Acknowledgments
Many people have contributed code included in the Free
Software Foundation’s distribution of GNU Emacs. To show
our appreciation for their public spirit, we list here in
alphabetical order those who have written substantial portions.
Others too numerous to mention have reported and fixed bugs, and
added features to many parts of Emacs. We thank them for their
generosity as well.
This list is intended to mention every contributor of a major
package or feature we currently distribute; if you know of
someone we have omitted, please make a bug report. More
comprehensive information is available in the
ChangeLog files, summarized in the file
etc/AUTHORS in the distribution.
- Per Abrahamsen wrote the customization facilities, as well
as double.el, for typing accented characters not
normally available from the keyboard; xt-mouse.el,
which allows mouse commands through Xterm;
gnus-cus.el, which implements customization
commands for Gnus; gnus-cite.el, a
citation-parsing facility for news articles;
gnus-score.el, scoring for Gnus;
cpp.el, which hides or highlights parts of C
programs according to preprocessor conditionals; and the widget
library files wid-browse.el,
wid-edit.el, widget.el. He also
co-wrote gnus-soup.el.
- Tomas Abrahamsson wrote artist.el, a package
for producing ASCII art with a mouse or with
keyboard keys.
- Jay K. Adams wrote jka-compr.el and
jka-cmpr-hook.el, providing automatic
decompression and recompression for compressed files.
- Michael Albinus wrote dbus.el, a package that
implements the D-Bus message bus protocol;
zeroconf.el, a mode for browsing Avahi services;
secrets.el, an interface to keyring daemons for
storing confidential data; and filenotify.el and
the associated low-level interface routines, for watching file
status changes. He and Kai Großjohann wrote the
Tramp package, which provides transparent remote file editing
using ssh, ftp, and other network protocols. He and Daniel
Pittman wrote tramp-cache.el.
- Ralf Angeli wrote scroll-lock.el, a minor mode
which keeps the point vertically fixed by scrolling the window
when moving up and down in the buffer.
- Aurélien Aptel added dynamic module support to
Emacs. Philipp Stephani and others also worked on the dynamic
module code.
- Joe Arceneaux wrote the original text property
implementation, and implemented support for X11.
- Emil Åström, Milan Zamaza, and
Stefan Bruda wrote prolog.el, a mode for editing
Prolog (and Mercury) code.
- Miles Bader wrote image-file.el, support code
for visiting image files; minibuf-eldef.el, a
minor mode that hides the minibuffer default value when
appropriate; rfn-eshadow.el, shadowing of
read-file-name input; mb-depth.el,
display of minibuffer depth; button.el, the
library that implements clickable buttons;
face-remap.el, a package for changing the default
face in individual buffers; and macroexp.el for
macro-expansion. He also worked on an early version of the
lexical binding code.
- David Bakhash wrote strokes.el, a mode for
controlling Emacs by moving the mouse in particular
patterns.
- Juanma Barranquero wrote emacs-lock.el (based
on the original version by Tom Wurgler), which makes it harder
to exit with valuable buffers unsaved; and
frameset.el, for saving and restoring the
frame/window setup. He also made many other contributions to
other areas, including MS Windows support.
- Eli Barzilay wrote calculator.el, a desktop
calculator for Emacs.
- Steven L. Baur wrote footnote.el which lets
you include footnotes in email messages; and
gnus-audio.el and earcon.el, which
provide sound effects for Gnus. He also wrote
gnus-setup.el.
- Alexander L. Belikoff, Sergey Berezin, Sacha Chua, David
Edmondson, Noah Friedman, Andreas Fuchs, Mario Lang, Ben
Mesander, Lawrence Mitchell, Gergely Nagy, Michael Olson, Per
Persson, Jorgen Schäfer, Alex Schroeder, and Tom
Tromey wrote ERC, an advanced Internet Relay Chat client (for
more information, see the file CREDITS in the ERC
distribution).
- Scott Bender, Michael Brouwer, Christophe de Dinechin, Carl
Edman, Christian Limpach and Adrian Robert developed and
maintained the NeXTstep port of Emacs.
- Stephen Berman wrote todo-mode.el (based on
the original version by Oliver Seidel), a package for
maintaining TODO list files.
- Anna M. Bigatti wrote cal-html.el, which
produces HTML calendars.
- Ray Blaak and Simon South wrote opascal.el, a
mode for editing Object Pascal source code.
- Martin Blais, Stefan Merten, and David Goodger wrote
rst.el, a mode for editing reStructuredText
documents.
- Jim Blandy wrote Emacs 19’s input system, brought its
configuration and build process up to the GNU coding standards,
and contributed to the frame support and multi-face support.
Jim also wrote tvi970.el, terminal support for the
TeleVideo 970 terminals; and co-wrote wyse50.el
(q.v.).
- Per Bothner wrote term.el, a terminal emulator
in an Emacs buffer.
- Terrence M. Brannon wrote landmark.el, a
neural-network robot that learns landmarks.
- Frank Bresz wrote diff.el, a program to
display
diff output.
- Peter Breton implemented dirtrack.el, a
library for tracking directory changes in shell buffers;
filecache.el, which records which directories your
files are in; locate.el, which interfaces to the
locate command; find-lisp.el, an
Emacs Lisp emulation of the find program;
net-utils.el; and the generic mode feature.
- Emmanuel Briot wrote xml.el, an XML parser for
Emacs; and ada-prj.el, editing of Ada mode project
files, as well as co-authoring ada-mode.el and
ada-xref.el.
- Kevin Broadey wrote foldout.el, providing
folding extensions to Emacs’s outline modes.
- David M. Brown wrote array.el, for editing
arrays and other tabular data.
- Włodek Bzyl and Ryszard Kubiak wrote
ogonek.el, a package for changing the encoding of
Polish characters.
- Bill Carpenter provided feedmail.el, a package
for massaging outgoing mail messages and sending them through
various popular mailers.
- Per Cederqvist and Inge Wallin wrote ewoc.el,
an Emacs widget for manipulating object collections. Per
Cederqvist, Inge Wallin, and Thomas Bellman wrote
avl-tree.el, for balanced binary trees.
- Hans Chalupsky wrote advice.el, an overloading
mechanism for Emacs Lisp functions; and trace.el,
a tracing facility for Emacs Lisp.
- Chris Chase, Carsten Dominik, and J. D. Smith wrote IDLWAVE
mode, for editing IDL and WAVE CL.
- Bob Chassell wrote texnfo-upd.el,
texinfo.el, and makeinfo.el, modes
and utilities for working with Texinfo files; and
page-ext.el, commands for extended page handling.
He also wrote the Emacs Lisp introduction. See Introduction to Programming in Emacs
Lisp.
- Jihyun Cho wrote hanja-util.el and
hangul.el, utilities for Korean Hanja.
- Andrew Choi and Yamamoto Mitsuharu wrote the Carbon
support, used prior to Emacs 23 for Mac OS. Yamamoto Mitsuharu
continued to contribute to Mac OS support in the newer Nextstep
port; and also improved support for multi-monitor
displays.
- Chong Yidong was the Emacs co-maintainer from Emacs 23 to
24.3. He made many improvements to the Emacs display engine. He
also wrote tabulated-list.el, a generic major mode
for lists of data; and improved support for themes and
packages.
- James Clark wrote SGML mode, a mode for editing SGML
documents; and nXML mode, a mode for editing XML documents. He
also contributed to Emacs’s dumping procedures.
- Mike Clarkson wrote edt.el, an emulation of
DEC’s EDT editor.
- Glynn Clements provided gamegrid.el and a
couple of games that use it, Snake and Tetris.
- Andrew Cohen wrote spam-wash.el, to decode and
clean email before it is analyzed for spam.
- Edward O’Connor wrote json.el, a file
for parsing and generating JSON files.
- Georges Brun-Cottan and Stefan Monnier wrote
easy-mmode.el, a package for easy definition of
major and minor modes.
- Andrew Csillag wrote M4 mode
(m4-mode.el).
- Doug Cutting and Jamie Zawinski wrote
disass.el, a disassembler for compiled Emacs Lisp
code.
- Mathias Dahl wrote image-dired.el, a package
for viewing image files as thumbnails.
- Julien Danjou wrote an implementation of desktop
notifications (notifications.el, and related
packages for ERC and Gnus); and color.el, a
library for general color manipulation. He also made various
contributions to Gnus.
- Vivek Dasmohapatra wrote htmlfontify.el, to
convert a buffer or source tree to HTML.
- Matthieu Devin wrote delsel.el, a package to
make newly-typed text replace the current selection.
- Eric Ding wrote goto-addr.el,
- Jan Djärv added support for the GTK+ toolkit
and X drag-and-drop. He also wrote
dynamic-setting.el.
- Carsten Dominik wrote RefTeX, a package for setting up
labels and cross-references in LaTeX documents; and co-wrote
IDLWAVE mode (q.v.). He was the original author of Org mode,
for maintaining notes, todo lists, and project planning.
Bastien Guerry subsequently took over maintainership. Benjamin
Andresen, Thomas Baumann, Joel Boehland, Jan
Böcker, Lennart Borgman, Baoqiu Cui, Dan Davison,
Christian Egli, Eric S. Fraga, Daniel German, Chris Gray,
Konrad Hinsen, Tassilo Horn, Philip Jackson, Martyn Jago,
Thorsten Jolitz, Jambunathan K, Tokuya Kameshima, Sergey
Litvinov, David Maus, Ross Patterson, Juan Pechiar, Sebastian
Rose, Eric Schulte, Paul Sexton, Ulf Stegemann, Andy Stewart,
Christopher Suckling, David O’Toole, John Wiegley, Zhang
Weize, Piotr Zieliński, and others also wrote
various Org mode components. For more information, see
History and Acknowledgments in The Org
Manual.
- Scott Draves wrote tq.el, help functions for
maintaining transaction queues between Emacs and its
subprocesses.
- Benjamin Drieu wrote pong.el, an
implementation of the classical pong game.
- Viktor Dukhovni wrote support for dumping under SunOS
version 4.
- John Eaton and Kurt Hornik wrote Octave mode.
- Rolf Ebert, Markus Heritsch, and Emmanuel Briot wrote Ada
mode.
- Paul Eggert integrated the Gnulib portability library, and
made many other portability fixes to the C code; as well as his
contributions to VC and the calendar.
- Stephen Eglen wrote mspools.el, which tells
you which Procmail folders have mail waiting in them.
- Torbjörn Einarsson wrote f90.el,
a mode for Fortran 90 files.
- Tsugutomo Enami co-wrote the support for international
character sets.
- David Engster wrote mairix.el and
nnmairix.el, an interface to the Mairix indexing
tool.
- Hans Henrik Eriksen wrote simula.el, a mode
for editing SIMULA 87 code.
- Michael Ernst wrote reposition.el, a command
for recentering a function’s source code and preceding
comment on the screen.
- Ata Etemadi wrote cdl.el, functions for
working with Common Data Language source code.
- Frederick Farnbach implemented morse.el, which
converts text to Morse code.
- Oscar Figueiredo wrote EUDC, the Emacs Unified Directory
Client, which is an interface to directory servers via LDAP,
CCSO PH/QI, or BBDB; and ldap.el, the LDAP client
interface.
- Fred Fish wrote the support for dumping COFF executable
files.
- Karl Fogel wrote bookmark.el, which implements
named placeholders; mail-hist.el, a history
mechanism for outgoing mail messages; and
saveplace.el, for preserving point’s
location in files between editing sessions.
- Gary Foster wrote scroll-all.el, a mode for
scrolling several buffers together.
- Romain Francoise contributed ACL (Access Control List)
support, for preserving extended file attributes on backup and
copy.
- Noah Friedman wrote rlogin.el, an interface to
Rlogin, type-break.el, which reminds you to take
periodic breaks from typing, and
eldoc-mode, a
mode to show the defined parameters or the doc string for the
Lisp function near point.
- Shigeru Fukaya wrote a testsuite for the
byte-compiler.
- Keith Gabryelski wrote hexl.el, a mode for
editing binary files.
- Kevin Gallagher rewrote and enhanced the EDT emulation, and
wrote flow-ctrl.el, a package for coping with
unsuppressible XON/XOFF flow control.
- Fabián E. Gallina rewrote
python.el, the major mode for the Python
programming language used in Emacs 24.3 onwards.
- Kevin Gallo added multiple-frame support for Windows NT and
wrote w32-win.el, support functions for the
MS-Windows window system.
- Juan León Lahoz GarcÃa wrote
wdired.el, a package for performing file
operations by directly editing Dired buffers.
- Howard Gayle wrote much of the C and Lisp code for display
tables and case tables. He also wrote rot13.el, a
command to display the plain-text form of a buffer encoded with
the Caesar cipher; vt100-led.el, a package for
controlling the LEDs on VT100-compatible terminals; and much of
the support for ISO-8859 European character sets (which
includes iso-ascii.el, iso-insert.el,
iso-swed.el, iso-syntax.el,
iso-transl.el, and swedish.el).
- Stephen Gildea made the Emacs quick reference card, and
made many contributions for time-stamp.el, a
package for maintaining last-change time stamps in files.
- Julien Gilles wrote gnus-ml.el, a mailing list
minor mode for Gnus.
- David Gillespie wrote the Common Lisp compatibility
packages;
Calc, an advanced calculator and
mathematical tool, since maintained and developed by Jay
Belanger; complete.el, a partial completion
mechanism; and edmacro.el, a package for editing
keyboard macros.
- Bob Glickstein wrote sregex.el, a facility for
writing regexps using a Lisp-like syntax.
- Boris Goldowsky wrote avoid.el, a package to
keep the mouse cursor out of the way of the text cursor;
shadowfile.el, a package for keeping identical
copies of files in more than one place; format.el,
a package for reading and writing files in various formats;
enriched.el, a package for saving text properties
in files; facemenu.el, a package for specifying
faces; and descr-text.el, describing text and
character properties.
- Michelangelo Grigni wrote ffap.el which visits
a file, taking the file name from the buffer.
- Odd Gripenstam wrote dcl-mode.el for editing
DCL command files.
- Michael Gschwind wrote iso-cvt.el, a package
to convert between the ISO 8859-1 character set and the
notations for non-ASCII characters used by
TeX and net tradition.
- Bastien Guerry wrote gnus-bookmark.el,
bookmark support for Gnus; as well as helping to maintain Org
mode (q.v.).
- Henry Guillaume wrote find-file.el, a package
to visit files related to the currently visited file.
- Doug Gwyn wrote the portable
alloca
implementation.
- Ken’ichi Handa implemented most of the support for
international character sets, and wrote most of the Emacs 23
font handling code. He also wrote composite.el,
which provides a minor mode that composes characters
automatically when they are displayed;
isearch-x.el, a facility for searching
non-ASCII text; and ps-bdf.el,
a BDF font support for printing non-ASCII
text on a PostScript printer. Together with Naoto Takahashi, he
wrote quail.el, an input facility for typing
non-ASCII text from an
ASCII keyboard.
- Jesper Harder wrote yenc.el, for decoding yenc
encoded messages.
- Alexandru Harsanyi wrote a library for accessing SOAP web
services.
- K. Shane Hartman wrote chistory.el and
echistory.el, packages for browsing command
history lists; electric.el and
helper.el, which provide an alternative command
loop and appropriate help facilities; emacsbug.el,
a package for reporting Emacs bugs; picture.el, a
mode for editing ASCII pictures; and
view.el, a package for perusing files and buffers
without editing them.
- John Heidemann wrote mouse-copy.el and
mouse-drag.el, which provide alternative
mouse-based editing and scrolling features.
- Jon K Hellan wrote utf7.el, support for
mail-safe transformation format of Unicode.
- Karl Heuer wrote the original blessmail script, implemented
the
intangible text property, and rearranged the
structure of the Lisp_Object type to allow for
more data bits.
- Manabu Higashida ported Emacs to MS-DOS.
- Anders Holst wrote hippie-exp.el, a versatile
completion and expansion package.
- Tassilo Horn wrote DocView mode, allowing viewing of PDF,
PostScript and DVI documents.
- Tom Houlder wrote mantemp.el, which generates
manual C++ template instantiations.
- Joakim Hove wrote html2text.el, a html to
plain text converter.
- Denis Howe wrote browse-url.el, a package for
invoking a WWW browser to display a URL.
- Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen did a major redesign of the Gnus
news-reader and wrote many of its parts. Several of these are
now general components of Emacs, including: dns.el
for Domain Name Service lookups; format-spec.el
for formatting arbitrary format strings; netrc.el
for parsing of .netrc files; and
time-date.el for general date and time handling.
He also wrote network-stream.el, for opening
network processes; url-queue.el, for controlling
parallel downloads of URLs; and implemented libxml2 support. He
also wrote eww.el, an Emacs Lisp web browser; and
implemented native zlib decompression. Components of Gnus have
also been written by: Nagy Andras, David Blacka, Scott Byer,
Ludovic Courtès, Julien Danjou, Kevin Greiner, Kai
Großjohann, Joe Hildebrand, Paul Jarc, Simon
Josefsson, Sascha Lüdecke, David Moore, Jim
Radford, Benjamin Rutt, Raymond Scholz, Thomas Steffen, Reiner
Steib, Jan Tatarik, Didier Verna, Ilja Weis, Katsumi Yamaoka,
Teodor Zlatanov, and others (see
Contributors in the Gnus Manual).
- Andrew Innes contributed extensively to the MS-Windows
support.
- Seiichiro Inoue improved Emacs’s XIM support.
- Philip Jackson wrote find-cmd.el, to build a
find command-line.
- Ulf Jasper wrote icalendar.el, a package for
converting Emacs diary entries to and from the iCalendar
format; newsticker.el, an RSS and Atom based
Newsticker; and bubbles.el, a puzzle game.
- Kyle Jones wrote life.el, a package to play
Conway’s Game of Life.
- Terry Jones wrote shadow.el, a package for
finding potential load-path problems when some Lisp file
shadows another.
- Simon Josefsson wrote dns-mode.el, an editing
mode for Domain Name System master files; dig.el,
a Domain Name System interface; flow-fill.el, a
package for interpreting RFC2646 formatted text in messages;
fringe.el, a package for customizing the fringe;
imap.el, an Emacs Lisp library for talking to IMAP
servers; password-cache.el, a password reader;
nnimap.el, the IMAP back-end for Gnus;
url-imap.el for the URL library;
rfc2104.el, a hashed message authentication
facility; the Gnus S/MIME and Sieve components; and
tls.el and starttls.el for the
Transport Layer Security protocol.
- Arne Jørgensen wrote
latexenc.el, a package to automatically guess the
correct coding system in LaTeX files.
- Alexandre Julliard wrote vc-git.el, support
for the Git version control system.
- Tomoji Kagatani implemented smtpmail.el, used
for sending out mail with SMTP.
- Ivan Kanis wrote vc-hg.el, support for the
Mercurial version control system.
- Henry Kautz wrote bib-mode.el, a mode for
maintaining bibliography databases compatible with
refer (the troff version) and
lookbib, and refbib.el, a package to
convert those databases to the format used by the LaTeX text
formatting package.
- Taichi Kawabata added support for Devanagari script and the
Indian languages, and wrote ucs-normalize.el for
Unicode normalization.
- Taro Kawagishi implemented the MD4 Message Digest Algorithm
in Lisp; and wrote ntlm.el and
sasl-ntlm.el for NT LanManager authentication
support.
- Howard Kaye wrote sort.el, commands to sort
text in Emacs buffers.
- Michael Kifer wrote
ediff, an interactive
interface to the diff, patch, and
merge programs; and Viper, an emulator of the VI
editor.
- Richard King wrote the first version of
userlock.el and filelock.c, which
provide simple support for multiple users editing the same
file. He also wrote the initial version of
uniquify.el, a facility to make buffer names
unique by adding parts of the file’s name to the buffer
name.
- Peter Kleiweg wrote ps-mode.el, a mode for
editing PostScript files and running a PostScript interpreter
interactively from within Emacs.
- Karel KlÃÄ contributed SELinux support,
for preserving the Security-Enhanced Linux context of files on
backup and copy.
- Shuhei Kobayashi wrote hex-util.el, for
operating on hexadecimal strings; and support for HMAC
(Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication).
- Pavel Kobyakov wrote flymake.el, a minor mode
for performing on-the-fly syntax checking.
- David M. Koppelman wrote hi-lock.el, a minor
mode for interactive automatic highlighting of parts of the
buffer text.
- Koseki Yoshinori wrote iimage.el, a minor mode
for displaying inline images.
- Robert Krawitz wrote the original xmenu.c,
part of Emacs’s pop-up menu support.
- Sebastian Kremer wrote
dired-mode, with
contributions by Lawrence R. Dodd. He also wrote
ls-lisp.el, a Lisp emulation of the
ls command for platforms that don’t have
ls as a standard program.
- David KÃ¥gedal wrote tempo.el,
providing support for easy insertion of boilerplate text and
other common constructions.
- Igor Kuzmin wrote cconv.el, providing closure
conversion for statically scoped Emacs lisp.
- Daniel LaLiberte wrote edebug.el, a
source-level debugger for Emacs Lisp; cl-specs.el,
specifications to help
edebug debug code written
using David Gillespie’s Common Lisp support; and
isearch.el, Emacs’s incremental search minor
mode. He also co-wrote hideif.el (q.v.).
- Karl Landstrom and Daniel Colascione wrote
js.el, a mode for editing JavaScript.
- Vinicius Jose Latorre wrote the Emacs printing facilities,
as well as
ps-print (with Jim Thompson, Jacques
Duthen, and Kenichi Handa), a package for pretty-printing Emacs
buffers to PostScript printers; delim-col.el, a
package to arrange text into columns; ebnf2ps.el,
a package that translates EBNF grammar to a syntactic chart
that can be printed to a PostScript printer; and
whitespace.el, a package that detects and cleans
up excess whitespace in a file (building on an earlier version
by Rajesh Vaidheeswarran).
- Frederic Lepied wrote expand.el, which uses
the abbrev mechanism for inserting programming constructs.
- Peter Liljenberg wrote elint.el, a Lint-style
code checker for Emacs Lisp programs.
- Lars Lindberg wrote msb.el, which provides
more flexible menus for buffer selection; co-wrote
imenu.el (q.v.); and rewrote
dabbrev.el, originally written by Don
Morrison.
- Anders Lindgren wrote autorevert.el, a package
for automatically reverting files visited by Emacs that were
changed on disk; cwarn.el, a package to highlight
suspicious C and C++ constructs; and
follow.el, a minor mode to synchronize windows
that show the same buffer.
- Thomas Link wrote filesets.el, a package for
handling sets of files.
- Juri Linkov wrote misearch.el, extending
isearch to multi-buffer searches; the code in
files-x.el for handling file- and directory-local
variables; and the
info-finder feature that
creates a virtual Info manual of package keywords.
- Leo Liu wrote pcmpl-x.el, providing completion
for miscellaneous external tools; and revamped support for
Octave in Emacs 24.4.
- Károly Lőrentey wrote the
multi-terminal code, which allows Emacs to run on graphical and
text terminals simultaneously.
- Martin Lorentzon wrote vc-annotate.el, support
for version control annotation.
- Dave Love wrote much of the code dealing with Unicode
support and Latin-N unification. He added support for many
coding systems, including the various UTF-7 and UTF-16 coding
systems. He also wrote
autoarg-mode, a global
minor mode whereby digit keys supply prefix arguments;
autoarg-kp-mode, which redefines the keypad
numeric keys to digit arguments; autoconf.el, a
mode for editing Autoconf files; cfengine.el, a
mode for editing Cfengine files; elide-head.el, a
package for eliding boilerplate text from file headers;
hl-line.el, a minor mode for highlighting the line
in the current window on which point is;
cap-words.el, a minor mode for motion in
CapitalizedWordIdentifiers;
latin1-disp.el, a package that lets you display
ISO 8859 characters on Latin-1 terminals by setting up
appropriate display tables; the version of
python.el used prior to Emacs 24.3;
smiley.el, a facility for displaying smiley faces;
sym-comp.el, a library for performing
mode-dependent symbol completion; benchmark.el for
timing code execution; and tool-bar.el, a mode to
control the display of the Emacs tool bar. With Riccardo Murri
he wrote vc-bzr.el, support for the Bazaar version
control system.
- Eric Ludlam wrote the Speedbar package;
checkdoc.el, for checking doc strings in Emacs
Lisp programs; dframe.el, providing dedicated
frame support modes; ezimage.el, a generalized way
to place images over text; chart.el for drawing
bar charts etc.; and the EIEIO (Enhanced Implementation of
Emacs Interpreted Objects) package. He was also the main author
of the CEDET (Collection of Emacs Development Environment
Tools) package. Portions were also written by Jan Moringen,
David Ponce, and Joakim Verona.
- Roland McGrath wrote compile.el (since updated
by Daniel Pfeiffer), a package for running compilations in a
buffer, and then visiting the locations reported in error
messages; etags.el, a package for jumping to
function definitions and searching or replacing in all the
files mentioned in a TAGS file; with Sebastian
Kremer find-dired.el, for using
dired
commands on output from the find program;
grep.el for running the grep command;
map-ynp.el, a general purpose boolean
question-asker; autoload.el, providing
semi-automatic maintenance of autoload files.
- Alan Mackenzie wrote the integrated AWK support in CC Mode,
and maintained CC Mode from Emacs 22 onwards.
- Michael McNamara and Wilson Snyder wrote Verilog mode.
- Christopher J. Madsen wrote decipher.el, a
package for cracking simple substitution ciphers.
- Neil M. Mager wrote appt.el, functions to
notify users of their appointments. It finds appointments
recorded in the diary files used by the
calendar
package.
- Ken Manheimer wrote allout.el, a mode for
manipulating and formatting outlines, and
icomplete.el, which provides incremental
completion feedback in the minibuffer.
- Bill Mann wrote perl-mode.el, a mode for
editing Perl code.
- Brian Marick and Daniel LaLiberte wrote
hideif.el, support for hiding selected code within
C
#ifdef clauses.
- Simon Marshall wrote regexp-opt.el, which
generates a regular expression from a list of strings; and the
fast-lock and lazy-lock font-lock support modes. He also
extended comint.el and shell.el,
originally written by Olin Shivers.
- Bengt Martensson, Dirk Herrmann, Marc Shapiro, Mike Newton,
Aaron Larson, and Stefan Schoef, wrote bibtex.el,
a mode for editing BibTeX bibliography files.
- Charlie Martin wrote autoinsert.el, which
provides automatic mode-sensitive insertion of text into new
files.
- Yukihiro Matsumoto and Nobuyoshi Nakada wrote
Ruby-mode.
- Tomohiro Matsuyama wrote the native Elisp profiler.
- Thomas May wrote blackbox.el, a version of the
traditional blackbox game.
- David Megginson wrote derived.el, which allows
one to define new major modes by inheriting key bindings and
commands from existing major modes.
- Will Mengarini wrote repeat.el, a command to
repeat the preceding command with its arguments.
- Richard Mlynarik wrote cl-indent.el, a package
for indenting Common Lisp code; ebuff-menu.el, an
electric browser for buffer listings; ehelp.el,
bindings for browsing help screens; and rfc822.el,
a parser for E-mail addresses in the RFC-822 format, used in
mail messages and news articles.
- Gerd Möllmann was the Emacs maintainer from
the beginning of Emacs 21 development until the release of
21.1. He wrote the new display engine used from Emacs 21
onwards, and the asynchronous timers facility. He also wrote
ebrowse, the C++ browser;
jit-lock.el, the Just-In-Time font-lock support
mode; tooltip.el, a package for displaying
tooltips; authors.el, a package for maintaining
the AUTHORS file; and rx.el, a
regular expression constructor.
- Stefan Monnier was the Emacs (co-)maintainer from Emacs 23
until late in the development of 25.1. He added support for
Arch and Subversion to VC, re-wrote much of the Emacs server to
use the built-in networking primitives, and re-wrote the abbrev
and minibuffer completion code for Emacs 23. He also wrote
PCL-CVS, a directory-level front end to the CVS
version control system; reveal.el, a minor mode
for automatically revealing invisible text;
smerge-mode.el, a minor mode for resolving
diff3 conflicts; diff-mode.el, a mode
for viewing and editing context diffs; css-mode.el
for Cascading Style Sheets; bibtex-style.el for
BibTeX Style files; mpc.el, a client for the Music
Player Daemon (MPD); smie.el, a generic
indentation engine; and pcase.el, implementing
ML-style pattern matching. In Emacs 24, he integrated the
lexical binding code, cleaned up the CL namespace (making it
acceptable to use CL functions at runtime), added generalized
variables to core Emacs Lisp, and implemented a new lightweight
advice mechanism.
- Morioka Tomohiko wrote several packages for MIME support in
Gnus and elsewhere.
- Sen Nagata wrote crm.el, a package for reading
multiple strings with completion, and rfc2368.el,
support for
mailto: URLs.
- Erik Naggum wrote the time-conversion functions. He also
wrote disp-table.el, for dealing with display
tables; mailheader.el, for parsing email headers;
and parse-time.el, for parsing time strings.
- Takahashi Naoto co-wrote quail.el (q.v.), and
wrote robin.el, another input method.
- Thomas Neumann and Eric Raymond wrote
make-mode.el, a mode for editing makefiles.
- Thien-Thi Nguyen and Dan Nicolaescu wrote
hideshow.el, a minor mode for selectively
displaying blocks of text.
- Dan Nicolaescu added support for running Emacs as a daemon.
He also wrote romanian.el, support for editing
Romanian text; iris-ansi.el, support for running
Emacs on SGI’s
xwsh and winterm
terminal emulators; and vc-dir.el, displaying the
status of version-controlled directories.
- Hrvoje Nikšić wrote
savehist.el, for saving the minibuffer history
between Emacs sessions.
- Jeff Norden wrote kermit.el, a package to help
the Kermit dialup communications program run comfortably in an
Emacs shell buffer.
- Andrew Norman wrote ange-ftp.el, providing
transparent FTP support.
- Kentaro Ohkouchi created the Emacs icons used beginning
with Emacs 23.
- Christian Ohler wrote ert.el, a library for
automated regression testing.
- Alexandre Oliva wrote gnus-mlspl.el, a group
params-based mail splitting mechanism.
- Takaaki Ota wrote table.el, a package for
creating and editing embedded text-based tables.
- Pieter E. J. Pareit wrote mixal-mode.el, an
editing mode for the MIX assembly language.
- David Pearson wrote quickurl.el, a simple
method of inserting a URL into the current buffer based on text
at point; 5x5.el, a game to fill all squares on
the field.
- Jeff Peck wrote sun.el, key bindings for
sunterm keys.
- Damon Anton Permezel wrote hanoi.el, an
animated demonstration of the Towers of Hanoi puzzle.
- William M. Perry wrote mailcap.el (with Lars
Magne Ingebrigtsen), a MIME media types configuration facility;
mwheel.el, a package for supporting mouse wheels;
co-wrote (with Dave Love) socks.el, a Socks v5
client; and developed the URL package.
- Per Persson wrote gnus-vm.el, the VM interface
for Gnus.
- Jens Petersen wrote find-func.el, which makes
it easy to find the source code for an Emacs Lisp function or
variable.
- Nicolas Petton wrote map.el, a library
providing map-manipulation functions that work on alists,
hash-table and arrays; seq.el, a library providing
advanced sequence manipulation functions and macros; and
thunk.el, a library providing functions and macros
to delay the evaluation of forms. He also created the new icon
in Emacs 25.
- Daniel Pfeiffer wrote conf-mode.el, a mode for
editing configuration files; copyright.el, a
package for updating copyright notices in files;
executable.el, a package for executing interpreter
scripts; sh-script.el, a mode for editing shell
scripts; skeleton.el, implementing a concise
language for writing statement skeletons; and
two-column.el, a minor mode for simultaneous
two-column editing.
Daniel also rewrote apropos.el (originally
written by Joe Wells), for finding commands, functions, and
variables matching a regular expression; and, together with
Jim Blandy, co-authored wyse50.el, support for
Wyse 50 terminals. He also co-wrote compile.el
(q.v.) and ada-stmt.el.
- Richard L. Pieri wrote pop3.el, a Post Office
Protocol (RFC 1460) interface for Emacs.
- Fred Pierresteguy and Paul Reilly made Emacs work with X
Toolkit widgets.
- François Pinard, Greg McGary, and Bruno Haible
wrote po.el, support for PO translation
files.
- Christian Plaunt wrote soundex.el, an
implementation of the Soundex algorithm for comparing English
words by their pronunciation.
- David Ponce wrote recentf.el, a package that
puts a menu of recently visited files in the Emacs menu bar;
ruler-mode.el, a minor mode for displaying a ruler
in the header line; and tree-widget.el, a package
to display hierarchical data structures.
- Francesco A. Potortì wrote
cmacexp.el, providing a command which runs the C
preprocessor on a region of a file and displays the results. He
also expanded and redesigned the
etags
program.
- Michael D. Prange and Steven A. Wood wrote
fortran.el, a mode for editing Fortran code.
- Ashwin Ram wrote refer.el, commands to look up
references in bibliography files by keyword.
- Eric S. Raymond wrote vc.el, an interface to
the RCS and SCCS source code version control systems, with Paul
Eggert; gud.el, a package for running source-level
debuggers like GDB and SDB in Emacs; asm-mode.el,
a mode for editing assembly language code;
AT386.el, terminal support package for IBM’s
AT keyboards; cookie1.el, support for
fortune-cookie programs like yow.el and
spook.el; finder.el, a package for
finding Emacs Lisp packages by keyword and topic;
keyswap.el, code to swap the BS and DEL keys;
loadhist.el, functions for loading and unloading
Emacs features; lisp-mnt.el, functions for working
with the special headers used in Emacs Lisp library files; and
code to set and make use of the
load-history lisp
variable, which records the source file from which each lisp
function loaded into Emacs came.
- Edward M. Reingold wrote the calendar and diary support,
with contributions from Stewart Clamen
(cal-mayan.el), Nachum Dershowitz
(cal-hebrew.el), Paul Eggert
(cal-dst.el), Steve Fisk
(cal-tex.el), Michael Kifer
(cal-x.el), Lara Rios (cal-menu.el),
and Denis B. Roegel (solar.el). Andy Oram
contributed to its documentation. Reingold also contributed to
tex-mode.el, a mode for editing TeX files, as did
William F. Schelter, Dick King, Stephen Gildea, Michael Prange,
and Jacob Gore.
- David Reitter wrote mailclient.el which can
send mail via the system’s designated mail client.
- Alex Rezinsky wrote which-func.el, a mode that
shows the name of the current function in the mode line.
- Rob Riepel wrote vt-control.el, providing some
control functions for the DEC VT line of terminals.
- Nick Roberts wrote t-mouse.el, for mouse
support in text terminals; and gdb-ui.el, a
graphical user interface to GDB. Together with Dmitry Dzhus, he
wrote gdb-mi.el, the successor to
gdb-ui.el.
- Danny Roozendaal implemented handwrite.el,
which converts text into “handwriting”.
- Markus Rost wrote cus-test.el, a testing
framework for customize.
- Guillermo J. Rozas wrote scheme.el, a mode for
editing Scheme and DSSSL code.
- Martin Rudalics implemented improved display-buffer
handling in Emacs 24; and implemented pixel-wise resizing of
windows and frames.
- Ivar Rummelhoff wrote winner.el, which records
recent window configurations so you can move back to them.
- Jason Rumney ported the Emacs 21 display engine to
MS-Windows, and has contributed extensively to the MS-Windows
port of Emacs.
- Wolfgang Rupprecht wrote Emacs 19’s floating-point
support (including float-sup.el and
floatfns.c).
- Kevin Ryde wrote info-xref.el, a library for
checking references in Info files.
- James B. Salem and Brewster Kahle wrote
completion.el, providing dynamic word
completion.
- Holger Schauer wrote fortune.el, a package for
using fortune in message signatures.
- William Schelter wrote telnet.el, support for
telnet sessions within Emacs.
- Ralph Schleicher wrote battery.el, a package
for displaying laptop computer battery status, and
info-look.el, a package for looking up Info
documentation for symbols in the buffer.
- Michael Schmidt and Tom Perrine wrote
modula2.el, a mode for editing Modula-2 code,
based on work by Mick Jordan and Peter Robinson.
- Ronald S. Schnell wrote dunnet.el, a text
adventure game.
- Philippe Schnoebelen wrote gomoku.el, a Go
Moku game played against Emacs; and mpuz.el, a
multiplication puzzle.
- Jan Schormann wrote solitaire.el, an
implementation of the Solitaire game.
- Alex Schroeder wrote ansi-color.el, a package
for translating ANSI color escape sequences to Emacs faces;
sql.el, a package for interactively running an SQL
interpreter in an Emacs buffer; cus-theme.el, an
interface for custom themes; master.el, a package
for making a buffer ‘master’ over
another; and spam-stat.el, for statistical
detection of junk email. He also wrote parts of the IRC client
ERC (q.v.).
- Randal Schwartz wrote pp.el, a pretty-printer
for lisp objects.
- Manuel Serrano wrote the Flyspell package, which does spell
checking as you type.
- Hovav Shacham wrote windmove.el, a set of
commands for selecting windows based on their geometrical
position on the frame.
- Stanislav Shalunov wrote uce.el, for
responding to unsolicited commercial email.
- Richard Sharman wrote hilit-chg.el, which uses
colors to show recent editing changes.
- Olin Shivers wrote comint.el, a library for
modes running interactive command-line-oriented subprocesses,
and shell.el, for running inferior shells (both
since extended by Simon Marshall); cmuscheme.el,
for running inferior Scheme processes;
inf-lisp.el, for running inferior Lisp
process.
- Espen Skoglund wrote pascal.el, a mode for
editing Pascal code.
- Rick Sladkey wrote backquote.el, a lisp macro
for creating mostly-constant data.
- Lynn Slater wrote help-macro.el, a macro for
writing interactive help for key bindings.
- Chris Smith wrote icon.el, a mode for editing
Icon code.
- David Smith wrote ielm.el, a mode for
interacting with the Emacs Lisp interpreter as a
subprocess.
- Paul D. Smith wrote snmp-mode.el.
- William Sommerfeld wrote scribe.el, a mode for
editing Scribe files, and server.el, a package
allowing programs to send files to an extant Emacs job to be
edited.
- Andre Spiegel made many contributions to the Emacs Version
Control package, and in particular made it support multiple
back ends.
- Michael Staats wrote pc-select.el, which
rebinds keys for selecting regions to follow many other
systems.
- Richard Stallman invented Emacs. He is the original author
of GNU Emacs, and has been Emacs maintainer over several
non-contiguous periods. In addition to much of the core Emacs
code, he has written easymenu.el, a facility for
defining Emacs menus; image-mode.el, support for
visiting image files; menu-bar.el, the Emacs menu
bar support code; paren.el, a package to make
matching parentheses stand out in color; and also co-authored
portions of CC mode.
- Sam Steingold wrote midnight.el, a package for
running a command every midnight.
- Ake Stenhoff and Lars Lindberg wrote imenu.el,
a framework for browsing indices made from buffer
contents.
- Peter Stephenson wrote vcursor.el, which
implements a virtual cursor that you can move with the keyboard
and use for copying text.
- Ken Stevens wrote ispell.el, a spell-checker
interface.
- Kim F. Storm made many improvements to the Emacs display
engine, process support, and networking support. He also wrote
bindat.el, a package for encoding and decoding
binary data; CUA mode, which allows Emacs to emulate the
standard CUA key bindings; ido.el, a package for
selecting buffers and files quickly; keypad.el for
simplified keypad bindings; and kmacro.el, the
keyboard macro facility.
- Martin Stjernholm co-authored CC Mode, a major editing mode
for C, C++, Objective-C, Java, Pike, CORBA IDL, and
AWK code.
- Steve Strassmann did not write spook.el, and
even if he did, he really didn’t mean for you to use it
in an anarchistic way.
- Olaf Sylvester wrote bs.el, a package for
manipulating Emacs buffers.
- Tibor Å imko and Milan Zamazal wrote
slovak.el, support for editing text in Slovak
language.
- Luc Teirlinck wrote help-at-pt.el, providing
local help through the keyboard.
- Jean-Philippe Theberge wrote thumbs.el, a
package for viewing image files as thumbnails.
- Spencer Thomas wrote the original dabbrev.el,
providing a command which completes the partial word before
point, based on other nearby words for which it is a prefix. He
also wrote the original dumping support.
- Toru Tomabechi contributed to Tibetan support.
- Markus Triska wrote linum.el, a minor mode
that displays line numbers in the left margin.
- Tom Tromey and Chris Lindblad wrote tcl.el, a
mode for editing Tcl/Tk source files and running a Tcl
interpreter as an Emacs subprocess. Tom Tromey also wrote
bug-reference.el, providing clickable links to bug
reports; and the first version of the Emacs package
system.
- Eli Tziperman wrote rmail-spam-filter.el, a
spam filter for RMAIL.
- Daiki Ueno wrote starttls.el, support for
Transport Layer Security protocol; sasl-cram.el
and sasl-digest.el (with Kenichi Okada), and
sasl.el, support for Simple Authentication and
Security Layer (SASL); plstore.el for secure
storage of property lists; and the EasyPG (and its predecessor
PGG) package, for GnuPG and PGP support.
- Masanobu Umeda wrote GNUS, a feature-rich reader for Usenet
news that was the ancestor of the current Gnus package. He also
wrote rmailsort.el, a package for sorting messages
in RMAIL folders; metamail.el, an interface to the
Metamail program; gnus-kill.el, the Kill File mode
for Gnus; gnus-mh.el, an mh-e interface for Gnus;
gnus-msg.el, a mail and post interface for Gnus;
and timezone.el, providing functions for dealing
with time zones.
- Neil W. Van Dyke wrote webjump.el, a Web
hotlist package.
- Didier Verna wrote rect.el, a package of
functions for operations on rectangle regions of text. He also
contributed to Gnus (q.v.).
- Joakim Verona implemented ImageMagick support.
- Ulrik Vieth implemented meta-mode.el, for
editing MetaFont code.
- Geoffrey Voelker wrote the Windows NT support. He also
wrote dos-w32.el, functions shared by the MS-DOS
and MS-Windows ports of Emacs, and w32-fns.el,
MS-Windows specific support functions.
- Johan Vromans wrote forms.el and its
associated files, a mode for filling in forms. He also wrote
iso-acc.el, a minor mode providing electric accent
keys.
- Colin Walters wrote Ibuffer, an enhanced buffer menu.
- Barry Warsaw wrote cc-mode.el, a mode for
editing C, C++, and Java code, based on earlier work
by Dave Detlefs, Stewart Clamen, and Richard Stallman;
elp.el, a profiler for Emacs Lisp programs;
man.el, a mode for reading Unix manual pages;
regi.el, providing an AWK-like functionality for
use in lisp programs; reporter.el, providing
customizable bug reporting for lisp packages; and
supercite.el, a minor mode for quoting sections of
mail messages and news articles.
- Christoph Wedler wrote antlr-mode.el, a major
mode for ANTLR grammar files.
- Morten Welinder helped port Emacs to MS-DOS, and introduced
face support into the MS-DOS port of Emacs. He also wrote
desktop.el, facilities for saving some of
Emacs’s state between sessions; timer.el,
the Emacs facility to run commands at a given time or
frequency, or when Emacs is idle, and its C-level support code;
pc-win.el, the MS-DOS “window-system”
support; internal.el, an “internal
terminal” emulator for the MS-DOS port of Emacs;
arc-mode.el, the mode for editing compressed
archives; s-region.el, commands for setting the
region using the shift key and motion commands; and
dos-fns.el, functions for use under MS-DOS.
- Joe Wells wrote the original version of
apropos.el (q.v.); resume.el, support
for processing command-line arguments after resuming a
suspended Emacs job; and mail-extr.el, a package
for extracting names and addresses from mail headers, with
contributions from Jamie Zawinski.
- Rodney Whitby and Reto Zimmermann wrote
vhdl-mode.el, a major mode for editing VHDL source
code.
- John Wiegley was the Emacs maintainer from Emacs 25
onwards. He wrote align.el, a set of commands for
aligning text according to regular-expression based rules;
isearchb.el for fast buffer switching;
timeclock.el, a package for keeping track of time
spent on projects; the Bahá’Ã
calendar support; pcomplete.el, a programmable
completion facility; remember.el, a mode for
jotting down things to remember; eudcb-mab.el, an
address book backend for the Emacs Unified Directory Client;
and
eshell, a command shell implemented entirely
in Emacs Lisp. He also contributed to Org mode (q.v.).
- Mike Williams wrote thingatpt.el, a library of
functions for finding the “thing” (word, line,
s-expression) at point.
- Roland Winkler wrote proced.el, a system
process editor.
- Bill Wohler wrote MH-E, the Emacs interface to the MH mail
system; making use of earlier work by James R. Larus. Satyaki
Das, Peter S. Galbraith, Stephen Gildea, and Jeffrey C. Honig
also wrote various MH-E components.
- Dale R. Worley wrote emerge.el, a package for
interactively merging two versions of a file.
- Francis J. Wright wrote woman.el, a package
for browsing manual pages without the
man
command.
- Masatake Yamato wrote ld-script.el, an editing
mode for GNU linker scripts, and contributed subword handling
and style guessing in CC mode.
- Jonathan Yavner wrote testcover.el, a package
for keeping track of the testing status of Emacs Lisp code;
unsafep.el to determine if a Lisp form is safe;
and the SES spreadsheet package.
- Ryan Yeske wrote rcirc.el a simple Internet
Relay Chat client.
- Ilya Zakharevich and Bob Olson wrote
cperl-mode.el, a major mode for editing Perl code.
Ilya Zakharevich also wrote tmm.el, a mode for
accessing the Emacs menu bar on a text-mode terminal.
- Milan Zamazal wrote czech.el, support for
editing Czech text; glasses.el, a package for
easier reading of source code that uses illegible identifier
names; and tildify.el, commands for adding hard
spaces to text, TeX, and SGML/HTML files.
- Victor Zandy wrote zone.el, a package for
people who like to zone out in front of Emacs.
- Eli Zaretskii made many standard Emacs features work on
MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows. He also wrote
tty-colors.el, which implements transparent
mapping of X colors to tty colors; and rxvt.el. He
implemented support for bidirectional text, and also menus on
text-mode terminals.
- Jamie Zawinski wrote much of the support for faces and X
selections. With Hallvard Furuseth, he wrote the optimizing
byte compiler used from Emacs 19 onwards. He also wrote
mailabbrev.el, a package that provides automatic
expansion of mail aliases, and tar-mode.el, which
provides simple viewing and editing commands for tar
files.
- Andrew Zhilin created the Emacs 22 icons.
- Shenghuo Zhu wrote binhex.el, a package for
reading and writing binhex files; mm-partial.el,
message/partial support for MIME messages;
rfc1843.el, an HZ decoding package;
uudecode.el, an Emacs Lisp decoder for uuencoded
data; and webmail.el, an interface to Web mail. He
also wrote several other Gnus components.
- Ian T. Zimmerman wrote gametree.el.
- Reto Zimmermann wrote vera-mode.el.
- Neal Ziring and Felix S. T. Wu wrote vi.el, an
emulation of the VI text editor.
- Ted Zlatanov (as well as his contributions to the Gnus
newsreader) wrote an interface to the GnuTLS library, for
secure network connections; and a futures facility for the URL
library.
- Detlev Zundel wrote re-builder.el, a package
for building regexps with visual feedback.