Vertico provides a performant and minimalistic vertical completion UI based on
the default completion system. The focus of Vertico is to provide a UI which
behaves correctly under all circumstances. By reusing the built-in facilities
system, Vertico achieves full compatibility with built-in Emacs completion
commands and completion tables. Vertico only provides the completion UI but aims
to be highly flexible, extendable and modular. Additional enhancements are
available as extensions or complementary packages. The code base is small and
maintainable. The main vertico.el
package is only about 600 lines of code
without white space and comments.
- Vertical display with arrow key navigation. Many additional display modes are provided as extensions.
- Prompt shows the current candidate index and the total number of candidates.
- The current candidate is inserted with
TAB
and selected withRET
. - Non-existing candidates can be submitted with
M-RET
or by moving the point to the prompt. - Efficient sorting by history position, length and alphabetically.
- Long candidates with newlines are formatted to take up less space.
- Lazy completion candidate highlighting for performance.
- Annotations are displayed next to the candidates (
annotation-
andaffixation-function
). - Support for candidate grouping and group cycling commands (
group-function
).
Vertico is available from GNU ELPA. You can install it directly via M-x package-install RET vertico RET
.
After installation, activate the global minor mode with M-x vertico-mode RET
.
Vertico defines its own local keymap in the minibuffer which is derived from
minibuffer-local-map
. The keymap keeps most of the fundamental-mode
keybindings
intact and remaps and binds only a handful of commands.
Binding/Remapping | Vertico command |
---|---|
beginning-of-buffer , minibuffer-beginning-of-buffer | vertico-first |
end-of-buffer | vertico-last |
scroll-down-command | vertico-scroll-down |
scroll-up-command | vertico-scroll-up |
next-line , next-line-or-history-element | vertico-next |
previous-line , previous-line-or-history-element | vertico-previous |
forward-paragraph | vertico-next-group |
backward-paragraph | vertico-previous-group |
exit-minibuffer | vertico-exit |
kill-ring-save | vertico-save |
M-RET | vertico-exit-input |
TAB | vertico-insert |
Note in particular the binding of TAB
to vertico-insert
, which inserts the
currently selected candidate, and the binding of RET
and M-RET
to vertico-exit
and vertico-exit-input
respectively.
vertico-exit
exits with the currently selected candidate, while
vertico-exit-input
exits with the minibuffer input instead. Exiting with the
current input is needed when you want to create a new buffer or a new file with
find-file
or switch-to-buffer
. As an alternative to pressing M-RET
, move the
selection up to the input prompt by pressing the up
arrow key and then press
RET
.
In order to configure Vertico and other packages in your init.el, you may want
to take advantage of use-package
. Here is an example configuration:
;; Enable vertico
(use-package vertico
:custom
;; (vertico-scroll-margin 0) ;; Different scroll margin
;; (vertico-count 20) ;; Show more candidates
;; (vertico-resize t) ;; Grow and shrink the Vertico minibuffer
;; (vertico-cycle t) ;; Enable cycling for `vertico-next/previous'
:init
(vertico-mode))
;; Persist history over Emacs restarts. Vertico sorts by history position.
(use-package savehist
:init
(savehist-mode))
;; A few more useful configurations...
(use-package emacs
:custom
;; Support opening new minibuffers from inside existing minibuffers.
(enable-recursive-minibuffers t)
;; Hide commands in M-x which do not work in the current mode. Vertico
;; commands are hidden in normal buffers. This setting is useful beyond
;; Vertico.
(read-extended-command-predicate #'command-completion-default-include-p)
:init
;; Add prompt indicator to `completing-read-multiple'.
;; We display [CRM<separator>], e.g., [CRM,] if the separator is a comma.
(defun crm-indicator (args)
(cons (format "[CRM%s] %s"
(replace-regexp-in-string
"\\`\\[.*?]\\*\\|\\[.*?]\\*\\'" ""
crm-separator)
(car args))
(cdr args)))
(advice-add #'completing-read-multiple :filter-args #'crm-indicator)
;; Do not allow the cursor in the minibuffer prompt
(setq minibuffer-prompt-properties
'(read-only t cursor-intangible t face minibuffer-prompt))
(add-hook 'minibuffer-setup-hook #'cursor-intangible-mode))
I recommend to give Orderless completion a try, which is more flexible and powerful than the default completion styles.
;; Optionally use the `orderless' completion style.
(use-package orderless
:custom
;; Configure a custom style dispatcher (see the Consult wiki)
;; (orderless-style-dispatchers '( orderless-consult-dispatch orderless-affix-dispatch))
;; (orderless-component-separator #'orderless-escapable-split-on-space)
(completion-styles '(orderless basic))
(completion-category-defaults nil)
(completion-category-overrides '((file (styles partial-completion)))))
The basic
completion style is specified as fallback in addition to orderless
in
order to ensure that completion commands which rely on dynamic completion
tables, e.g., completion-table-dynamic
or completion-table-in-turn
, work
correctly. See the Consult wiki for my advanced Orderless configuration with
style dispatchers. Additionally enable partial-completion
for file path
expansion. partial-completion
is important for file wildcard support in
find-file
. In order to open multiple files with a wildcard at once, you have to
submit the prompt with M-RET
. Alternative first move to the prompt and then
press RET
.
See also the Vertico Wiki for additional configuration tips. For more general documentation read the chapter about completion in the Emacs manual. If you want to create your own completion commands, you can find documentation about completion in the Elisp manual.
The bindings of the minibuffer-local-completion-map
are not available in Vertico
by default. This means that TAB
works differently from what you may expect from
shells like Bash or the default Emacs completion system. In Vertico TAB
inserts
the currently selected candidate.
If you prefer to have the default completion commands available you can add new
bindings or even replace the Vertico bindings. For example you can use M-TAB
to
expand the prefix of candidates (TAB complete) or cycle between candidates if
completion-cycle-threshold
is non-nil, with the following configuration.
;; Option 1: Additional bindings
(keymap-set vertico-map "?" #'minibuffer-completion-help)
(keymap-set vertico-map "M-RET" #'minibuffer-force-complete-and-exit)
(keymap-set vertico-map "M-TAB" #'minibuffer-complete)
;; Option 2: Replace `vertico-insert' to enable TAB prefix expansion.
;; (keymap-set vertico-map "TAB" #'minibuffer-complete)
The command minibuffer-complete
performs prefix expansion for the basic
completion style, while the orderless
and substring
completion styles expand to
the longest candidate substring. Alternatively you can use completion-styles
like partial-completion
, flex
or initials
, which perform different expansion and
filtering. The partial-completion
style is important if you want to open
multiple files at once with find-file
using wildcards. In order to open multiple
files with a wildcard at once, you have to submit the prompt with M-RET
.
Alternative first move to the prompt and then press RET
.
(setq completion-styles '(basic substring partial-completion flex))
Because Vertico is fully compatible with Emacs default completion system, further customization of completion behavior can be achieved by setting the designated Emacs variables. For example, one may wish to disable case-sensitivity for file and buffer matching when built-in completion styles are used:
(setq read-file-name-completion-ignore-case t
read-buffer-completion-ignore-case t
completion-ignore-case t)
The tab completion command completion-at-point
command is usually bound to M-TAB
or TAB
. Tab completion is also used in the minibuffer by M-:
(eval-expression
).
In case you want to use Vertico to show the completion candidates of
completion-at-point
and completion-in-region
, you can use the function
consult-completion-in-region
provided by the Consult package.
;; Use `consult-completion-in-region' if Vertico is enabled.
;; Otherwise use the default `completion--in-region' function.
(setq completion-in-region-function
(lambda (&rest args)
(apply (if vertico-mode
#'consult-completion-in-region
#'completion--in-region)
args)))
You may also want to look into my Corfu package, which provides a minimal
completion system for completion-in-region
in a child frame popup. Corfu is a
narrowly focused package and developed in the same spirit as Vertico. You can
even use Corfu in the minibuffer.
We maintain small extension packages to Vertico in this repository in the
subdirectory extensions/. The extensions are installed together with Vertico if
you pull the package from ELPA. The extensions are inactive by default and can
be enabled manually if desired. Furthermore it is possible to install all of the
files separately, both vertico.el
and the vertico-*.el
extensions. Currently the
following extensions come with the Vertico ELPA package:
- vertico-buffer:
vertico-buffer-mode
to display Vertico like a regular buffer. - vertico-directory: Commands for Ido-like directory navigation.
- vertico-flat:
vertico-flat-mode
to enable a flat, horizontal display. - vertico-grid:
vertico-grid-mode
to enable a grid display. - vertico-indexed:
vertico-indexed-mode
to select indexed candidates with prefix arguments. - vertico-mouse:
vertico-mouse-mode
to support for scrolling and candidate selection. - vertico-multiform: Configure Vertico modes per command or completion category.
- vertico-quick: Commands to select using Avy-style quick keys.
- vertico-repeat: The command
vertico-repeat
repeats the last completion session. - vertico-reverse:
vertico-reverse-mode
to reverse the display. - vertico-suspend: The command
vertico-suspend
suspends and restores the current session. - vertico-unobtrusive:
vertico-unobtrusive-mode
displays only the topmost candidate.
See the commentary of those files for configuration details. With these
extensions it is possible to adapt Vertico such that it matches your preference
or behaves similar to other familiar UIs. For example, the combination
vertico-flat
plus vertico-directory
resembles Ido in look and feel. For an
interface similar to Helm, the extension vertico-buffer
allows you to configure
freely where the completion buffer opens, instead of growing the minibuffer.
Furthermore vertico-buffer
will adjust the number of displayed candidates
according to the buffer height.
Configuration example for vertico-directory
:
;; Configure directory extension.
(use-package vertico-directory
:after vertico
:ensure nil
;; More convenient directory navigation commands
:bind (:map vertico-map
("RET" . vertico-directory-enter)
("DEL" . vertico-directory-delete-char)
("M-DEL" . vertico-directory-delete-word))
;; Tidy shadowed file names
:hook (rfn-eshadow-update-overlay . vertico-directory-tidy))
Vertico offers the vertico-multiform-mode
which allows you to configure Vertico
per command or per completion category. The vertico-buffer-mode
enables a
Helm-like buffer display, which takes more space but also displays more
candidates. This verbose display mode is useful for commands like consult-imenu
or consult-outline
since the buffer display allows you to get a better overview
over the entire current buffer. But for other commands you want to keep using
the default Vertico display. vertico-multiform-mode
solves this configuration
problem.
;; Enable vertico-multiform
(vertico-multiform-mode)
;; Configure the display per command.
;; Use a buffer with indices for imenu
;; and a flat (Ido-like) menu for M-x.
(setq vertico-multiform-commands
'((consult-imenu buffer indexed)
(execute-extended-command unobtrusive)))
;; Configure the display per completion category.
;; Use the grid display for files and a buffer
;; for the consult-grep commands.
(setq vertico-multiform-categories
'((file grid)
(consult-grep buffer)))
Temporary toggling between the different display modes is possible. The
following commands are bound by default in the vertico-multiform-map
. You can of
course change these bindings if you like.
M-B
->vertico-multiform-buffer
M-F
->vertico-multiform-flat
M-G
->vertico-multiform-grid
M-R
->vertico-multiform-reverse
M-U
->vertico-multiform-unobtrusive
M-V
->vertico-multiform-vertical
For special configuration you can use your own functions or even lambdas to configure the completion behavior per command or per completion category. Functions must have the calling convention of a mode, i.e., take a single argument, which is either 1 to turn on the mode and -1 to turn off the mode.
;; Configure `consult-outline' as a scaled down TOC in a separate buffer
(setq vertico-multiform-commands
`((consult-outline buffer ,(lambda (_) (text-scale-set -1)))))
Furthermore you can tune buffer-local settings per command or category.
;; Change the default sorting function.
;; See `vertico-sort-function' and `vertico-sort-override-function'.
(setq vertico-multiform-commands
'((describe-symbol (vertico-sort-function . vertico-sort-alpha))))
(setq vertico-multiform-categories
'((symbol (vertico-sort-function . vertico-sort-alpha))
(file (vertico-sort-function . sort-directories-first))))
;; Sort directories before files
(defun sort-directories-first (files)
(setq files (vertico-sort-history-length-alpha files))
(nconc (seq-filter (lambda (x) (string-suffix-p "/" x)) files)
(seq-remove (lambda (x) (string-suffix-p "/" x)) files)))
Combining these features allows us to fine-tune the completion display even more
by adjusting the vertico-buffer-display-action
. We can for example reuse the
current window for commands of the consult-grep
category (consult-grep
,
consult-git-grep
and consult-ripgrep
). Note that this configuration is
incompatible with Consult preview, since the previewed buffer is usually shown
in exactly this window. Nevertheless this snippet demonstrates the flexibility
of the configuration system.
;; Configure the buffer display and the buffer display action
(setq vertico-multiform-categories
'((consult-grep
buffer
(vertico-buffer-display-action . (display-buffer-same-window)))))
;; Disable preview for consult-grep commands
(consult-customize consult-ripgrep consult-git-grep consult-grep :preview-key nil)
As another example, the following code uses vertico-flat
and vertico-cycle
to
emulate (ido-mode 'buffer)
, i.e., Ido when it is enabled only for completion of
buffer names. vertico-cycle
set to t
is necessary here to prevent completion
candidates from disappearing when they scroll off-screen to the left.
(setq vertico-multiform-categories
'((buffer flat (vertico-cycle . t))))
Vertico integrates well with complementary packages, which enrich the completion UI. These packages are fully supported:
- Marginalia: Rich annotations in the minibuffer
- Consult: Useful search and navigation commands
- Embark: Minibuffer actions and context menu
- Orderless: Advanced completion style
In order to get accustomed with the package ecosystem, I recommend the following quick start approach:
- Start with plain Emacs (
emacs -Q
). - Install and enable Vertico to get incremental minibuffer completion.
- Install Orderless and/or configure the built-in completion styles for more flexible minibuffer filtering.
- Install Marginalia if you like rich minibuffer annotations.
- Install Embark and add two keybindings for
embark-dwim
andembark-act
. I am using the mnemonic keybindingsM-.
andC-.
since these commands allow you to act on the object at point or in the minibuffer. - Install Consult if you want additional featureful completion commands,
e.g., the buffer switcher
consult-buffer
with preview or the line-based searchconsult-line
. - Install Embark-Consult and Wgrep for export from
consult-line
tooccur-mode
buffers and fromconsult-grep
to editablegrep-mode
buffers. - Fine tune Vertico with extensions.
The ecosystem is modular. You don’t have to use all of these components. Use
only the ones you like and the ones which fit well into your setup. The steps 1.
to 4. introduce no new commands over plain Emacs. Step 5. introduces the new
commands embark-act
and embark-dwim
. In step 6. you get the Consult commands,
some offer new functionality not present in Emacs already (e.g., consult-line
)
and some are substitutes (e.g., consult-buffer
for switch-to-buffer
).
An often requested feature is the ability to display the completions in a child
frame popup. Personally I am critical of using child frames for minibuffer
completion. From my experience it introduces more problems than it solves. Most
importantly child frames hide the content of the underlying buffer. Furthermore
child frames do not play well together with changing windows and entering
recursive minibuffer sessions. On top, child frames can feel slow and sometimes
flicker. A better alternative is the vertico-buffer
display which can even be
configured individually per command using vertico-multiform
. On the plus side of
child frames, the completion display appears at the center of the screen, where
your eyes are focused. Please give the following packages a try and judge for
yourself.
- mini-frame: Display the entire minibuffer in a child frame.
- mini-popup: Slightly simpler alternative to mini-frame.
- vertico-posframe: Display only the Vertico minibuffer in a child frame using the posframe library.
There are many alternative completion UIs, each UI with its own advantages and disadvantages.
Vertico aims to be 100% compliant with all Emacs commands and achieves that with
a minimal code base, relying purely on completing-read
while avoiding to invent
its own APIs. Inventing a custom API as Helm or Ivy is explicitly avoided in
order to increase flexibility and package reuse. Due to its small code base and
reuse of the Emacs built-in facilities, bugs and compatibility issues are less
likely to occur in comparison to completion UIs or monolithic completion systems.
Since Vertico only provides the UI, you may want to combine it with some of the complementary packages, to give a full-featured completion experience similar to Helm or Ivy. The idea is to have smaller independent components, which one can add and understand step by step. Each component focuses on its niche and tries to be as non-intrusive as possible. Vertico targets users interested in crafting their Emacs precisely to their liking - completion plays an integral part in how the users interacts with Emacs.
There are other interactive completion UIs, which follow a similar philosophy:
- Mct: Minibuffer and Completions in Tandem. Mct reuses the default
*Completions*
buffer and enhances it with automatic updates and additional keybindings, to select a candidate and move between minibuffer and completions buffer. Since Mct uses a fully functional buffer you can use familiar buffer commands inside the completions buffer. The main distinction to Vertico’s approach is that*Completions*
buffer displays all matching candidates. This has the advantage that you can interact freely with the candidates and jump around with Isearch or Avy. On the other hand it necessarily causes a slowdown. - Selectrum: Selectrum is the predecessor of Vertico has been deprecated in favor of Vertico. Read the migration guide when migrating from Selectrum. Vertico was designed specifically to address the technical shortcomings of Selectrum. Selectrum is not fully compatible with every Emacs completion command and dynamic completion tables, since it uses its own filtering infrastructure, which deviates from the standard Emacs completion facilities.
- Icomplete: Emacs comes with the builtin
icomplete-vertical-mode
, which is a more bare-bone than Vertico. Vertico offers additional flexibility thanks to its extensions.
If you want to learn more about Vertico and minibuffer completion, check out the following resources:
- Configurations which use Vertico and Corfu for completion:
- Videos:
- Emacs Completion Explained (2022-07-19) by Andrew Tropin.
- Emacs Minibuffer Completions (2022-02-12) by Greg Yut.
- Vertico Extensions for Emacs (2022-01-08) by Karthik Chikmagalur.
- Using Emacs Episode 80 - Vertico, Marginalia, Consult and Embark (2021-10-26) by Mike Zamansky.
- System Crafters Live! - Replacing Ivy and Counsel with Vertico and Consult (2021-05-21) by David Wilson.
- Streamline Your Emacs Completions with Vertico (2021-05-17) by David Wilson.
- Modern Emacs: all those new tools that make Emacs better and faster (2024-03-06) by Marie-Hélène Burle.
Since this package is part of GNU ELPA contributions require a copyright assignment to the FSF.
When you observe an error in the vertico--exhibit
post command hook, you should
install an advice to enforce debugging. This allows you to obtain a stack trace
in order to narrow down the location of the error. The reason is that post
command hooks are automatically disabled (and not debugged) by Emacs. Otherwise
Emacs would become unusable, given that the hooks are executed after every
command.
(setq debug-on-error t)
(defun force-debug (func &rest args)
(condition-case e
(apply func args)
((debug error) (signal (car e) (cdr e)))))
(advice-add #'vertico--exhibit :around #'force-debug)
Vertico is robust in most scenarios. However some completion commands make certain assumptions about the completion styles and the completion UI. Some of these assumptions may not hold in Vertico or other UIs and require minor workarounds.
org-refile
uses org-olpath-completing-read
to complete the outline path in
steps, when org-refile-use-outline-path
is non-nil.
Unfortunately the implementation of this Org completion table assumes that the
basic
completion style is used. The table is incompatible with completion styles
like substring
, flex
or orderless
. In order to fix the issue at the root, the
completion table should make use of completion boundaries similar to the
built-in file completion table. In your user configuration you can prioritize
basic
before orderless
.
;; Alternative 1: Use the basic completion style
(setq org-refile-use-outline-path 'file
org-outline-path-complete-in-steps t)
(advice-add #'org-olpath-completing-read :around #'vertico-enforce-basic-completion)
(defun vertico-enforce-basic-completion (&rest args)
(minibuffer-with-setup-hook
(:append
(lambda ()
(let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
(define-key map [tab] #'minibuffer-complete)
(use-local-map (make-composed-keymap (list map) (current-local-map))))
(setq-local completion-styles (cons 'basic completion-styles)
vertico-preselect 'prompt)))
(apply args)))
Alternatively you may want to disable the outline path completion in steps. The completion on the full path can be quicker since the input string matches directly against substrings of the full path, which is useful with Orderless. However the list of possible completions becomes much more cluttered.
;; Alternative 2: Complete full paths
(setq org-refile-use-outline-path 'file
org-outline-path-complete-in-steps nil)
Similar to org-refile
, the commands org-agenda-filter
and org-tags-view
do not
make use of completion boundaries. The internal completion tables are
org-agenda-filter-completion-function
and org-tags-completion-function
.
Unfortunately TAB
completion (minibuffer-complete
) does not work for this reason
with arbitrary completion styles like substring
, flex
or orderless
. This affects
Vertico and also the Emacs default completion system. For example if you enter
tag<0 TAB
the input is replaced with 0:10
which is not correct. With preserved
completion boundaries, the expected result would be tag<0:10
. Completion
boundaries are used for example by file completion, where each part of the path
can be completed separately. Ideally this issue would be fixed in Org.
(advice-add #'org-make-tags-matcher :around #'vertico-enforce-basic-completion)
(advice-add #'org-agenda-filter :around #'vertico-enforce-basic-completion)
The text menu bar works well with Vertico but always shows a *Completions*
buffer, which is unwanted if you use the Vertico UI. This completion buffer can
be disabled with an advice. If you disabled the standard GUI menu bar and prefer
the Vertico interface you may also overwrite the default F10 keybinding.
(keymap-global-set "<f10>" #'tmm-menubar)
(advice-add #'tmm-add-prompt :after #'minibuffer-hide-completions)
The command ffap-menu
shows the *Completions*
buffer by default like
tmm-menubar
, which is unnecessary with Vertico. This completion buffer can be
disabled as follows.
(advice-add #'ffap-menu-ask :around
(lambda (&rest args)
(cl-letf (((symbol-function #'minibuffer-completion-help)
#'ignore))
(apply args))))
Dynamic completion tables (completion-table-dynamic
, completion-table-in-turn
,
…) should work well with Vertico. The only requirement is that the basic
completion style is enabled. The basic
style performs prefix filtering by
passing the input to the completion table (or the dynamic completion table
function). The basic
completion style must not necessarily be configured with
highest priority, it can also come after other completion styles like orderless
,
substring
or flex
, as is also recommended by the Orderless documentation because
of completion-table-dynamic
.
(setq completion-styles '(basic))
;; (setq completion-styles '(orderless basic))
(completing-read "Dynamic: "
(completion-table-dynamic
(lambda (str)
(list (concat str "1")
(concat str "2")
(concat str "3")))))
The commands multi-occur
, auto-insert
, bbdb-create
read multiple arguments from
the minibuffer with completing-read
, one at a time, until you submit an empty
string. You should type M-RET
(vertico-exit-input
) to finish the loop. Directly
pressing RET
(vertico-exit
) does not work since the first candidate is
preselected.
The underlying issue is that completing-read
always allows you to exit with the
empty string, which is called the null completion, even if the REQUIRE-MATCH
argument is non-nil. Try the following two calls to completing-read
with C-x C-e
:
(completing-read "Select: " '("first" "second" "third") nil 'require-match)
(completing-read "Select: " '("first" "second" "third") nil 'require-match nil nil "")
In both cases the empty string can be submitted. In the first case no explicit
default value is specified and Vertico preselects the first candidate. In order
to exit with the empty string, press M-RET
. In the second case the explicit
default value “” is specified and Vertico preselects the prompt, such that
exiting with the empty string is possible by pressing RET
only.
NOTE: On upcoming Emacs 29.2 and Tramp 2.6.1.5 the workarounds described in this section are not necessary anymore, since the relevant completion tables have been improved.
In combination with Orderless or other non-prefix completion styles like
substring
or flex
, host names and user names are not made available for
completion after entering /ssh:
. In order to avoid this problem, the basic
completion style should be specified for the file completion category, such that
basic
is tried before orderless
. This can be achieved by putting basic
first in
the completion style overrides for the file completion category.
(setq completion-styles '(orderless basic)
completion-category-defaults nil
completion-category-overrides '((file (styles basic partial-completion))))
If you are familiar with the completion-style
machinery, you may also define a
custom completion style which activates only for remote files. The custom
completion style ensures that you can always match substrings within non-remote
file names, since orderless
will stay the preferred style for non-remote files.
(defun basic-remote-try-completion (string table pred point)
(and (vertico--remote-p string)
(completion-basic-try-completion string table pred point)))
(defun basic-remote-all-completions (string table pred point)
(and (vertico--remote-p string)
(completion-basic-all-completions string table pred point)))
(add-to-list
'completion-styles-alist
'(basic-remote basic-remote-try-completion basic-remote-all-completions nil))
(setq completion-styles '(orderless basic)
completion-category-defaults nil
completion-category-overrides '((file (styles basic-remote partial-completion))))