Folding is generally unnecessary with emacs, as it has tools that explicitly implement the actions people do manually when folding code.
Most people have good success with simple incremental searches. See "foo" mentioned somewhere? Type C-sfoo
, find the definition, press enter, read it, and then press C-x C-x to go back to where you were. Simple and very useful.
Most modes support imenu. M-ximenu
will let you jump to a function definition (etc.) by name. You can also bind it to a mouse click to get a menu of functions (or add it to the menubar; see the Info page for more detail). It provides data for which-function-mode, which will let you see which function you are currently inside in the modeline. (Why are your functions this long, though?)
There is also speedbar, which displays the imenu information (and other things) graphically.
If you want to get an overview of your file, try M-xoccur
". Given a regex, it will create a new buffer with each match in the current buffer. You can search for "(defun" to get an overview of the functions the current file implements. Clicking on the result will move you to that position in the file.
So anyway, think about what you really want to achieve, and Emacs probably implements that. Don't fight with imperfect tools that make you fold and unfold things constantly.
You might want to rebind C-x C-b to invoke buffer-menu
rather than list-buffers
:
(global-set-key "\C-x\C-b" 'buffer-menu)
Best Answer
It's listed in the NEWS for Emacs (
C-h N
):I think what you want is:
(but I think you're using the vertical versus horizontal splitting the opposite of what Emacs terminology is (which is counterintuitive to me as well))