

  ┌────
  │ (advice-add #'marginalia-cycle :after
  │ 	    (lambda ()
  │ 	      (let ((inhibit-message t))
  │ 		(customize-save-variable 'marginalia-annotators
  │ 					 marginalia-annotators))))
  └────


5 Icons in the minibuffer
═════════════════════════

  Marginalia focuses on text annotations. The [nerd-icons-completion]
  package is compatible with Marginalia and uses the special NerdFonts
  to add icons in front of minibuffer completion candidates. There exist
  related packages to enhance Dired, Ibuffer, Corfu and other modes with
  icons consistently.


[nerd-icons-completion]
<https://github.com/rainstormstudio/nerd-icons-completion>


6 Contributions
═══════════════

  Since this package is part of [GNU ELPA] contributions require a
  copyright assignment to the FSF.


[GNU ELPA] <https://elpa.gnu.org/packages/marginalia.html>
