(shell-command): Remove space after `:' in mode-line-process.
[bpt/emacs.git] / lisp / simple.el
1 ;;; simple.el --- basic editing commands for Emacs
2
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
6
7 ;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
10 ;; any later version.
11
12 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
19 ;; the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
20
21 ;;; Commentary:
22
23 ;; A grab-bag of basic Emacs commands not specifically related to some
24 ;; major mode or to file-handling.
25
26 ;;; Code:
27
28 (defun open-line (arg)
29 "Insert a newline and leave point before it.
30 If there is a fill prefix, insert the fill prefix on the new line
31 if the line would have been empty.
32 With arg N, insert N newlines."
33 (interactive "*p")
34 (let* ((do-fill-prefix (and fill-prefix (bolp)))
35 (flag (and (null do-fill-prefix) (bolp) (not (bobp)))))
36 ;; If this is a simple case, and we are at the beginning of a line,
37 ;; actually insert the newline *before* the preceding newline
38 ;; instead of after. That makes better display behavior.
39 (if flag
40 (progn
41 ;; If undo is enabled, don't let this hack be visible:
42 ;; record the real value of point as the place to move back to
43 ;; if we undo this insert.
44 (if (not (eq buffer-undo-list t))
45 (setq buffer-undo-list (cons (point) buffer-undo-list)))
46 (forward-char -1)))
47 (save-excursion
48 (while (> arg 0)
49 (if do-fill-prefix (insert fill-prefix))
50 (insert ?\n)
51 (setq arg (1- arg))))
52 (end-of-line)
53 (if flag (forward-char 1))))
54
55 (defun split-line ()
56 "Split current line, moving portion beyond point vertically down."
57 (interactive "*")
58 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
59 (let ((col (current-column))
60 (pos (point)))
61 (insert ?\n)
62 (indent-to col 0)
63 (goto-char pos)))
64
65 (defun quoted-insert (arg)
66 "Read next input character and insert it.
67 This is useful for inserting control characters.
68 You may also type up to 3 octal digits, to insert a character with that code.
69
70 In overwrite mode, this function inserts the character anyway, and
71 does not handle octal digits specially. This means that if you use
72 overwrite as your normal editing mode, you can use this function to
73 insert characters when necessary.
74
75 In binary overwrite mode, this function does overwrite, and octal
76 digits are interpreted as a character code. This is supposed to make
77 this function useful in editing binary files."
78 (interactive "*p")
79 (let ((char (if (or (not overwrite-mode)
80 (eq overwrite-mode 'overwrite-mode-binary))
81 (read-quoted-char)
82 (read-char))))
83 (if (eq overwrite-mode 'overwrite-mode-binary)
84 (delete-char arg))
85 (insert-char char arg)))
86
87 (defun delete-indentation (&optional arg)
88 "Join this line to previous and fix up whitespace at join.
89 If there is a fill prefix, delete it from the beginning of this line.
90 With argument, join this line to following line."
91 (interactive "*P")
92 (beginning-of-line)
93 (if arg (forward-line 1))
94 (if (eq (preceding-char) ?\n)
95 (progn
96 (delete-region (point) (1- (point)))
97 ;; If the second line started with the fill prefix,
98 ;; delete the prefix.
99 (if (and fill-prefix
100 (<= (+ (point) (length fill-prefix)) (point-max))
101 (string= fill-prefix
102 (buffer-substring (point)
103 (+ (point) (length fill-prefix)))))
104 (delete-region (point) (+ (point) (length fill-prefix))))
105 (fixup-whitespace))))
106
107 (defun fixup-whitespace ()
108 "Fixup white space between objects around point.
109 Leave one space or none, according to the context."
110 (interactive "*")
111 (save-excursion
112 (delete-horizontal-space)
113 (if (or (looking-at "^\\|\\s)")
114 (save-excursion (forward-char -1)
115 (looking-at "$\\|\\s(\\|\\s'")))
116 nil
117 (insert ?\ ))))
118
119 (defun delete-horizontal-space ()
120 "Delete all spaces and tabs around point."
121 (interactive "*")
122 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
123 (delete-region (point) (progn (skip-chars-forward " \t") (point))))
124
125 (defun just-one-space ()
126 "Delete all spaces and tabs around point, leaving one space."
127 (interactive "*")
128 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
129 (if (= (following-char) ? )
130 (forward-char 1)
131 (insert ? ))
132 (delete-region (point) (progn (skip-chars-forward " \t") (point))))
133
134 (defun delete-blank-lines ()
135 "On blank line, delete all surrounding blank lines, leaving just one.
136 On isolated blank line, delete that one.
137 On nonblank line, delete all blank lines that follow it."
138 (interactive "*")
139 (let (thisblank singleblank)
140 (save-excursion
141 (beginning-of-line)
142 (setq thisblank (looking-at "[ \t]*$"))
143 ;; Set singleblank if there is just one blank line here.
144 (setq singleblank
145 (and thisblank
146 (not (looking-at "[ \t]*\n[ \t]*$"))
147 (or (bobp)
148 (progn (forward-line -1)
149 (not (looking-at "[ \t]*$")))))))
150 ;; Delete preceding blank lines, and this one too if it's the only one.
151 (if thisblank
152 (progn
153 (beginning-of-line)
154 (if singleblank (forward-line 1))
155 (delete-region (point)
156 (if (re-search-backward "[^ \t\n]" nil t)
157 (progn (forward-line 1) (point))
158 (point-min)))))
159 ;; Delete following blank lines, unless the current line is blank
160 ;; and there are no following blank lines.
161 (if (not (and thisblank singleblank))
162 (save-excursion
163 (end-of-line)
164 (forward-line 1)
165 (delete-region (point)
166 (if (re-search-forward "[^ \t\n]" nil t)
167 (progn (beginning-of-line) (point))
168 (point-max)))))
169 ;; Handle the special case where point is followed by newline and eob.
170 ;; Delete the line, leaving point at eob.
171 (if (looking-at "^[ \t]*\n\\'")
172 (delete-region (point) (point-max)))))
173
174 (defun back-to-indentation ()
175 "Move point to the first non-whitespace character on this line."
176 (interactive)
177 (beginning-of-line 1)
178 (skip-chars-forward " \t"))
179
180 (defun newline-and-indent ()
181 "Insert a newline, then indent according to major mode.
182 Indentation is done using the value of `indent-line-function'.
183 In programming language modes, this is the same as TAB.
184 In some text modes, where TAB inserts a tab, this command indents to the
185 column specified by the variable `left-margin'."
186 (interactive "*")
187 (delete-region (point) (progn (skip-chars-backward " \t") (point)))
188 (newline)
189 (indent-according-to-mode))
190
191 (defun reindent-then-newline-and-indent ()
192 "Reindent current line, insert newline, then indent the new line.
193 Indentation of both lines is done according to the current major mode,
194 which means calling the current value of `indent-line-function'.
195 In programming language modes, this is the same as TAB.
196 In some text modes, where TAB inserts a tab, this indents to the
197 column specified by the variable `left-margin'."
198 (interactive "*")
199 (save-excursion
200 (delete-region (point) (progn (skip-chars-backward " \t") (point)))
201 (indent-according-to-mode))
202 (newline)
203 (indent-according-to-mode))
204
205 ;; Internal subroutine of delete-char
206 (defun kill-forward-chars (arg)
207 (if (listp arg) (setq arg (car arg)))
208 (if (eq arg '-) (setq arg -1))
209 (kill-region (point) (+ (point) arg)))
210
211 ;; Internal subroutine of backward-delete-char
212 (defun kill-backward-chars (arg)
213 (if (listp arg) (setq arg (car arg)))
214 (if (eq arg '-) (setq arg -1))
215 (kill-region (point) (- (point) arg)))
216
217 (defun backward-delete-char-untabify (arg &optional killp)
218 "Delete characters backward, changing tabs into spaces.
219 Delete ARG chars, and kill (save in kill ring) if KILLP is non-nil.
220 Interactively, ARG is the prefix arg (default 1)
221 and KILLP is t if prefix arg is was specified."
222 (interactive "*p\nP")
223 (let ((count arg))
224 (save-excursion
225 (while (and (> count 0) (not (bobp)))
226 (if (= (preceding-char) ?\t)
227 (let ((col (current-column)))
228 (forward-char -1)
229 (setq col (- col (current-column)))
230 (insert-char ?\ col)
231 (delete-char 1)))
232 (forward-char -1)
233 (setq count (1- count)))))
234 (delete-backward-char arg killp)
235 ;; In overwrite mode, back over columns while clearing them out,
236 ;; unless at end of line.
237 (and overwrite-mode (not (eolp))
238 (save-excursion (insert-char ?\ arg))))
239
240 (defun zap-to-char (arg char)
241 "Kill up to and including ARG'th occurrence of CHAR.
242 Goes backward if ARG is negative; error if CHAR not found."
243 (interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")
244 (kill-region (point) (progn
245 (search-forward (char-to-string char) nil nil arg)
246 ; (goto-char (if (> arg 0) (1- (point)) (1+ (point))))
247 (point))))
248
249 (defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
250 "Move point to the beginning of the buffer; leave mark at previous position.
251 With arg N, put point N/10 of the way from the true beginning.
252
253 Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
254 \(goto-char (point-min)) is faster and avoids clobbering the mark."
255 (interactive "P")
256 (push-mark)
257 (goto-char (if arg
258 (if (> (buffer-size) 10000)
259 ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes!
260 (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
261 (/ (buffer-size) 10))
262 (/ (+ 10 (* (buffer-size) (prefix-numeric-value arg))) 10))
263 (point-min)))
264 (if arg (forward-line 1)))
265
266 (defun end-of-buffer (&optional arg)
267 "Move point to the end of the buffer; leave mark at previous position.
268 With arg N, put point N/10 of the way from the true end.
269
270 Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
271 \(goto-char (point-max)) is faster and avoids clobbering the mark."
272 (interactive "P")
273 (push-mark)
274 (goto-char (if arg
275 (- (1+ (buffer-size))
276 (if (> (buffer-size) 10000)
277 ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes!
278 (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
279 (/ (buffer-size) 10))
280 (/ (* (buffer-size) (prefix-numeric-value arg)) 10)))
281 (point-max)))
282 ;; If we went to a place in the middle of the buffer,
283 ;; adjust it to the beginning of a line.
284 (if arg (forward-line 1)
285 ;; If the end of the buffer is not already on the screen,
286 ;; then scroll specially to put it near, but not at, the bottom.
287 (if (let ((old-point (point)))
288 (save-excursion
289 (goto-char (window-start))
290 (vertical-motion (window-height))
291 (< (point) old-point)))
292 (recenter -3))))
293
294 (defun mark-whole-buffer ()
295 "Put point at beginning and mark at end of buffer.
296 You probably should not use this function in Lisp programs;
297 it is usually a mistake for a Lisp function to use any subroutine
298 that uses or sets the mark."
299 (interactive)
300 (push-mark (point))
301 (push-mark (point-max) nil t)
302 (goto-char (point-min)))
303
304 (defun count-lines-region (start end)
305 "Print number of lines and characters in the region."
306 (interactive "r")
307 (message "Region has %d lines, %d characters"
308 (count-lines start end) (- end start)))
309
310 (defun what-line ()
311 "Print the current line number (in the buffer) of point."
312 (interactive)
313 (save-restriction
314 (widen)
315 (save-excursion
316 (beginning-of-line)
317 (message "Line %d"
318 (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))))
319
320 (defun count-lines (start end)
321 "Return number of lines between START and END.
322 This is usually the number of newlines between them,
323 but can be one more if START is not equal to END
324 and the greater of them is not at the start of a line."
325 (save-match-data
326 (save-excursion
327 (save-restriction
328 (narrow-to-region start end)
329 (goto-char (point-min))
330 (if (eq selective-display t)
331 (let ((done 0))
332 (while (re-search-forward "[\n\C-m]" nil t 40)
333 (setq done (+ 40 done)))
334 (while (re-search-forward "[\n\C-m]" nil t 1)
335 (setq done (+ 1 done)))
336 (goto-char (point-max))
337 (if (and (/= start end)
338 (not (bolp)))
339 (1+ done)
340 done))
341 (- (buffer-size) (forward-line (buffer-size))))))))
342
343 (defun what-cursor-position ()
344 "Print info on cursor position (on screen and within buffer)."
345 (interactive)
346 (let* ((char (following-char))
347 (beg (point-min))
348 (end (point-max))
349 (pos (point))
350 (total (buffer-size))
351 (percent (if (> total 50000)
352 ;; Avoid overflow from multiplying by 100!
353 (/ (+ (/ total 200) (1- pos)) (max (/ total 100) 1))
354 (/ (+ (/ total 2) (* 100 (1- pos))) (max total 1))))
355 (hscroll (if (= (window-hscroll) 0)
356 ""
357 (format " Hscroll=%d" (window-hscroll))))
358 (col (current-column)))
359 (if (= pos end)
360 (if (or (/= beg 1) (/= end (1+ total)))
361 (message "point=%d of %d(%d%%) <%d - %d> column %d %s"
362 pos total percent beg end col hscroll)
363 (message "point=%d of %d(%d%%) column %d %s"
364 pos total percent col hscroll))
365 (if (or (/= beg 1) (/= end (1+ total)))
366 (message "Char: %s (0%o) point=%d of %d(%d%%) <%d - %d> column %d %s"
367 (single-key-description char) char pos total percent beg end col hscroll)
368 (message "Char: %s (0%o) point=%d of %d(%d%%) column %d %s"
369 (single-key-description char) char pos total percent col hscroll)))))
370
371 (defun fundamental-mode ()
372 "Major mode not specialized for anything in particular.
373 Other major modes are defined by comparison with this one."
374 (interactive)
375 (kill-all-local-variables))
376
377 (defvar read-expression-map (cons 'keymap minibuffer-local-map)
378 "Minibuffer keymap used for reading Lisp expressions.")
379 (define-key read-expression-map "\M-\t" 'lisp-complete-symbol)
380
381 (put 'eval-expression 'disabled t)
382
383 (defvar read-expression-history nil)
384
385 ;; We define this, rather than making `eval' interactive,
386 ;; for the sake of completion of names like eval-region, eval-current-buffer.
387 (defun eval-expression (expression)
388 "Evaluate EXPRESSION and print value in minibuffer.
389 Value is also consed on to front of the variable `values'."
390 (interactive
391 (list (read-from-minibuffer "Eval: "
392 nil read-expression-map t
393 'read-expression-history)))
394 (setq values (cons (eval expression) values))
395 (prin1 (car values) t))
396
397 (defun edit-and-eval-command (prompt command)
398 "Prompting with PROMPT, let user edit COMMAND and eval result.
399 COMMAND is a Lisp expression. Let user edit that expression in
400 the minibuffer, then read and evaluate the result."
401 (let ((command (read-from-minibuffer prompt
402 (prin1-to-string command)
403 read-expression-map t
404 '(command-history . 1))))
405 (eval command)))
406
407 (defun repeat-complex-command (arg)
408 "Edit and re-evaluate last complex command, or ARGth from last.
409 A complex command is one which used the minibuffer.
410 The command is placed in the minibuffer as a Lisp form for editing.
411 The result is executed, repeating the command as changed.
412 If the command has been changed or is not the most recent previous command
413 it is added to the front of the command history.
414 You can use the minibuffer history commands \\<minibuffer-local-map>\\[next-history-element] and \\[previous-history-element]
415 to get different commands to edit and resubmit."
416 (interactive "p")
417 (let ((elt (nth (1- arg) command-history))
418 (minibuffer-history-position arg)
419 (minibuffer-history-sexp-flag t)
420 newcmd)
421 (if elt
422 (progn
423 (setq newcmd
424 (read-from-minibuffer
425 "Redo: " (prin1-to-string elt) read-expression-map t
426 (cons 'command-history arg)))
427
428 ;; If command was added to command-history as a string,
429 ;; get rid of that. We want only evallable expressions there.
430 (if (stringp (car command-history))
431 (setq command-history (cdr command-history)))
432
433 ;; If command to be redone does not match front of history,
434 ;; add it to the history.
435 (or (equal newcmd (car command-history))
436 (setq command-history (cons newcmd command-history)))
437 (eval newcmd))
438 (ding))))
439 \f
440 (defvar minibuffer-history nil
441 "Default minibuffer history list.
442 This is used for all minibuffer input
443 except when an alternate history list is specified.")
444 (defvar minibuffer-history-sexp-flag nil
445 "Nonzero when doing history operations on `command-history'.
446 More generally, indicates that the history list being acted on
447 contains expressions rather than strings.")
448 (setq minibuffer-history-variable 'minibuffer-history)
449 (setq minibuffer-history-position nil)
450 (defvar minibuffer-history-search-history nil)
451
452 (mapcar
453 (lambda (key-and-command)
454 (mapcar
455 (lambda (keymap-and-completionp)
456 ;; Arg is (KEYMAP-SYMBOL . COMPLETION-MAP-P).
457 ;; If the cdr of KEY-AND-COMMAND (the command) is a cons,
458 ;; its car is used if COMPLETION-MAP-P is nil, its cdr if it is t.
459 (define-key (symbol-value (car keymap-and-completionp))
460 (car key-and-command)
461 (let ((command (cdr key-and-command)))
462 (if (consp command)
463 ;; (and ... nil) => ... turns back on the completion-oriented
464 ;; history commands which rms turned off since they seem to
465 ;; do things he doesn't like.
466 (if (and (cdr keymap-and-completionp) nil) ;XXX turned off
467 (progn (error "EMACS BUG!") (cdr command))
468 (car command))
469 command))))
470 '((minibuffer-local-map . nil)
471 (minibuffer-local-ns-map . nil)
472 (minibuffer-local-completion-map . t)
473 (minibuffer-local-must-match-map . t)
474 (read-expression-map . nil))))
475 '(("\en" . (next-history-element . next-complete-history-element))
476 ([next] . (next-history-element . next-complete-history-element))
477 ("\ep" . (previous-history-element . previous-complete-history-element))
478 ([prior] . (previous-history-element . previous-complete-history-element))
479 ("\er" . previous-matching-history-element)
480 ("\es" . next-matching-history-element)))
481
482 (defun previous-matching-history-element (regexp n)
483 "Find the previous history element that matches REGEXP.
484 \(Previous history elements refer to earlier actions.)
485 With prefix argument N, search for Nth previous match.
486 If N is negative, find the next or Nth next match."
487 (interactive
488 (let* ((enable-recursive-minibuffers t)
489 (minibuffer-history-sexp-flag nil)
490 (regexp (read-from-minibuffer "Previous element matching (regexp): "
491 nil
492 minibuffer-local-map
493 nil
494 'minibuffer-history-search-history)))
495 ;; Use the last regexp specified, by default, if input is empty.
496 (list (if (string= regexp "")
497 (setcar minibuffer-history-search-history
498 (nth 1 minibuffer-history-search-history))
499 regexp)
500 (prefix-numeric-value current-prefix-arg))))
501 (let ((history (symbol-value minibuffer-history-variable))
502 prevpos
503 (pos minibuffer-history-position))
504 (while (/= n 0)
505 (setq prevpos pos)
506 (setq pos (min (max 1 (+ pos (if (< n 0) -1 1))) (length history)))
507 (if (= pos prevpos)
508 (error (if (= pos 1)
509 "No later matching history item"
510 "No earlier matching history item")))
511 (if (string-match regexp
512 (if minibuffer-history-sexp-flag
513 (prin1-to-string (nth (1- pos) history))
514 (nth (1- pos) history)))
515 (setq n (+ n (if (< n 0) 1 -1)))))
516 (setq minibuffer-history-position pos)
517 (erase-buffer)
518 (let ((elt (nth (1- pos) history)))
519 (insert (if minibuffer-history-sexp-flag
520 (prin1-to-string elt)
521 elt)))
522 (goto-char (point-min)))
523 (if (or (eq (car (car command-history)) 'previous-matching-history-element)
524 (eq (car (car command-history)) 'next-matching-history-element))
525 (setq command-history (cdr command-history))))
526
527 (defun next-matching-history-element (regexp n)
528 "Find the next history element that matches REGEXP.
529 \(The next history element refers to a more recent action.)
530 With prefix argument N, search for Nth next match.
531 If N is negative, find the previous or Nth previous match."
532 (interactive
533 (let* ((enable-recursive-minibuffers t)
534 (minibuffer-history-sexp-flag nil)
535 (regexp (read-from-minibuffer "Next element matching (regexp): "
536 nil
537 minibuffer-local-map
538 nil
539 'minibuffer-history-search-history)))
540 ;; Use the last regexp specified, by default, if input is empty.
541 (list (if (string= regexp "")
542 (setcar minibuffer-history-search-history
543 (nth 1 minibuffer-history-search-history))
544 regexp)
545 (prefix-numeric-value current-prefix-arg))))
546 (previous-matching-history-element regexp (- n)))
547
548 (defun next-history-element (n)
549 "Insert the next element of the minibuffer history into the minibuffer."
550 (interactive "p")
551 (let ((narg (min (max 1 (- minibuffer-history-position n))
552 (length (symbol-value minibuffer-history-variable)))))
553 (if (= minibuffer-history-position narg)
554 (error (if (= minibuffer-history-position 1)
555 "End of history; no next item"
556 "Beginning of history; no preceding item"))
557 (erase-buffer)
558 (setq minibuffer-history-position narg)
559 (let ((elt (nth (1- minibuffer-history-position)
560 (symbol-value minibuffer-history-variable))))
561 (insert
562 (if minibuffer-history-sexp-flag
563 (prin1-to-string elt)
564 elt)))
565 (goto-char (point-min)))))
566
567 (defun previous-history-element (n)
568 "Inserts the previous element of the minibuffer history into the minibuffer."
569 (interactive "p")
570 (next-history-element (- n)))
571
572 (defun next-complete-history-element (n)
573 "Get next element of history which is a completion of minibuffer contents."
574 (interactive "p")
575 (let ((point-at-start (point)))
576 (next-matching-history-element
577 (concat "^" (regexp-quote (buffer-substring (point-min) (point)))) n)
578 ;; next-matching-history-element always puts us at (point-min).
579 ;; Move to the position we were at before changing the buffer contents.
580 ;; This is still sensical, because the text before point has not changed.
581 (goto-char point-at-start)))
582
583 (defun previous-complete-history-element (n)
584 "\
585 Get previous element of history which is a completion of minibuffer contents."
586 (interactive "p")
587 (next-complete-history-element (- n)))
588 \f
589 (defun goto-line (arg)
590 "Goto line ARG, counting from line 1 at beginning of buffer."
591 (interactive "NGoto line: ")
592 (save-restriction
593 (widen)
594 (goto-char 1)
595 (if (eq selective-display t)
596 (re-search-forward "[\n\C-m]" nil 'end (1- arg))
597 (forward-line (1- arg)))))
598
599 ;Put this on C-x u, so we can force that rather than C-_ into startup msg
600 (define-function 'advertised-undo 'undo)
601
602 (defun undo (&optional arg)
603 "Undo some previous changes.
604 Repeat this command to undo more changes.
605 A numeric argument serves as a repeat count."
606 (interactive "*p")
607 ;; If we don't get all the way thru, make last-command indicate that
608 ;; for the following command.
609 (setq this-command t)
610 (let ((modified (buffer-modified-p))
611 (recent-save (recent-auto-save-p)))
612 (or (eq (selected-window) (minibuffer-window))
613 (message "Undo!"))
614 (or (eq last-command 'undo)
615 (progn (undo-start)
616 (undo-more 1)))
617 (undo-more (or arg 1))
618 ;; Don't specify a position in the undo record for the undo command.
619 ;; Instead, undoing this should move point to where the change is.
620 (let ((tail buffer-undo-list)
621 done)
622 (while (and tail (not done) (not (null (car tail))))
623 (if (integerp (car tail))
624 (progn
625 (setq done t)
626 (setq buffer-undo-list (delq (car tail) buffer-undo-list))))
627 (setq tail (cdr tail))))
628 (and modified (not (buffer-modified-p))
629 (delete-auto-save-file-if-necessary recent-save)))
630 ;; If we do get all the way thru, make this-command indicate that.
631 (setq this-command 'undo))
632
633 (defvar pending-undo-list nil
634 "Within a run of consecutive undo commands, list remaining to be undone.")
635
636 (defun undo-start ()
637 "Set `pending-undo-list' to the front of the undo list.
638 The next call to `undo-more' will undo the most recently made change."
639 (if (eq buffer-undo-list t)
640 (error "No undo information in this buffer"))
641 (setq pending-undo-list buffer-undo-list))
642
643 (defun undo-more (count)
644 "Undo back N undo-boundaries beyond what was already undone recently.
645 Call `undo-start' to get ready to undo recent changes,
646 then call `undo-more' one or more times to undo them."
647 (or pending-undo-list
648 (error "No further undo information"))
649 (setq pending-undo-list (primitive-undo count pending-undo-list)))
650
651 (defvar shell-command-history nil
652 "History list for some commands that read shell commands.")
653
654 (defun shell-command (command &optional flag)
655 "Execute string COMMAND in inferior shell; display output, if any.
656 If COMMAND ends in ampersand, execute it asynchronously.
657
658 Optional second arg non-nil (prefix arg, if interactive)
659 means insert output in current buffer after point (leave mark after it).
660 This cannot be done asynchronously."
661 (interactive (list (read-from-minibuffer "Shell command: "
662 nil nil nil 'shell-command-history)
663 current-prefix-arg))
664 (if flag
665 (progn (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
666 (push-mark)
667 ;; We do not use -f for csh; we will not support broken use of
668 ;; .cshrcs. Even the BSD csh manual says to use
669 ;; "if ($?prompt) exit" before things which are not useful
670 ;; non-interactively. Besides, if someone wants their other
671 ;; aliases for shell commands then they can still have them.
672 (call-process shell-file-name nil t nil
673 "-c" command)
674 ;; This is like exchange-point-and-mark, but doesn't activate the mark.
675 ;; It is cleaner to avoid activation, even though the command
676 ;; loop would deactivate the mark because we inserted text.
677 (goto-char (prog1 (mark t)
678 (set-marker (mark-marker) (point)
679 (current-buffer)))))
680 ;; Preserve the match data in case called from a program.
681 (let ((data (match-data)))
682 (unwind-protect
683 (if (string-match "[ \t]*&[ \t]*$" command)
684 ;; Command ending with ampersand means asynchronous.
685 (let ((buffer (get-buffer-create "*shell-command*"))
686 (directory default-directory)
687 proc)
688 ;; Remove the ampersand.
689 (setq command (substring command 0 (match-beginning 0)))
690 ;; If will kill a process, query first.
691 (setq proc (get-buffer-process buffer))
692 (if proc
693 (if (yes-or-no-p "A command is running. Kill it? ")
694 (kill-process proc)
695 (error "Shell command in progress")))
696 (save-excursion
697 (set-buffer buffer)
698 (erase-buffer)
699 (display-buffer buffer)
700 (setq default-directory directory)
701 (setq proc (start-process "Shell" buffer
702 shell-file-name "-c" command))
703 (setq mode-line-process '(":%s"))
704 (set-process-sentinel proc 'shell-command-sentinel)
705 (set-process-filter proc 'shell-command-filter)
706 ))
707 (shell-command-on-region (point) (point) command nil))
708 (store-match-data data)))))
709
710 ;; We have a sentinel to prevent insertion of a termination message
711 ;; in the buffer itself.
712 (defun shell-command-sentinel (process signal)
713 (if (and (memq (process-status process) '(exit signal))
714 (buffer-name (process-buffer process)))
715 (progn
716 (message "%s: %s."
717 (car (cdr (cdr (process-command process))))
718 (substring signal 0 -1))
719 (save-excursion
720 (set-buffer (process-buffer process))
721 (setq mode-line-process nil))
722 (delete-process process))))
723
724 (defun shell-command-filter (proc string)
725 ;; Do save-excursion by hand so that we can leave point numerically unchanged
726 ;; despite an insertion immediately after it.
727 (let* ((obuf (current-buffer))
728 (buffer (process-buffer proc))
729 opoint
730 (window (get-buffer-window buffer))
731 (pos (window-start window)))
732 (unwind-protect
733 (progn
734 (set-buffer buffer)
735 (or (= (point) (point-max))
736 (setq opoint (point)))
737 (goto-char (point-max))
738 (insert-before-markers string))
739 ;; insert-before-markers moved this marker: set it back.
740 (set-window-start window pos)
741 ;; Finish our save-excursion.
742 (if opoint
743 (goto-char opoint))
744 (set-buffer obuf))))
745
746 (defun shell-command-on-region (start end command &optional flag interactive)
747 "Execute string COMMAND in inferior shell with region as input.
748 Normally display output (if any) in temp buffer `*Shell Command Output*';
749 Prefix arg means replace the region with it.
750 Noninteractive args are START, END, COMMAND, FLAG.
751 Noninteractively FLAG means insert output in place of text from START to END,
752 and put point at the end, but don't alter the mark.
753
754 If the output is one line, it is displayed in the echo area,
755 but it is nonetheless available in buffer `*Shell Command Output*'
756 even though that buffer is not automatically displayed. If there is no output
757 or output is inserted in the current buffer then `*Shell Command Output*' is
758 deleted."
759 (interactive (list (region-beginning) (region-end)
760 (read-from-minibuffer "Shell command on region: "
761 nil nil nil 'shell-command-history)
762 current-prefix-arg
763 (prefix-numeric-value current-prefix-arg)))
764 (if flag
765 ;; Replace specified region with output from command.
766 (let ((swap (and interactive (< (point) (mark)))))
767 ;; Don't muck with mark
768 ;; unless called interactively.
769 (and interactive (push-mark))
770 (call-process-region start end shell-file-name t t nil
771 "-c" command)
772 (if (get-buffer "*Shell Command Output*")
773 (kill-buffer "*Shell Command Output*"))
774 (and interactive swap (exchange-point-and-mark)))
775 ;; No prefix argument: put the output in a temp buffer,
776 ;; replacing its entire contents.
777 (let ((buffer (get-buffer-create "*Shell Command Output*"))
778 (success nil))
779 (unwind-protect
780 (if (eq buffer (current-buffer))
781 ;; If the input is the same buffer as the output,
782 ;; delete everything but the specified region,
783 ;; then replace that region with the output.
784 (progn (delete-region end (point-max))
785 (delete-region (point-min) start)
786 (call-process-region (point-min) (point-max)
787 shell-file-name t t nil
788 "-c" command)
789 (setq success t))
790 ;; Clear the output buffer, then run the command with output there.
791 (save-excursion
792 (set-buffer buffer)
793 (erase-buffer))
794 (call-process-region start end shell-file-name
795 nil buffer nil
796 "-c" command)
797 (setq success t))
798 ;; Report the amount of output.
799 (let ((lines (save-excursion
800 (set-buffer buffer)
801 (if (= (buffer-size) 0)
802 0
803 (count-lines (point-min) (point-max))))))
804 (cond ((= lines 0)
805 (if success
806 (message "(Shell command completed with no output)"))
807 (kill-buffer buffer))
808 ((and success (= lines 1))
809 (message "%s"
810 (save-excursion
811 (set-buffer buffer)
812 (goto-char (point-min))
813 (buffer-substring (point)
814 (progn (end-of-line) (point)))))
815 (kill-buffer buffer))
816 (t
817 (set-window-start (display-buffer buffer) 1))))))))
818 \f
819 (defun universal-argument ()
820 "Begin a numeric argument for the following command.
821 Digits or minus sign following \\[universal-argument] make up the numeric argument.
822 \\[universal-argument] following the digits or minus sign ends the argument.
823 \\[universal-argument] without digits or minus sign provides 4 as argument.
824 Repeating \\[universal-argument] without digits or minus sign
825 multiplies the argument by 4 each time."
826 (interactive nil)
827 (let ((factor 4)
828 key)
829 ;; (describe-arg (list factor) 1)
830 (setq key (read-key-sequence nil t))
831 (while (equal (key-binding key) 'universal-argument)
832 (setq factor (* 4 factor))
833 ;; (describe-arg (list factor) 1)
834 (setq key (read-key-sequence nil t)))
835 (prefix-arg-internal key factor nil)))
836
837 (defun prefix-arg-internal (key factor value)
838 (let ((sign 1))
839 (if (and (numberp value) (< value 0))
840 (setq sign -1 value (- value)))
841 (if (eq value '-)
842 (setq sign -1 value nil))
843 ;; (describe-arg value sign)
844 (while (equal key "-")
845 (setq sign (- sign) factor nil)
846 ;; (describe-arg value sign)
847 (setq key (read-key-sequence nil t)))
848 (while (and (stringp key)
849 (= (length key) 1)
850 (not (string< key "0"))
851 (not (string< "9" key)))
852 (setq value (+ (* (if (numberp value) value 0) 10)
853 (- (aref key 0) ?0))
854 factor nil)
855 ;; (describe-arg value sign)
856 (setq key (read-key-sequence nil t)))
857 (setq prefix-arg
858 (cond (factor (list factor))
859 ((numberp value) (* value sign))
860 ((= sign -1) '-)))
861 ;; Calling universal-argument after digits
862 ;; terminates the argument but is ignored.
863 (if (eq (key-binding key) 'universal-argument)
864 (progn
865 (describe-arg value sign)
866 (setq key (read-key-sequence nil t))))
867 (setq unread-command-events (listify-key-sequence key))))
868
869 (defun describe-arg (value sign)
870 (cond ((numberp value)
871 (message "Arg: %d" (* value sign)))
872 ((consp value)
873 (message "Arg: [%d]" (car value)))
874 ((< sign 0)
875 (message "Arg: -"))))
876
877 (defun digit-argument (arg)
878 "Part of the numeric argument for the next command.
879 \\[universal-argument] following digits or minus sign ends the argument."
880 (interactive "P")
881 (prefix-arg-internal (char-to-string (logand last-command-char ?\177))
882 nil arg))
883
884 (defun negative-argument (arg)
885 "Begin a negative numeric argument for the next command.
886 \\[universal-argument] following digits or minus sign ends the argument."
887 (interactive "P")
888 (prefix-arg-internal "-" nil arg))
889 \f
890 (defun forward-to-indentation (arg)
891 "Move forward ARG lines and position at first nonblank character."
892 (interactive "p")
893 (forward-line arg)
894 (skip-chars-forward " \t"))
895
896 (defun backward-to-indentation (arg)
897 "Move backward ARG lines and position at first nonblank character."
898 (interactive "p")
899 (forward-line (- arg))
900 (skip-chars-forward " \t"))
901
902 (defvar kill-whole-line nil
903 "*If non-nil, `kill-line' with no arg at beg of line kills the whole line.")
904
905 (defun kill-line (&optional arg)
906 "Kill the rest of the current line; if no nonblanks there, kill thru newline.
907 With prefix argument, kill that many lines from point.
908 Negative arguments kill lines backward.
909
910 When calling from a program, nil means \"no arg\",
911 a number counts as a prefix arg.
912
913 If `kill-whole-line' is non-nil, then kill the whole line
914 when given no argument at the beginning of a line."
915 (interactive "P")
916 (kill-region (point)
917 ;; It is better to move point to the other end of the kill
918 ;; before killing. That way, in a read-only buffer, point
919 ;; moves across the text that is copied to the kill ring.
920 ;; The choice has no effect on undo now that undo records
921 ;; the value of point from before the command was run.
922 (progn
923 (if arg
924 (forward-line (prefix-numeric-value arg))
925 (if (eobp)
926 (signal 'end-of-buffer nil))
927 (if (or (looking-at "[ \t]*$") (and kill-whole-line (bolp)))
928 (forward-line 1)
929 (end-of-line)))
930 (point))))
931 \f
932 ;;;; Window system cut and paste hooks.
933
934 (defvar interprogram-cut-function nil
935 "Function to call to make a killed region available to other programs.
936
937 Most window systems provide some sort of facility for cutting and
938 pasting text between the windows of different programs.
939 This variable holds a function that Emacs calls whenever text
940 is put in the kill ring, to make the new kill available to other
941 programs.
942
943 The function takes one or two arguments.
944 The first argument, TEXT, is a string containing
945 the text which should be made available.
946 The second, PUSH, if non-nil means this is a \"new\" kill;
947 nil means appending to an \"old\" kill.")
948
949 (defvar interprogram-paste-function nil
950 "Function to call to get text cut from other programs.
951
952 Most window systems provide some sort of facility for cutting and
953 pasting text between the windows of different programs.
954 This variable holds a function that Emacs calls to obtain
955 text that other programs have provided for pasting.
956
957 The function should be called with no arguments. If the function
958 returns nil, then no other program has provided such text, and the top
959 of the Emacs kill ring should be used. If the function returns a
960 string, that string should be put in the kill ring as the latest kill.
961
962 Note that the function should return a string only if a program other
963 than Emacs has provided a string for pasting; if Emacs provided the
964 most recent string, the function should return nil. If it is
965 difficult to tell whether Emacs or some other program provided the
966 current string, it is probably good enough to return nil if the string
967 is equal (according to `string=') to the last text Emacs provided.")
968
969
970 \f
971 ;;;; The kill ring data structure.
972
973 (defvar kill-ring nil
974 "List of killed text sequences.
975 Since the kill ring is supposed to interact nicely with cut-and-paste
976 facilities offered by window systems, use of this variable should
977 interact nicely with `interprogram-cut-function' and
978 `interprogram-paste-function'. The functions `kill-new',
979 `kill-append', and `current-kill' are supposed to implement this
980 interaction; you may want to use them instead of manipulating the kill
981 ring directly.")
982
983 (defconst kill-ring-max 30
984 "*Maximum length of kill ring before oldest elements are thrown away.")
985
986 (defvar kill-ring-yank-pointer nil
987 "The tail of the kill ring whose car is the last thing yanked.")
988
989 (defun kill-new (string)
990 "Make STRING the latest kill in the kill ring.
991 Set the kill-ring-yank pointer to point to it.
992 If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, apply it to STRING."
993 (setq kill-ring (cons string kill-ring))
994 (if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
995 (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil))
996 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
997 (if interprogram-cut-function
998 (funcall interprogram-cut-function string t)))
999
1000 (defun kill-append (string before-p)
1001 "Append STRING to the end of the latest kill in the kill ring.
1002 If BEFORE-P is non-nil, prepend STRING to the kill.
1003 If `interprogram-cut-function' is set, pass the resulting kill to
1004 it."
1005 (setcar kill-ring
1006 (if before-p
1007 (concat string (car kill-ring))
1008 (concat (car kill-ring) string)))
1009 (if interprogram-cut-function
1010 (funcall interprogram-cut-function (car kill-ring))))
1011
1012 (defun current-kill (n &optional do-not-move)
1013 "Rotate the yanking point by N places, and then return that kill.
1014 If N is zero, `interprogram-paste-function' is set, and calling it
1015 returns a string, then that string is added to the front of the
1016 kill ring and returned as the latest kill.
1017 If optional arg DO-NOT-MOVE is non-nil, then don't actually move the
1018 yanking point; just return the Nth kill forward."
1019 (let ((interprogram-paste (and (= n 0)
1020 interprogram-paste-function
1021 (funcall interprogram-paste-function))))
1022 (if interprogram-paste
1023 (progn
1024 ;; Disable the interprogram cut function when we add the new
1025 ;; text to the kill ring, so Emacs doesn't try to own the
1026 ;; selection, with identical text.
1027 (let ((interprogram-cut-function nil))
1028 (kill-new interprogram-paste))
1029 interprogram-paste)
1030 (or kill-ring (error "Kill ring is empty"))
1031 (let ((ARGth-kill-element
1032 (nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
1033 (length kill-ring))
1034 kill-ring)))
1035 (or do-not-move
1036 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element))
1037 (car ARGth-kill-element)))))
1038
1039
1040 \f
1041 ;;;; Commands for manipulating the kill ring.
1042
1043 (defvar kill-read-only-ok nil
1044 "*Non-nil means don't signal an error for killing read-only text.")
1045
1046 (defun kill-region (beg end)
1047 "Kill between point and mark.
1048 The text is deleted but saved in the kill ring.
1049 The command \\[yank] can retrieve it from there.
1050 \(If you want to kill and then yank immediately, use \\[copy-region-as-kill].)
1051 If the buffer is read-only, Emacs will beep and refrain from deleting
1052 the text, but put the text in the kill ring anyway. This means that
1053 you can use the killing commands to copy text from a read-only buffer.
1054
1055 This is the primitive for programs to kill text (as opposed to deleting it).
1056 Supply two arguments, character numbers indicating the stretch of text
1057 to be killed.
1058 Any command that calls this function is a \"kill command\".
1059 If the previous command was also a kill command,
1060 the text killed this time appends to the text killed last time
1061 to make one entry in the kill ring."
1062 (interactive "r")
1063 (cond
1064
1065 ;; If the buffer is read-only, we should beep, in case the person
1066 ;; just isn't aware of this. However, there's no harm in putting
1067 ;; the region's text in the kill ring, anyway.
1068 ((or (and buffer-read-only (not inhibit-read-only))
1069 (text-property-not-all beg end 'read-only nil))
1070 (copy-region-as-kill beg end)
1071 ;; This should always barf, and give us the correct error.
1072 (if kill-read-only-ok
1073 (message "Read only text copied to kill ring")
1074 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)))
1075
1076 ;; In certain cases, we can arrange for the undo list and the kill
1077 ;; ring to share the same string object. This code does that.
1078 ((not (or (eq buffer-undo-list t)
1079 (eq last-command 'kill-region)
1080 (equal beg end)))
1081 ;; Don't let the undo list be truncated before we can even access it.
1082 (let ((undo-strong-limit (+ (- (max beg end) (min beg end)) 100))
1083 (old-list buffer-undo-list)
1084 tail)
1085 (delete-region beg end)
1086 ;; Search back in buffer-undo-list for this string,
1087 ;; in case a change hook made property changes.
1088 (setq tail buffer-undo-list)
1089 (while (not (stringp (car (car tail))))
1090 (setq tail (cdr tail)))
1091 ;; Take the same string recorded for undo
1092 ;; and put it in the kill-ring.
1093 (kill-new (car (car tail)))
1094 (setq this-command 'kill-region)))
1095
1096 (t
1097 (copy-region-as-kill beg end)
1098 (delete-region beg end))))
1099
1100 (defun copy-region-as-kill (beg end)
1101 "Save the region as if killed, but don't kill it.
1102 If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, also save the text for a window
1103 system cut and paste."
1104 (interactive "r")
1105 (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
1106 (kill-append (buffer-substring beg end) (< end beg))
1107 (kill-new (buffer-substring beg end)))
1108 (setq this-command 'kill-region)
1109 nil)
1110
1111 (defun kill-ring-save (beg end)
1112 "Save the region as if killed, but don't kill it.
1113 This command is similar to `copy-region-as-kill', except that it gives
1114 visual feedback indicating the extent of the region being copied.
1115 If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, also save the text for a window
1116 system cut and paste."
1117 (interactive "r")
1118 (copy-region-as-kill beg end)
1119 (if (interactive-p)
1120 (let ((other-end (if (= (point) beg) end beg))
1121 (opoint (point))
1122 ;; Inhibit quitting so we can make a quit here
1123 ;; look like a C-g typed as a command.
1124 (inhibit-quit t))
1125 (if (pos-visible-in-window-p other-end (selected-window))
1126 (progn
1127 ;; Swap point and mark.
1128 (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer))
1129 (goto-char other-end)
1130 (sit-for 1)
1131 ;; Swap back.
1132 (set-marker (mark-marker) other-end (current-buffer))
1133 (goto-char opoint)
1134 ;; If user quit, deactivate the mark
1135 ;; as C-g would as a command.
1136 (and quit-flag mark-active
1137 (deactivate-mark)))
1138 (let* ((killed-text (current-kill 0))
1139 (message-len (min (length killed-text) 40)))
1140 (if (= (point) beg)
1141 ;; Don't say "killed"; that is misleading.
1142 (message "Saved text until \"%s\""
1143 (substring killed-text (- message-len)))
1144 (message "Saved text from \"%s\""
1145 (substring killed-text 0 message-len))))))))
1146
1147 (defun append-next-kill ()
1148 "Cause following command, if it kills, to append to previous kill."
1149 (interactive)
1150 (if (interactive-p)
1151 (progn
1152 (setq this-command 'kill-region)
1153 (message "If the next command is a kill, it will append"))
1154 (setq last-command 'kill-region)))
1155
1156 (defun yank-pop (arg)
1157 "Replace just-yanked stretch of killed text with a different stretch.
1158 This command is allowed only immediately after a `yank' or a `yank-pop'.
1159 At such a time, the region contains a stretch of reinserted
1160 previously-killed text. `yank-pop' deletes that text and inserts in its
1161 place a different stretch of killed text.
1162
1163 With no argument, the previous kill is inserted.
1164 With argument N, insert the Nth previous kill.
1165 If N is negative, this is a more recent kill.
1166
1167 The sequence of kills wraps around, so that after the oldest one
1168 comes the newest one."
1169 (interactive "*p")
1170 (if (not (eq last-command 'yank))
1171 (error "Previous command was not a yank"))
1172 (setq this-command 'yank)
1173 (let ((before (< (point) (mark t))))
1174 (delete-region (point) (mark t))
1175 (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer))
1176 (insert (current-kill arg))
1177 (if before
1178 ;; This is like exchange-point-and-mark, but doesn't activate the mark.
1179 ;; It is cleaner to avoid activation, even though the command
1180 ;; loop would deactivate the mark because we inserted text.
1181 (goto-char (prog1 (mark t)
1182 (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer))))))
1183 nil)
1184
1185 (defun yank (&optional arg)
1186 "Reinsert the last stretch of killed text.
1187 More precisely, reinsert the stretch of killed text most recently
1188 killed OR yanked. Put point at end, and set mark at beginning.
1189 With just C-u as argument, same but put point at beginning (and mark at end).
1190 With argument N, reinsert the Nth most recently killed stretch of killed
1191 text.
1192 See also the command \\[yank-pop]."
1193 (interactive "*P")
1194 ;; If we don't get all the way thru, make last-command indicate that
1195 ;; for the following command.
1196 (setq this-command t)
1197 (push-mark (point))
1198 (insert (current-kill (cond
1199 ((listp arg) 0)
1200 ((eq arg '-) -1)
1201 (t (1- arg)))))
1202 (if (consp arg)
1203 ;; This is like exchange-point-and-mark, but doesn't activate the mark.
1204 ;; It is cleaner to avoid activation, even though the command
1205 ;; loop would deactivate the mark because we inserted text.
1206 (goto-char (prog1 (mark t)
1207 (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer)))))
1208 ;; If we do get all the way thru, make this-command indicate that.
1209 (setq this-command 'yank)
1210 nil)
1211
1212 (defun rotate-yank-pointer (arg)
1213 "Rotate the yanking point in the kill ring.
1214 With argument, rotate that many kills forward (or backward, if negative)."
1215 (interactive "p")
1216 (current-kill arg))
1217
1218 \f
1219 (defun insert-buffer (buffer)
1220 "Insert after point the contents of BUFFER.
1221 Puts mark after the inserted text.
1222 BUFFER may be a buffer or a buffer name."
1223 (interactive (list (progn (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
1224 (read-buffer "Insert buffer: " (other-buffer) t))))
1225 (or (bufferp buffer)
1226 (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)))
1227 (let (start end newmark)
1228 (save-excursion
1229 (save-excursion
1230 (set-buffer buffer)
1231 (setq start (point-min) end (point-max)))
1232 (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
1233 (setq newmark (point)))
1234 (push-mark newmark))
1235 nil)
1236
1237 (defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
1238 "Append to specified buffer the text of the region.
1239 It is inserted into that buffer before its point.
1240
1241 When calling from a program, give three arguments:
1242 BUFFER (or buffer name), START and END.
1243 START and END specify the portion of the current buffer to be copied."
1244 (interactive
1245 (list (read-buffer "Append to buffer: " (other-buffer nil t))
1246 (region-beginning) (region-end)))
1247 (let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
1248 (save-excursion
1249 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer))
1250 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end))))
1251
1252 (defun prepend-to-buffer (buffer start end)
1253 "Prepend to specified buffer the text of the region.
1254 It is inserted into that buffer after its point.
1255
1256 When calling from a program, give three arguments:
1257 BUFFER (or buffer name), START and END.
1258 START and END specify the portion of the current buffer to be copied."
1259 (interactive "BPrepend to buffer: \nr")
1260 (let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
1261 (save-excursion
1262 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer))
1263 (save-excursion
1264 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)))))
1265
1266 (defun copy-to-buffer (buffer start end)
1267 "Copy to specified buffer the text of the region.
1268 It is inserted into that buffer, replacing existing text there.
1269
1270 When calling from a program, give three arguments:
1271 BUFFER (or buffer name), START and END.
1272 START and END specify the portion of the current buffer to be copied."
1273 (interactive "BCopy to buffer: \nr")
1274 (let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
1275 (save-excursion
1276 (set-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer))
1277 (erase-buffer)
1278 (save-excursion
1279 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)))))
1280 \f
1281 (defvar mark-even-if-inactive nil
1282 "*Non-nil means you can use the mark even when inactive.
1283 This option makes a difference in Transient Mark mode.
1284 When the option is non-nil, deactivation of the mark
1285 turns off region highlighting, but commands that use the mark
1286 behave as if the mark were still active.")
1287
1288 (put 'mark-inactive 'error-conditions '(mark-inactive error))
1289 (put 'mark-inactive 'error-message "The mark is not active now")
1290
1291 (defun mark (&optional force)
1292 "Return this buffer's mark value as integer; error if mark inactive.
1293 If optional argument FORCE is non-nil, access the mark value
1294 even if the mark is not currently active, and return nil
1295 if there is no mark at all.
1296
1297 If you are using this in an editing command, you are most likely making
1298 a mistake; see the documentation of `set-mark'."
1299 (if (or force mark-active mark-even-if-inactive)
1300 (marker-position (mark-marker))
1301 (signal 'mark-inactive nil)))
1302
1303 ;; Many places set mark-active directly, and several of them failed to also
1304 ;; run deactivate-mark-hook. This shorthand should simplify.
1305 (defsubst deactivate-mark ()
1306 "Deactivate the mark by setting `mark-active' to nil.
1307 \(That makes a difference only in Transient Mark mode.)
1308 Also runs the hook `deactivate-mark-hook'."
1309 (setq mark-active nil)
1310 (run-hooks 'deactivate-mark-hook))
1311
1312 (defun set-mark (pos)
1313 "Set this buffer's mark to POS. Don't use this function!
1314 That is to say, don't use this function unless you want
1315 the user to see that the mark has moved, and you want the previous
1316 mark position to be lost.
1317
1318 Normally, when a new mark is set, the old one should go on the stack.
1319 This is why most applications should use push-mark, not set-mark.
1320
1321 Novice Emacs Lisp programmers often try to use the mark for the wrong
1322 purposes. The mark saves a location for the user's convenience.
1323 Most editing commands should not alter the mark.
1324 To remember a location for internal use in the Lisp program,
1325 store it in a Lisp variable. Example:
1326
1327 (let ((beg (point))) (forward-line 1) (delete-region beg (point)))."
1328
1329 (if pos
1330 (progn
1331 (setq mark-active t)
1332 (run-hooks 'activate-mark-hook)
1333 (set-marker (mark-marker) pos (current-buffer)))
1334 (deactivate-mark)
1335 (set-marker (mark-marker) pos (current-buffer))))
1336
1337 (defvar mark-ring nil
1338 "The list of saved former marks of the current buffer,
1339 most recent first.")
1340 (make-variable-buffer-local 'mark-ring)
1341
1342 (defconst mark-ring-max 16
1343 "*Maximum size of mark ring. Start discarding off end if gets this big.")
1344
1345 (defvar global-mark-ring nil
1346 "The list of saved global marks, most recent first.")
1347
1348 (defconst global-mark-ring-max 16
1349 "*Maximum size of global mark ring. \
1350 Start discarding off end if gets this big.")
1351
1352 (defun set-mark-command (arg)
1353 "Set mark at where point is, or jump to mark.
1354 With no prefix argument, set mark, push old mark position on local mark
1355 ring, and push mark on global mark ring.
1356 With argument, jump to mark, and pop a new position for mark off the ring
1357 \(does not affect global mark ring\).
1358
1359 Novice Emacs Lisp programmers often try to use the mark for the wrong
1360 purposes. See the documentation of `set-mark' for more information."
1361 (interactive "P")
1362 (if (null arg)
1363 (progn
1364 (push-mark nil nil t))
1365 (if (null (mark t))
1366 (error "No mark set in this buffer")
1367 (goto-char (mark t))
1368 (pop-mark))))
1369
1370 (defun push-mark (&optional location nomsg activate)
1371 "Set mark at LOCATION (point, by default) and push old mark on mark ring.
1372 If the last global mark pushed was not in the current buffer,
1373 also push LOCATION on the global mark ring.
1374 Display `Mark set' unless the optional second arg NOMSG is non-nil.
1375 In Transient Mark mode, activate mark if optional third arg ACTIVATE non-nil.
1376
1377 Novice Emacs Lisp programmers often try to use the mark for the wrong
1378 purposes. See the documentation of `set-mark' for more information.
1379
1380 In Transient Mark mode, this does not activate the mark."
1381 (if (null (mark t))
1382 nil
1383 (setq mark-ring (cons (copy-marker (mark-marker)) mark-ring))
1384 (if (> (length mark-ring) mark-ring-max)
1385 (progn
1386 (move-marker (car (nthcdr mark-ring-max mark-ring)) nil)
1387 (setcdr (nthcdr (1- mark-ring-max) mark-ring) nil))))
1388 (set-marker (mark-marker) (or location (point)) (current-buffer))
1389 ;; Now push the mark on the global mark ring.
1390 (if (and global-mark-ring
1391 (eq (marker-buffer (car global-mark-ring)) (current-buffer)))
1392 ;; The last global mark pushed was in this same buffer.
1393 ;; Don't push another one.
1394 nil
1395 (setq global-mark-ring (cons (copy-marker (mark-marker)) global-mark-ring))
1396 (if (> (length global-mark-ring) global-mark-ring-max)
1397 (progn
1398 (move-marker (car (nthcdr global-mark-ring-max global-mark-ring))
1399 nil)
1400 (setcdr (nthcdr (1- global-mark-ring-max) global-mark-ring) nil))))
1401 (or nomsg executing-macro (> (minibuffer-depth) 0)
1402 (message "Mark set"))
1403 (if (or activate (not transient-mark-mode))
1404 (set-mark (mark t)))
1405 nil)
1406
1407 (defun pop-mark ()
1408 "Pop off mark ring into the buffer's actual mark.
1409 Does not set point. Does nothing if mark ring is empty."
1410 (if mark-ring
1411 (progn
1412 (setq mark-ring (nconc mark-ring (list (copy-marker (mark-marker)))))
1413 (set-marker (mark-marker) (+ 0 (car mark-ring)) (current-buffer))
1414 (deactivate-mark)
1415 (move-marker (car mark-ring) nil)
1416 (if (null (mark t)) (ding))
1417 (setq mark-ring (cdr mark-ring)))))
1418
1419 (define-function 'exchange-dot-and-mark 'exchange-point-and-mark)
1420 (defun exchange-point-and-mark ()
1421 "Put the mark where point is now, and point where the mark is now.
1422 This command works even when the mark is not active,
1423 and it reactivates the mark."
1424 (interactive nil)
1425 (let ((omark (mark t)))
1426 (if (null omark)
1427 (error "No mark set in this buffer"))
1428 (set-mark (point))
1429 (goto-char omark)
1430 nil))
1431
1432 (defun transient-mark-mode (arg)
1433 "Toggle Transient Mark mode.
1434 With arg, turn Transient Mark mode on if arg is positive, off otherwise.
1435
1436 In Transient Mark mode, when the mark is active, the region is highlighted.
1437 Changing the buffer \"deactivates\" the mark.
1438 So do certain other operations that set the mark
1439 but whose main purpose is something else--for example,
1440 incremental search, \\[beginning-of-buffer], and \\[end-of-buffer]."
1441 (interactive "P")
1442 (setq transient-mark-mode
1443 (if (null arg)
1444 (not transient-mark-mode)
1445 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0))))
1446
1447 (defun pop-global-mark ()
1448 "Pop off global mark ring and jump to the top location."
1449 (interactive)
1450 (or global-mark-ring
1451 (error "No global mark set"))
1452 (let* ((marker (car global-mark-ring))
1453 (buffer (marker-buffer marker))
1454 (position (marker-position marker)))
1455 (setq global-mark-ring (cdr global-mark-ring))
1456 (set-buffer buffer)
1457 (or (and (>= position (point-min))
1458 (<= position (point-max)))
1459 (widen))
1460 (goto-char position)
1461 (switch-to-buffer buffer)))
1462 \f
1463 (defvar next-line-add-newlines t
1464 "*If non-nil, `next-line' inserts newline to avoid `end of buffer' error.")
1465
1466 (defun next-line (arg)
1467 "Move cursor vertically down ARG lines.
1468 If there is no character in the target line exactly under the current column,
1469 the cursor is positioned after the character in that line which spans this
1470 column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough.
1471 If there is no line in the buffer after this one, behavior depends on the
1472 value of next-line-add-newlines. If non-nil, a newline character is inserted
1473 to create a line and the cursor moves to that line, otherwise the cursor is
1474 moved to the end of the buffer (if already at the end of the buffer, an error
1475 is signaled).
1476
1477 The command \\[set-goal-column] can be used to create
1478 a semipermanent goal column to which this command always moves.
1479 Then it does not try to move vertically. This goal column is stored
1480 in `goal-column', which is nil when there is none.
1481
1482 If you are thinking of using this in a Lisp program, consider
1483 using `forward-line' instead. It is usually easier to use
1484 and more reliable (no dependence on goal column, etc.)."
1485 (interactive "p")
1486 (if (and next-line-add-newlines (= arg 1))
1487 (let ((opoint (point)))
1488 (forward-line 1)
1489 (if (or (= opoint (point)) (not (eq (preceding-char) ?\n)))
1490 (insert ?\n)
1491 (goto-char opoint)
1492 (line-move arg)))
1493 (line-move arg))
1494 nil)
1495
1496 (defun previous-line (arg)
1497 "Move cursor vertically up ARG lines.
1498 If there is no character in the target line exactly over the current column,
1499 the cursor is positioned after the character in that line which spans this
1500 column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough.
1501
1502 The command \\[set-goal-column] can be used to create
1503 a semipermanent goal column to which this command always moves.
1504 Then it does not try to move vertically.
1505
1506 If you are thinking of using this in a Lisp program, consider using
1507 `forward-line' with a negative argument instead. It is usually easier
1508 to use and more reliable (no dependence on goal column, etc.)."
1509 (interactive "p")
1510 (line-move (- arg))
1511 nil)
1512
1513 (defconst track-eol nil
1514 "*Non-nil means vertical motion starting at end of line keeps to ends of lines.
1515 This means moving to the end of each line moved onto.
1516 The beginning of a blank line does not count as the end of a line.")
1517
1518 (defvar goal-column nil
1519 "*Semipermanent goal column for vertical motion, as set by \\[set-goal-column], or nil.")
1520 (make-variable-buffer-local 'goal-column)
1521
1522 (defvar temporary-goal-column 0
1523 "Current goal column for vertical motion.
1524 It is the column where point was
1525 at the start of current run of vertical motion commands.
1526 When the `track-eol' feature is doing its job, the value is 9999.")
1527
1528 (defun line-move (arg)
1529 (let ((signal
1530 (catch 'exit
1531 (if (not (or (eq last-command 'next-line)
1532 (eq last-command 'previous-line)))
1533 (setq temporary-goal-column
1534 (if (and track-eol (eolp)
1535 ;; Don't count beg of empty line as end of line
1536 ;; unless we just did explicit end-of-line.
1537 (or (not (bolp)) (eq last-command 'end-of-line)))
1538 9999
1539 (current-column))))
1540 (if (not (integerp selective-display))
1541 (or (and (zerop (forward-line arg))
1542 (bolp))
1543 (throw 'exit (if (bobp)
1544 'beginning-of-buffer
1545 'end-of-buffer)))
1546 ;; Move by arg lines, but ignore invisible ones.
1547 (while (> arg 0)
1548 (end-of-line)
1549 (and (zerop (vertical-motion 1))
1550 (throw 'exit 'end-of-buffer))
1551 (setq arg (1- arg)))
1552 (while (< arg 0)
1553 (beginning-of-line)
1554 (and (zerop (vertical-motion -1))
1555 (throw 'exit 'beginning-of-buffer))
1556 (setq arg (1+ arg))))
1557 (move-to-column (or goal-column temporary-goal-column))
1558 nil)))
1559 (cond
1560 ((eq signal 'beginning-of-buffer)
1561 (message "Beginning of buffer")
1562 (ding))
1563 ((eq signal 'end-of-buffer)
1564 (message "End of buffer")
1565 (ding)))))
1566
1567 ;;; Many people have said they rarely use this feature, and often type
1568 ;;; it by accident. Maybe it shouldn't even be on a key.
1569 (put 'set-goal-column 'disabled t)
1570
1571 (defun set-goal-column (arg)
1572 "Set the current horizontal position as a goal for \\[next-line] and \\[previous-line].
1573 Those commands will move to this position in the line moved to
1574 rather than trying to keep the same horizontal position.
1575 With a non-nil argument, clears out the goal column
1576 so that \\[next-line] and \\[previous-line] resume vertical motion.
1577 The goal column is stored in the variable `goal-column'."
1578 (interactive "P")
1579 (if arg
1580 (progn
1581 (setq goal-column nil)
1582 (message "No goal column"))
1583 (setq goal-column (current-column))
1584 (message (substitute-command-keys
1585 "Goal column %d (use \\[set-goal-column] with an arg to unset it)")
1586 goal-column))
1587 nil)
1588 \f
1589 ;;; Partial support for horizontal autoscrolling. Someday, this feature
1590 ;;; will be built into the C level and all the (hscroll-point-visible) calls
1591 ;;; will go away.
1592
1593 (defvar hscroll-step 0
1594 "*The number of columns to try scrolling a window by when point moves out.
1595 If that fails to bring point back on frame, point is centered instead.
1596 If this is zero, point is always centered after it moves off frame.")
1597
1598 (defun hscroll-point-visible ()
1599 "Scrolls the selected window horizontally to make point visible."
1600 (save-excursion
1601 (set-buffer (window-buffer))
1602 (if (not (or truncate-lines
1603 (> (window-hscroll) 0)
1604 (and truncate-partial-width-windows
1605 (< (window-width) (frame-width)))))
1606 ;; Point is always visible when lines are wrapped.
1607 ()
1608 ;; If point is on the invisible part of the line before window-start,
1609 ;; then hscrolling can't bring it back, so reset window-start first.
1610 (and (< (point) (window-start))
1611 (let ((ws-bol (save-excursion
1612 (goto-char (window-start))
1613 (beginning-of-line)
1614 (point))))
1615 (and (>= (point) ws-bol)
1616 (set-window-start nil ws-bol))))
1617 (let* ((here (hscroll-window-column))
1618 (left (min (window-hscroll) 1))
1619 (right (1- (window-width))))
1620 ;; Allow for the truncation glyph, if we're not exactly at eol.
1621 (if (not (and (= here right)
1622 (= (following-char) ?\n)))
1623 (setq right (1- right)))
1624 (cond
1625 ;; If too far away, just recenter. But don't show too much
1626 ;; white space off the end of the line.
1627 ((or (< here (- left hscroll-step))
1628 (> here (+ right hscroll-step)))
1629 (let ((eol (save-excursion (end-of-line) (hscroll-window-column))))
1630 (scroll-left (min (- here (/ (window-width) 2))
1631 (- eol (window-width) -5)))))
1632 ;; Within range. Scroll by one step (or maybe not at all).
1633 ((< here left)
1634 (scroll-right hscroll-step))
1635 ((> here right)
1636 (scroll-left hscroll-step)))))))
1637
1638 ;; This function returns the window's idea of the display column of point,
1639 ;; assuming that the window is already known to be truncated rather than
1640 ;; wrapped, and that we've already handled the case where point is on the
1641 ;; part of the line before window-start. We ignore window-width; if point
1642 ;; is beyond the right margin, we want to know how far. The return value
1643 ;; includes the effects of window-hscroll, window-start, and the prompt
1644 ;; string in the minibuffer. It may be negative due to hscroll.
1645 (defun hscroll-window-column ()
1646 (let* ((hscroll (window-hscroll))
1647 (startpos (save-excursion
1648 (beginning-of-line)
1649 (if (= (point) (save-excursion
1650 (goto-char (window-start))
1651 (beginning-of-line)
1652 (point)))
1653 (goto-char (window-start)))
1654 (point)))
1655 (hpos (+ (if (and (eq (selected-window) (minibuffer-window))
1656 (= 1 (window-start))
1657 (= startpos (point-min)))
1658 (minibuffer-prompt-width)
1659 0)
1660 (min 0 (- 1 hscroll))))
1661 val)
1662 (car (cdr (compute-motion startpos (cons hpos 0)
1663 (point) (cons 0 1)
1664 1000000 (cons hscroll 0) nil)))))
1665
1666
1667 ;; rms: (1) The definitions of arrow keys should not simply restate
1668 ;; what keys they are. The arrow keys should run the ordinary commands.
1669 ;; (2) The arrow keys are just one of many common ways of moving point
1670 ;; within a line. Real horizontal autoscrolling would be a good feature,
1671 ;; but supporting it only for arrow keys is too incomplete to be desirable.
1672
1673 ;;;;; Make arrow keys do the right thing for improved terminal support
1674 ;;;;; When we implement true horizontal autoscrolling, right-arrow and
1675 ;;;;; left-arrow can lose the (if truncate-lines ...) clause and become
1676 ;;;;; aliases. These functions are bound to the corresponding keyboard
1677 ;;;;; events in loaddefs.el.
1678
1679 ;;(defun right-arrow (arg)
1680 ;; "Move right one character on the screen (with prefix ARG, that many chars).
1681 ;;Scroll right if needed to keep point horizontally onscreen."
1682 ;; (interactive "P")
1683 ;; (forward-char arg)
1684 ;; (hscroll-point-visible))
1685
1686 ;;(defun left-arrow (arg)
1687 ;; "Move left one character on the screen (with prefix ARG, that many chars).
1688 ;;Scroll left if needed to keep point horizontally onscreen."
1689 ;; (interactive "P")
1690 ;; (backward-char arg)
1691 ;; (hscroll-point-visible))
1692 \f
1693 (defun transpose-chars (arg)
1694 "Interchange characters around point, moving forward one character.
1695 With prefix arg ARG, effect is to take character before point
1696 and drag it forward past ARG other characters (backward if ARG negative).
1697 If no argument and at end of line, the previous two chars are exchanged."
1698 (interactive "*P")
1699 (and (null arg) (eolp) (forward-char -1))
1700 (transpose-subr 'forward-char (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
1701
1702 (defun transpose-words (arg)
1703 "Interchange words around point, leaving point at end of them.
1704 With prefix arg ARG, effect is to take word before or around point
1705 and drag it forward past ARG other words (backward if ARG negative).
1706 If ARG is zero, the words around or after point and around or after mark
1707 are interchanged."
1708 (interactive "*p")
1709 (transpose-subr 'forward-word arg))
1710
1711 (defun transpose-sexps (arg)
1712 "Like \\[transpose-words] but applies to sexps.
1713 Does not work on a sexp that point is in the middle of
1714 if it is a list or string."
1715 (interactive "*p")
1716 (transpose-subr 'forward-sexp arg))
1717
1718 (defun transpose-lines (arg)
1719 "Exchange current line and previous line, leaving point after both.
1720 With argument ARG, takes previous line and moves it past ARG lines.
1721 With argument 0, interchanges line point is in with line mark is in."
1722 (interactive "*p")
1723 (transpose-subr (function
1724 (lambda (arg)
1725 (if (= arg 1)
1726 (progn
1727 ;; Move forward over a line,
1728 ;; but create a newline if none exists yet.
1729 (end-of-line)
1730 (if (eobp)
1731 (newline)
1732 (forward-char 1)))
1733 (forward-line arg))))
1734 arg))
1735
1736 (defun transpose-subr (mover arg)
1737 (let (start1 end1 start2 end2)
1738 (if (= arg 0)
1739 (progn
1740 (save-excursion
1741 (funcall mover 1)
1742 (setq end2 (point))
1743 (funcall mover -1)
1744 (setq start2 (point))
1745 (goto-char (mark))
1746 (funcall mover 1)
1747 (setq end1 (point))
1748 (funcall mover -1)
1749 (setq start1 (point))
1750 (transpose-subr-1))
1751 (exchange-point-and-mark)))
1752 (while (> arg 0)
1753 (funcall mover -1)
1754 (setq start1 (point))
1755 (funcall mover 1)
1756 (setq end1 (point))
1757 (funcall mover 1)
1758 (setq end2 (point))
1759 (funcall mover -1)
1760 (setq start2 (point))
1761 (transpose-subr-1)
1762 (goto-char end2)
1763 (setq arg (1- arg)))
1764 (while (< arg 0)
1765 (funcall mover -1)
1766 (setq start2 (point))
1767 (funcall mover -1)
1768 (setq start1 (point))
1769 (funcall mover 1)
1770 (setq end1 (point))
1771 (funcall mover 1)
1772 (setq end2 (point))
1773 (transpose-subr-1)
1774 (setq arg (1+ arg)))))
1775
1776 (defun transpose-subr-1 ()
1777 (if (> (min end1 end2) (max start1 start2))
1778 (error "Don't have two things to transpose"))
1779 (let ((word1 (buffer-substring start1 end1))
1780 (word2 (buffer-substring start2 end2)))
1781 (delete-region start2 end2)
1782 (goto-char start2)
1783 (insert word1)
1784 (goto-char (if (< start1 start2) start1
1785 (+ start1 (- (length word1) (length word2)))))
1786 (delete-char (length word1))
1787 (insert word2)))
1788 \f
1789 (defconst comment-column 32
1790 "*Column to indent right-margin comments to.
1791 Setting this variable automatically makes it local to the current buffer.
1792 Each mode establishes a different default value for this variable; you
1793 can set the value for a particular mode using that mode's hook.")
1794 (make-variable-buffer-local 'comment-column)
1795
1796 (defconst comment-start nil
1797 "*String to insert to start a new comment, or nil if no comment syntax defined.")
1798
1799 (defconst comment-start-skip nil
1800 "*Regexp to match the start of a comment plus everything up to its body.
1801 If there are any \\(...\\) pairs, the comment delimiter text is held to begin
1802 at the place matched by the close of the first pair.")
1803
1804 (defconst comment-end ""
1805 "*String to insert to end a new comment.
1806 Should be an empty string if comments are terminated by end-of-line.")
1807
1808 (defconst comment-indent-hook nil
1809 "Obsolete variable for function to compute desired indentation for a comment.
1810 This function is called with no args with point at the beginning of
1811 the comment's starting delimiter.")
1812
1813 (defconst comment-indent-function
1814 '(lambda () comment-column)
1815 "Function to compute desired indentation for a comment.
1816 This function is called with no args with point at the beginning of
1817 the comment's starting delimiter.")
1818
1819 (defun indent-for-comment ()
1820 "Indent this line's comment to comment column, or insert an empty comment."
1821 (interactive "*")
1822 (beginning-of-line 1)
1823 (if (null comment-start)
1824 (error "No comment syntax defined")
1825 (let* ((eolpos (save-excursion (end-of-line) (point)))
1826 cpos indent begpos)
1827 (if (re-search-forward comment-start-skip eolpos 'move)
1828 (progn (setq cpos (point-marker))
1829 ;; Find the start of the comment delimiter.
1830 ;; If there were paren-pairs in comment-start-skip,
1831 ;; position at the end of the first pair.
1832 (if (match-end 1)
1833 (goto-char (match-end 1))
1834 ;; If comment-start-skip matched a string with
1835 ;; internal whitespace (not final whitespace) then
1836 ;; the delimiter start at the end of that
1837 ;; whitespace. Otherwise, it starts at the
1838 ;; beginning of what was matched.
1839 (skip-syntax-backward " " (match-beginning 0))
1840 (skip-syntax-backward "^ " (match-beginning 0)))))
1841 (setq begpos (point))
1842 ;; Compute desired indent.
1843 (if (= (current-column)
1844 (setq indent (if comment-indent-hook
1845 (funcall comment-indent-hook)
1846 (funcall comment-indent-function))))
1847 (goto-char begpos)
1848 ;; If that's different from current, change it.
1849 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
1850 (delete-region (point) begpos)
1851 (indent-to indent))
1852 ;; An existing comment?
1853 (if cpos
1854 (progn (goto-char cpos)
1855 (set-marker cpos nil))
1856 ;; No, insert one.
1857 (insert comment-start)
1858 (save-excursion
1859 (insert comment-end))))))
1860
1861 (defun set-comment-column (arg)
1862 "Set the comment column based on point.
1863 With no arg, set the comment column to the current column.
1864 With just minus as arg, kill any comment on this line.
1865 With any other arg, set comment column to indentation of the previous comment
1866 and then align or create a comment on this line at that column."
1867 (interactive "P")
1868 (if (eq arg '-)
1869 (kill-comment nil)
1870 (if arg
1871 (progn
1872 (save-excursion
1873 (beginning-of-line)
1874 (re-search-backward comment-start-skip)
1875 (beginning-of-line)
1876 (re-search-forward comment-start-skip)
1877 (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
1878 (setq comment-column (current-column))
1879 (message "Comment column set to %d" comment-column))
1880 (indent-for-comment))
1881 (setq comment-column (current-column))
1882 (message "Comment column set to %d" comment-column))))
1883
1884 (defun kill-comment (arg)
1885 "Kill the comment on this line, if any.
1886 With argument, kill comments on that many lines starting with this one."
1887 ;; this function loses in a lot of situations. it incorrectly recognises
1888 ;; comment delimiters sometimes (ergo, inside a string), doesn't work
1889 ;; with multi-line comments, can kill extra whitespace if comment wasn't
1890 ;; through end-of-line, et cetera.
1891 (interactive "P")
1892 (or comment-start-skip (error "No comment syntax defined"))
1893 (let ((count (prefix-numeric-value arg)) endc)
1894 (while (> count 0)
1895 (save-excursion
1896 (end-of-line)
1897 (setq endc (point))
1898 (beginning-of-line)
1899 (and (string< "" comment-end)
1900 (setq endc
1901 (progn
1902 (re-search-forward (regexp-quote comment-end) endc 'move)
1903 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
1904 (point))))
1905 (beginning-of-line)
1906 (if (re-search-forward comment-start-skip endc t)
1907 (progn
1908 (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
1909 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
1910 (kill-region (point) endc)
1911 ;; to catch comments a line beginnings
1912 (indent-according-to-mode))))
1913 (if arg (forward-line 1))
1914 (setq count (1- count)))))
1915
1916 (defun comment-region (beg end &optional arg)
1917 "Comment or uncomment each line in the region.
1918 With just C-u prefix arg, uncomment each line in region.
1919 Numeric prefix arg ARG means use ARG comment characters.
1920 If ARG is negative, delete that many comment characters instead.
1921 Comments are terminated on each line, even for syntax in which newline does
1922 not end the comment. Blank lines do not get comments."
1923 ;; if someone wants it to only put a comment-start at the beginning and
1924 ;; comment-end at the end then typing it, C-x C-x, closing it, C-x C-x
1925 ;; is easy enough. No option is made here for other than commenting
1926 ;; every line.
1927 (interactive "r\nP")
1928 (or comment-start (error "No comment syntax is defined"))
1929 (if (> beg end) (let (mid) (setq mid beg beg end end mid)))
1930 (save-excursion
1931 (save-restriction
1932 (let ((cs comment-start) (ce comment-end)
1933 numarg)
1934 (if (consp arg) (setq numarg t)
1935 (setq numarg (prefix-numeric-value arg))
1936 ;; For positive arg > 1, replicate the comment delims now,
1937 ;; then insert the replicated strings just once.
1938 (while (> numarg 1)
1939 (setq cs (concat cs comment-start)
1940 ce (concat ce comment-end))
1941 (setq numarg (1- numarg))))
1942 ;; Loop over all lines from BEG to END.
1943 (narrow-to-region beg end)
1944 (goto-char beg)
1945 (while (not (eobp))
1946 (if (or (eq numarg t) (< numarg 0))
1947 (progn
1948 ;; Delete comment start from beginning of line.
1949 (if (eq numarg t)
1950 (while (looking-at (regexp-quote cs))
1951 (delete-char (length cs)))
1952 (let ((count numarg))
1953 (while (and (> 1 (setq count (1+ count)))
1954 (looking-at (regexp-quote cs)))
1955 (delete-char (length cs)))))
1956 ;; Delete comment end from end of line.
1957 (if (string= "" ce)
1958 nil
1959 (if (eq numarg t)
1960 (progn
1961 (end-of-line)
1962 ;; This is questionable if comment-end ends in
1963 ;; whitespace. That is pretty brain-damaged,
1964 ;; though.
1965 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
1966 (if (and (>= (- (point) (point-min)) (length ce))
1967 (save-excursion
1968 (backward-char (length ce))
1969 (looking-at (regexp-quote ce))))
1970 (delete-char (- (length ce)))))
1971 (let ((count numarg))
1972 (while (> 1 (setq count (1+ count)))
1973 (end-of-line)
1974 ;; this is questionable if comment-end ends in whitespace
1975 ;; that is pretty brain-damaged though
1976 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
1977 (save-excursion
1978 (backward-char (length ce))
1979 (if (looking-at (regexp-quote ce))
1980 (delete-char (length ce))))))))
1981 (forward-line 1))
1982 ;; Insert at beginning and at end.
1983 (if (looking-at "[ \t]*$") ()
1984 (insert cs)
1985 (if (string= "" ce) ()
1986 (end-of-line)
1987 (insert ce)))
1988 (search-forward "\n" nil 'move)))))))
1989 \f
1990 (defun backward-word (arg)
1991 "Move backward until encountering the end of a word.
1992 With argument, do this that many times.
1993 In programs, it is faster to call `forward-word' with negative arg."
1994 (interactive "p")
1995 (forward-word (- arg)))
1996
1997 (defun mark-word (arg)
1998 "Set mark arg words away from point."
1999 (interactive "p")
2000 (push-mark
2001 (save-excursion
2002 (forward-word arg)
2003 (point))
2004 nil t))
2005
2006 (defun kill-word (arg)
2007 "Kill characters forward until encountering the end of a word.
2008 With argument, do this that many times."
2009 (interactive "p")
2010 (kill-region (point) (progn (forward-word arg) (point))))
2011
2012 (defun backward-kill-word (arg)
2013 "Kill characters backward until encountering the end of a word.
2014 With argument, do this that many times."
2015 (interactive "p")
2016 (kill-word (- arg)))
2017
2018 (defun current-word (&optional strict)
2019 "Return the word point is on (or a nearby word) as a string.
2020 If optional arg STRICT is non-nil, return nil unless point is within
2021 or adjacent to a word."
2022 (save-excursion
2023 (let ((oldpoint (point)) (start (point)) (end (point)))
2024 (skip-syntax-backward "w_") (setq start (point))
2025 (goto-char oldpoint)
2026 (skip-syntax-forward "w_") (setq end (point))
2027 (if (and (eq start oldpoint) (eq end oldpoint))
2028 ;; Point is neither within nor adjacent to a word.
2029 (and (not strict)
2030 (progn
2031 ;; Look for preceding word in same line.
2032 (skip-syntax-backward "^w_"
2033 (save-excursion (beginning-of-line)
2034 (point)))
2035 (if (bolp)
2036 ;; No preceding word in same line.
2037 ;; Look for following word in same line.
2038 (progn
2039 (skip-syntax-forward "^w_"
2040 (save-excursion (end-of-line)
2041 (point)))
2042 (setq start (point))
2043 (skip-syntax-forward "w_")
2044 (setq end (point)))
2045 (setq end (point))
2046 (skip-syntax-backward "w_")
2047 (setq start (point)))
2048 (buffer-substring start end)))
2049 (buffer-substring start end)))))
2050 \f
2051 (defconst fill-prefix nil
2052 "*String for filling to insert at front of new line, or nil for none.
2053 Setting this variable automatically makes it local to the current buffer.")
2054 (make-variable-buffer-local 'fill-prefix)
2055
2056 (defconst auto-fill-inhibit-regexp nil
2057 "*Regexp to match lines which should not be auto-filled.")
2058
2059 (defun do-auto-fill ()
2060 (let (give-up)
2061 (or (and auto-fill-inhibit-regexp
2062 (save-excursion (beginning-of-line)
2063 (looking-at auto-fill-inhibit-regexp)))
2064 (while (and (not give-up) (> (current-column) fill-column))
2065 ;; Determine where to split the line.
2066 (let ((fill-point
2067 (let ((opoint (point))
2068 bounce
2069 (first t))
2070 (save-excursion
2071 (move-to-column (1+ fill-column))
2072 ;; Move back to a word boundary.
2073 (while (or first
2074 ;; If this is after period and a single space,
2075 ;; move back once more--we don't want to break
2076 ;; the line there and make it look like a
2077 ;; sentence end.
2078 (and (not (bobp))
2079 (not bounce)
2080 sentence-end-double-space
2081 (save-excursion (forward-char -1)
2082 (and (looking-at "\\. ")
2083 (not (looking-at "\\. "))))))
2084 (setq first nil)
2085 (skip-chars-backward "^ \t\n")
2086 ;; If we find nowhere on the line to break it,
2087 ;; break after one word. Set bounce to t
2088 ;; so we will not keep going in this while loop.
2089 (if (bolp)
2090 (progn
2091 (re-search-forward "[ \t]" opoint t)
2092 (setq bounce t)))
2093 (skip-chars-backward " \t"))
2094 ;; Let fill-point be set to the place where we end up.
2095 (point)))))
2096 ;; If that place is not the beginning of the line,
2097 ;; break the line there.
2098 (if (save-excursion
2099 (goto-char fill-point)
2100 (not (bolp)))
2101 (let ((prev-column (current-column)))
2102 ;; If point is at the fill-point, do not `save-excursion'.
2103 ;; Otherwise, if a comment prefix or fill-prefix is inserted,
2104 ;; point will end up before it rather than after it.
2105 (if (save-excursion
2106 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
2107 (= (point) fill-point))
2108 (indent-new-comment-line)
2109 (save-excursion
2110 (goto-char fill-point)
2111 (indent-new-comment-line)))
2112 ;; If making the new line didn't reduce the hpos of
2113 ;; the end of the line, then give up now;
2114 ;; trying again will not help.
2115 (if (>= (current-column) prev-column)
2116 (setq give-up t)))
2117 ;; No place to break => stop trying.
2118 (setq give-up t)))))))
2119
2120 (defun auto-fill-mode (&optional arg)
2121 "Toggle auto-fill mode.
2122 With arg, turn Auto-Fill mode on if and only if arg is positive.
2123 In Auto-Fill mode, inserting a space at a column beyond `fill-column'
2124 automatically breaks the line at a previous space."
2125 (interactive "P")
2126 (prog1 (setq auto-fill-function
2127 (if (if (null arg)
2128 (not auto-fill-function)
2129 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0))
2130 'do-auto-fill
2131 nil))
2132 ;; update mode-line
2133 (set-buffer-modified-p (buffer-modified-p))))
2134
2135 ;; This holds a document string used to document auto-fill-mode.
2136 (defun auto-fill-function ()
2137 "Automatically break line at a previous space, in insertion of text."
2138 nil)
2139
2140 (defun turn-on-auto-fill ()
2141 "Unconditionally turn on Auto Fill mode."
2142 (auto-fill-mode 1))
2143
2144 (defun set-fill-column (arg)
2145 "Set `fill-column' to current column, or to argument if given.
2146 The variable `fill-column' has a separate value for each buffer."
2147 (interactive "P")
2148 (setq fill-column (if (integerp arg) arg (current-column)))
2149 (message "fill-column set to %d" fill-column))
2150 \f
2151 (defconst comment-multi-line nil
2152 "*Non-nil means \\[indent-new-comment-line] should continue same comment
2153 on new line, with no new terminator or starter.
2154 This is obsolete because you might as well use \\[newline-and-indent].")
2155
2156 (defun indent-new-comment-line ()
2157 "Break line at point and indent, continuing comment if within one.
2158 This indents the body of the continued comment
2159 under the previous comment line.
2160
2161 This command is intended for styles where you write a comment per line,
2162 starting a new comment (and terminating it if necessary) on each line.
2163 If you want to continue one comment across several lines, use \\[newline-and-indent]."
2164 (interactive "*")
2165 (let (comcol comstart)
2166 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
2167 (delete-region (point)
2168 (progn (skip-chars-forward " \t")
2169 (point)))
2170 (insert ?\n)
2171 (if (not comment-multi-line)
2172 (save-excursion
2173 (if (and comment-start-skip
2174 (let ((opoint (point)))
2175 (forward-line -1)
2176 (re-search-forward comment-start-skip opoint t)))
2177 ;; The old line is a comment.
2178 ;; Set WIN to the pos of the comment-start.
2179 ;; But if the comment is empty, look at preceding lines
2180 ;; to find one that has a nonempty comment.
2181 (let ((win (match-beginning 0)))
2182 (while (and (eolp) (not (bobp))
2183 (let (opoint)
2184 (beginning-of-line)
2185 (setq opoint (point))
2186 (forward-line -1)
2187 (re-search-forward comment-start-skip opoint t)))
2188 (setq win (match-beginning 0)))
2189 ;; Indent this line like what we found.
2190 (goto-char win)
2191 (setq comcol (current-column))
2192 (setq comstart (buffer-substring (point) (match-end 0)))))))
2193 (if comcol
2194 (let ((comment-column comcol)
2195 (comment-start comstart)
2196 (comment-end comment-end))
2197 (and comment-end (not (equal comment-end ""))
2198 ; (if (not comment-multi-line)
2199 (progn
2200 (forward-char -1)
2201 (insert comment-end)
2202 (forward-char 1))
2203 ; (setq comment-column (+ comment-column (length comment-start))
2204 ; comment-start "")
2205 ; )
2206 )
2207 (if (not (eolp))
2208 (setq comment-end ""))
2209 (insert ?\n)
2210 (forward-char -1)
2211 (indent-for-comment)
2212 (save-excursion
2213 ;; Make sure we delete the newline inserted above.
2214 (end-of-line)
2215 (delete-char 1)))
2216 (if fill-prefix
2217 (insert fill-prefix)
2218 (indent-according-to-mode)))))
2219 \f
2220 (defun set-selective-display (arg)
2221 "Set `selective-display' to ARG; clear it if no arg.
2222 When the value of `selective-display' is a number > 0,
2223 lines whose indentation is >= that value are not displayed.
2224 The variable `selective-display' has a separate value for each buffer."
2225 (interactive "P")
2226 (if (eq selective-display t)
2227 (error "selective-display already in use for marked lines"))
2228 (let ((current-vpos
2229 (save-restriction
2230 (narrow-to-region (point-min) (point))
2231 (goto-char (window-start))
2232 (vertical-motion (window-height)))))
2233 (setq selective-display
2234 (and arg (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
2235 (recenter current-vpos))
2236 (set-window-start (selected-window) (window-start (selected-window)))
2237 (princ "selective-display set to " t)
2238 (prin1 selective-display t)
2239 (princ "." t))
2240
2241 (defconst overwrite-mode-textual " Ovwrt"
2242 "The string displayed in the mode line when in overwrite mode.")
2243 (defconst overwrite-mode-binary " Bin Ovwrt"
2244 "The string displayed in the mode line when in binary overwrite mode.")
2245
2246 (defun overwrite-mode (arg)
2247 "Toggle overwrite mode.
2248 With arg, turn overwrite mode on iff arg is positive.
2249 In overwrite mode, printing characters typed in replace existing text
2250 on a one-for-one basis, rather than pushing it to the right. At the
2251 end of a line, such characters extend the line. Before a tab,
2252 such characters insert until the tab is filled in.
2253 \\[quoted-insert] still inserts characters in overwrite mode; this
2254 is supposed to make it easier to insert characters when necessary."
2255 (interactive "P")
2256 (setq overwrite-mode
2257 (if (if (null arg) (not overwrite-mode)
2258 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0))
2259 'overwrite-mode-textual))
2260 (force-mode-line-update))
2261
2262 (defun binary-overwrite-mode (arg)
2263 "Toggle binary overwrite mode.
2264 With arg, turn binary overwrite mode on iff arg is positive.
2265 In binary overwrite mode, printing characters typed in replace
2266 existing text. Newlines are not treated specially, so typing at the
2267 end of a line joins the line to the next, with the typed character
2268 between them. Typing before a tab character simply replaces the tab
2269 with the character typed.
2270 \\[quoted-insert] replaces the text at the cursor, just as ordinary
2271 typing characters do.
2272
2273 Note that binary overwrite mode is not its own minor mode; it is a
2274 specialization of overwrite-mode, entered by setting the
2275 `overwrite-mode' variable to `overwrite-mode-binary'."
2276 (interactive "P")
2277 (setq overwrite-mode
2278 (if (if (null arg)
2279 (not (eq overwrite-mode 'overwrite-mode-binary))
2280 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0))
2281 'overwrite-mode-binary))
2282 (force-mode-line-update))
2283 \f
2284 (defvar line-number-mode nil
2285 "*Non-nil means display line number in mode line.")
2286
2287 (defun line-number-mode (arg)
2288 "Toggle Line Number mode.
2289 With arg, turn Line Number mode on iff arg is positive.
2290 When Line Number mode is enabled, the line number appears
2291 in the mode line."
2292 (interactive "P")
2293 (setq line-number-mode
2294 (if (null arg) (not line-number-mode)
2295 (> (prefix-numeric-value arg) 0)))
2296 (force-mode-line-update))
2297
2298 (defvar blink-matching-paren t
2299 "*Non-nil means show matching open-paren when close-paren is inserted.")
2300
2301 (defconst blink-matching-paren-distance 12000
2302 "*If non-nil, is maximum distance to search for matching open-paren.")
2303
2304 (defun blink-matching-open ()
2305 "Move cursor momentarily to the beginning of the sexp before point."
2306 (interactive)
2307 (and (> (point) (1+ (point-min)))
2308 (not (memq (char-syntax (char-after (- (point) 2))) '(?/ ?\\ )))
2309 blink-matching-paren
2310 (let* ((oldpos (point))
2311 (blinkpos)
2312 (mismatch))
2313 (save-excursion
2314 (save-restriction
2315 (if blink-matching-paren-distance
2316 (narrow-to-region (max (point-min)
2317 (- (point) blink-matching-paren-distance))
2318 oldpos))
2319 (condition-case ()
2320 (setq blinkpos (scan-sexps oldpos -1))
2321 (error nil)))
2322 (and blinkpos (/= (char-syntax (char-after blinkpos))
2323 ?\$)
2324 (setq mismatch
2325 (/= (char-after (1- oldpos))
2326 (logand (lsh (aref (syntax-table)
2327 (char-after blinkpos))
2328 -8)
2329 255))))
2330 (if mismatch (setq blinkpos nil))
2331 (if blinkpos
2332 (progn
2333 (goto-char blinkpos)
2334 (if (pos-visible-in-window-p)
2335 (sit-for 1)
2336 (goto-char blinkpos)
2337 (message
2338 "Matches %s"
2339 ;; Show what precedes the open in its line, if anything.
2340 (if (save-excursion
2341 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
2342 (not (bolp)))
2343 (buffer-substring (progn (beginning-of-line) (point))
2344 (1+ blinkpos))
2345 ;; Show what follows the open in its line, if anything.
2346 (if (save-excursion
2347 (forward-char 1)
2348 (skip-chars-forward " \t")
2349 (not (eolp)))
2350 (buffer-substring blinkpos
2351 (progn (end-of-line) (point)))
2352 ;; Otherwise show the previous nonblank line.
2353 (concat
2354 (buffer-substring (progn
2355 (backward-char 1)
2356 (skip-chars-backward "\n \t")
2357 (beginning-of-line)
2358 (point))
2359 (progn (end-of-line)
2360 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
2361 (point)))
2362 ;; Replace the newline and other whitespace with `...'.
2363 "..."
2364 (buffer-substring blinkpos (1+ blinkpos))))))))
2365 (cond (mismatch
2366 (message "Mismatched parentheses"))
2367 ((not blink-matching-paren-distance)
2368 (message "Unmatched parenthesis"))))))))
2369
2370 ;Turned off because it makes dbx bomb out.
2371 (setq blink-paren-function 'blink-matching-open)
2372
2373 ;; This executes C-g typed while Emacs is waiting for a command.
2374 ;; Quitting out of a program does not go through here;
2375 ;; that happens in the QUIT macro at the C code level.
2376 (defun keyboard-quit ()
2377 "Signal a quit condition.
2378 During execution of Lisp code, this character causes a quit directly.
2379 At top-level, as an editor command, this simply beeps."
2380 (interactive)
2381 (deactivate-mark)
2382 (signal 'quit nil))
2383
2384 (define-key global-map "\C-g" 'keyboard-quit)
2385 \f
2386 (defun set-variable (var val)
2387 "Set VARIABLE to VALUE. VALUE is a Lisp object.
2388 When using this interactively, supply a Lisp expression for VALUE.
2389 If you want VALUE to be a string, you must surround it with doublequotes.
2390
2391 If VARIABLE has a `variable-interactive' property, that is used as if
2392 it were the arg to `interactive' (which see) to interactively read the value."
2393 (interactive
2394 (let* ((var (read-variable "Set variable: "))
2395 (minibuffer-help-form
2396 '(funcall myhelp))
2397 (myhelp
2398 (function
2399 (lambda ()
2400 (with-output-to-temp-buffer "*Help*"
2401 (prin1 var)
2402 (princ "\nDocumentation:\n")
2403 (princ (substring (documentation-property var 'variable-documentation)
2404 1))
2405 (if (boundp var)
2406 (let ((print-length 20))
2407 (princ "\n\nCurrent value: ")
2408 (prin1 (symbol-value var))))
2409 nil)))))
2410 (list var
2411 (let ((prop (get var 'variable-interactive)))
2412 (if prop
2413 ;; Use VAR's `variable-interactive' property
2414 ;; as an interactive spec for prompting.
2415 (call-interactively (list 'lambda '(arg)
2416 (list 'interactive prop)
2417 'arg))
2418 (eval-minibuffer (format "Set %s to value: " var)))))))
2419 (set var val))
2420 \f
2421 ;; Define the major mode for lists of completions.
2422
2423 (defvar completion-list-mode-map nil)
2424 (or completion-list-mode-map
2425 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
2426 (define-key map [mouse-2] 'mouse-choose-completion)
2427 (define-key map "\C-m" 'choose-completion)
2428 (define-key map [return] 'choose-completion)
2429 (setq completion-list-mode-map map)))
2430
2431 ;; Completion mode is suitable only for specially formatted data.
2432 (put 'completion-list-mode 'mode-class 'special)
2433
2434 ;; Record the buffer that was current when the completion list was requested.
2435 (defvar completion-reference-buffer)
2436
2437 (defun choose-completion ()
2438 "Choose the completion that point is in or next to."
2439 (interactive)
2440 (let (beg end)
2441 (skip-chars-forward "^ \t\n")
2442 (setq end (point))
2443 (skip-chars-backward "^ \t\n")
2444 (setq beg (point))
2445 (choose-completion-string (buffer-substring beg end))))
2446
2447 ;; Delete the longest partial match for STRING
2448 ;; that can be found before POINT.
2449 (defun choose-completion-delete-max-match (string)
2450 (let ((opoint (point))
2451 (len (min (length string)
2452 (- (point) (point-min)))))
2453 (goto-char (- (point) (length string)))
2454 (while (and (> len 0)
2455 (let ((tail (buffer-substring (point)
2456 (+ (point) len))))
2457 (not (string= tail (substring string 0 len)))))
2458 (setq len (1- len))
2459 (forward-char 1))
2460 (delete-char len)))
2461
2462 (defun choose-completion-string (choice &optional buffer)
2463 (let ((buffer (or buffer completion-reference-buffer)))
2464 (set-buffer buffer)
2465 (choose-completion-delete-max-match choice)
2466 (insert choice)
2467 ;; Update point in the window that BUFFER is showing in.
2468 (let ((window (get-buffer-window buffer t)))
2469 (set-window-point window (point)))
2470 (and (equal buffer (window-buffer (minibuffer-window)))
2471 (minibuffer-complete-and-exit))))
2472
2473 (defun completion-list-mode ()
2474 "Major mode for buffers showing lists of possible completions.
2475 Type \\<completion-list-mode-map>\\[choose-completion] in the completion list\
2476 to select the completion near point.
2477 Use \\<completion-list-mode-map>\\[mouse-choose-completion] to select one\
2478 with the mouse."
2479 (interactive)
2480 (kill-all-local-variables)
2481 (use-local-map completion-list-mode-map)
2482 (setq mode-name "Completion List")
2483 (setq major-mode 'completion-list-mode)
2484 (run-hooks 'completion-list-mode-hook))
2485
2486 (defun completion-setup-function ()
2487 (save-excursion
2488 (let ((mainbuf (current-buffer)))
2489 (set-buffer standard-output)
2490 (completion-list-mode)
2491 (make-local-variable 'completion-reference-buffer)
2492 (setq completion-reference-buffer mainbuf)
2493 (goto-char (point-min))
2494 (if window-system
2495 (insert (substitute-command-keys
2496 "Click \\[mouse-choose-completion] on a completion to select it.\n")))
2497 (insert (substitute-command-keys
2498 "In this buffer, type \\[choose-completion] to \
2499 select the completion near point.\n\n"))
2500 (forward-line 1)
2501 (if window-system
2502 (while (re-search-forward "[^ \t\n]+" nil t)
2503 (put-text-property (match-beginning 0) (match-end 0)
2504 'mouse-face 'highlight))))))
2505
2506 (add-hook 'completion-setup-hook 'completion-setup-function)
2507 \f
2508 ;;;; Keypad support.
2509
2510 ;;; Make the keypad keys act like ordinary typing keys. If people add
2511 ;;; bindings for the function key symbols, then those bindings will
2512 ;;; override these, so this shouldn't interfere with any existing
2513 ;;; bindings.
2514
2515 ;; Also tell read-char how to handle these keys.
2516 (mapcar
2517 (lambda (keypad-normal)
2518 (let ((keypad (nth 0 keypad-normal))
2519 (normal (nth 1 keypad-normal)))
2520 (put keypad 'ascii-character normal)
2521 (define-key function-key-map (vector keypad) (vector normal))))
2522 '((kp-0 ?0) (kp-1 ?1) (kp-2 ?2) (kp-3 ?3) (kp-4 ?4)
2523 (kp-5 ?5) (kp-6 ?6) (kp-7 ?7) (kp-8 ?8) (kp-9 ?9)
2524 (kp-space ?\ )
2525 (kp-tab ?\t)
2526 (kp-enter ?\r)
2527 (kp-multiply ?*)
2528 (kp-add ?+)
2529 (kp-separator ?,)
2530 (kp-subtract ?-)
2531 (kp-decimal ?.)
2532 (kp-divide ?/)
2533 (kp-equal ?=)))
2534
2535 ;;; simple.el ends here