On 7 February 2020 at 09:06, Alex Branham wrote: | Can you reproduce this without your .emacs file?
But ESS would not be turned on without it. | Does that buffer's name match any entry in display-buffer-alist or all the | similar variables? The buffer my focus is stolen from is any off buffer in R mode, call it R/foo.R The buffer the focus is moved is called *ess-command-output* Per C-h v, the value of display-buffer-alist is nil. Dirk | On Fri, Feb 7, 2020, 3:39 AM Dirk Eddelbuettel via ESS-help < | ess-help@r-project.org> wrote: | | > | > On 6 February 2020 at 10:19, James W. MacDonald wrote: | > | It's not clear from your question exactly what the behaviour is, but it | > | sounds like auto complete? | > | > No, I like autocomplete. | > | > As I wrote in what is still below, I have irony-mode and other helpers. | > But what is annoying as hell is that ESS decided to | > - move focus away from where I am (writing R code) | > - move to a completely new buffer (showing help I did not ask for) | > - require me to kill the new buffer to get back to where I was | > which happens *each and every time* I type a token it knows and could | > complete to a help page it then takes me to. | > | > Anyone have an idea what I need to turn on to suppress this? | > | > Dirk | > | > | On Thu, Feb 6, 2020 at 2:15 AM Dirk Eddelbuettel via ESS-help < | > | ess-help@r-project.org> wrote: | > | | > | > | > | > When I have e.g. a local variable arr (for array) and start typing | > | > | > | > print(arr | > | > | > | > in an ESS buffer, I first (briefly) get a helpful and uninstrusive | > dropdown | > | > starting with arrows, array and more. | > | > | > | > But annoyingly, a split second later it flips to a new help buffer | > | > (entitled | > | > *ess-command-output*) which the help text for arrows. I absolutely do | > not | > | > want that. I have been unable to turn it off though. | > | > | > | > I am running the last release, and I have a somewhat muddled .emacs | > also | > | > enabled irony and a few more modes helpful for programming in different | > | > languages, but this behaviour seems to be ESS specific. How do I stop | > it? | > | > | > | > Sorry to be asking such a noob question after what must now be a | > quarter | > | > century of Emacs, R and ESS... | > | > | > | > Dirk | > | > | > | > -- | > | > http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com | @eddelbuettel | e...@debian.org | > | > | > | > ______________________________________________ | > | > ESS-help@r-project.org mailing list | > | > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-help | > | > | > | | > | | > | -- | > | James W. MacDonald, M.S. | > | Biostatistician | > | University of Washington | > | Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences | > | 4225 Roosevelt Way NE, # 100 | > | Seattle WA 98105-6099 | > | > -- | > http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com | @eddelbuettel | e...@debian.org | > | > ______________________________________________ | > ESS-help@r-project.org mailing list | > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-help | > -- http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com | @eddelbuettel | e...@debian.org ______________________________________________ ESS-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-help