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Fixing the mark commands in transient mark mode

Making the mark commands more useful in Emacs by altering the behavior of push-mark and jump to mark
Updated for emacs 28

Most people, myself included, use transient-mark-mode (or just tmm), a great piece of kit that makes Emacs behave sanely by using visible regions like other editors. But tmm can get in the way of Emacs’s point and mark system, as the mark also serves as a handy beacon that you can set with C-SPC and jump to with C-u C-SPC.

Sadly, most of the point and mark commands generally go unnoticed by people who never used Emacs without tmm. That’s a shame, because mastering the mark commands will greatly speed up movement and editing.

In tmm the command C-SPC activates the region and lets you select text as you see fit. That means if you want to set the mark (and nothing else) you have to follow up the preceding command with another C-SPC (or C-g) to abort the active region “selection.” That’s too much typing for something that should be second nature.

I use the following snippet below to explicitly set the mark. I bind it to C-`, an unused key.

(defun push-mark-no-activate ()
  "Pushes `point' to `mark-ring' and does not activate the region
   Equivalent to \\[set-mark-command] when \\[transient-mark-mode] is disabled"
  (interactive)
  (push-mark (point) t nil)
  (message "Pushed mark to ring"))

(global-set-key (kbd "C-`") 'push-mark-no-activate)

The C-u C-SPC command is trickier, as the functionality in tmm can be very useful for precision work not served by specialist commands like mark-defun or kill-sexp. To jump to the mark I replace the binding on M-` – a command that opens a terminal-friendly menu bar in the minibuffer – with a dedicated “jump to mark” command.

(defun jump-to-mark ()
  "Jumps to the local mark, respecting the `mark-ring' order.
  This is the same as using \\[set-mark-command] with the prefix argument."
  (interactive)
  (set-mark-command 1))
(global-set-key (kbd "M-`") 'jump-to-mark)

The exchange-point-and-mark, bound to C-x C-x, will by default activate the region when it is invoked. You must use the prefix argument to suppress the activation, but I find that to be too cumbersome for day-to-day use so I disable it outright. The snippet below will do this, so if you don’t want that to happen don’t use the snippet below!

(defun exchange-point-and-mark-no-activate ()
  "Identical to \\[exchange-point-and-mark] but will not activate the region."
  (interactive)
  (exchange-point-and-mark)
  (deactivate-mark nil))
(define-key global-map [remap exchange-point-and-mark] 'exchange-point-and-mark-no-activate)

And there you have it. Mark commands without the interloping tmm to spoil the fun.

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