Mercurial > emacs
view lisp/progmodes/cc-subword.el @ 82729:10439b0bb602
(help-with-tutorial): Tutorials now in tutorial-directory.
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 22 Aug 2007 07:42:18 +0000 |
parents | c1ec1c8a8d2e |
children | a1342e6e097a 5405672da978 |
line wrap: on
line source
;;; cc-subword.el --- Handling capitalized subwords in a nomenclature ;; Copyright (C) 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Author: Masatake YAMATO ;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) ;; any later version. ;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with this program; see the file COPYING. If not, write to ;; the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, ;; Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. ;;; Commentary: ;; This package provides `subword' oriented commands and a minor mode ;; (`c-subword-mode') that substitutes the common word handling ;; functions with them. ;; In spite of GNU Coding Standards, it is popular to name a symbol by ;; mixing uppercase and lowercase letters, e.g. "GtkWidget", ;; "EmacsFrameClass", "NSGraphicsContext", etc. Here we call these ;; mixed case symbols `nomenclatures'. Also, each capitalized (or ;; completely uppercase) part of a nomenclature is called a `subword'. ;; Here are some examples: ;; Nomenclature Subwords ;; =========================================================== ;; GtkWindow => "Gtk" and "Window" ;; EmacsFrameClass => "Emacs", "Frame" and "Class" ;; NSGraphicsContext => "NS", "Graphics" and "Context" ;; The subword oriented commands defined in this package recognize ;; subwords in a nomenclature to move between them and to edit them as ;; words. ;; In the minor mode, all common key bindings for word oriented ;; commands are overridden by the subword oriented commands: ;; Key Word oriented command Subword oriented command ;; ============================================================ ;; M-f `forward-word' `c-forward-subword' ;; M-b `backward-word' `c-backward-subword' ;; M-@ `mark-word' `c-mark-subword' ;; M-d `kill-word' `c-kill-subword' ;; M-DEL `backward-kill-word' `c-backward-kill-subword' ;; M-t `transpose-words' `c-transpose-subwords' ;; M-c `capitalize-word' `c-capitalize-subword' ;; M-u `upcase-word' `c-upcase-subword' ;; M-l `downcase-word' `c-downcase-subword' ;; ;; Note: If you have changed the key bindings for the word oriented ;; commands in your .emacs or a similar place, the keys you've changed ;; to are also used for the corresponding subword oriented commands. ;; To make the mode turn on automatically, put the following code in ;; your .emacs: ;; ;; (add-hook 'c-mode-common-hook ;; (lambda () (c-subword-mode 1))) ;; ;; Acknowledgment: ;; The regular expressions to detect subwords are mostly based on ;; the old `c-forward-into-nomenclature' originally contributed by ;; Terry_Glanfield dot Southern at rxuk dot xerox dot com. ;; TODO: ispell-word and subword oriented C-w in isearch. ;;; Code: (eval-when-compile (let ((load-path (if (and (boundp 'byte-compile-dest-file) (stringp byte-compile-dest-file)) (cons (file-name-directory byte-compile-dest-file) load-path) load-path))) (load "cc-bytecomp" nil t))) (cc-require 'cc-defs) (cc-require 'cc-cmds) ;; Don't complain about the `define-minor-mode' form if it isn't defined. (cc-bytecomp-defvar c-subword-mode) ;; Autoload directives must be on the top level, so we construct an ;; autoload form instead. ;;;###autoload (autoload 'c-subword-mode "cc-subword" "Mode enabling subword movement and editing keys." t) (if (not (fboundp 'define-minor-mode)) (defun c-subword-mode () "(Missing) mode enabling subword movement and editing keys. This mode is not (yet) available in this version of (X)Emacs. Sorry! If you really want it, please send a request to <bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>, telling us which (X)Emacs version you're using." (interactive) (error "c-subword-mode is not (yet) available in this version of (X)Emacs. Sorry!")) (defvar c-subword-mode-map (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))) (dolist (cmd '(forward-word backward-word mark-word kill-word backward-kill-word transpose-words capitalize-word upcase-word downcase-word)) (let ((othercmd (let ((name (symbol-name cmd))) (string-match "\\(.*-\\)\\(word.*\\)" name) (intern (concat "c-" (match-string 1 name) "sub" (match-string 2 name)))))) (if (fboundp 'command-remapping) (define-key map (vector 'remap cmd) othercmd) (substitute-key-definition cmd othercmd map global-map)))) map) "Keymap used in command `c-subword-mode' minor mode.") (define-minor-mode c-subword-mode "Mode enabling subword movement and editing keys. In spite of GNU Coding Standards, it is popular to name a symbol by mixing uppercase and lowercase letters, e.g. \"GtkWidget\", \"EmacsFrameClass\", \"NSGraphicsContext\", etc. Here we call these mixed case symbols `nomenclatures'. Also, each capitalized (or completely uppercase) part of a nomenclature is called a `subword'. Here are some examples: Nomenclature Subwords =========================================================== GtkWindow => \"Gtk\" and \"Window\" EmacsFrameClass => \"Emacs\", \"Frame\" and \"Class\" NSGraphicsContext => \"NS\", \"Graphics\" and \"Context\" The subword oriented commands activated in this minor mode recognize subwords in a nomenclature to move between subwords and to edit them as words. \\{c-subword-mode-map}" nil nil c-subword-mode-map (c-update-modeline)) ) (defun c-forward-subword (&optional arg) "Do the same as `forward-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `forward-word'." (interactive "p") (unless arg (setq arg 1)) (c-keep-region-active) (cond ((< 0 arg) (dotimes (i arg (point)) (c-forward-subword-internal))) ((> 0 arg) (dotimes (i (- arg) (point)) (c-backward-subword-internal))) (t (point)))) (put 'c-forward-subword 'CUA 'move) (defun c-backward-subword (&optional arg) "Do the same as `backward-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `backward-word'." (interactive "p") (c-forward-subword (- (or arg 1)))) (defun c-mark-subword (arg) "Do the same as `mark-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `mark-word'." ;; This code is almost copied from `mark-word' in GNU Emacs. (interactive "p") (cond ((and (eq last-command this-command) (mark t)) (set-mark (save-excursion (goto-char (mark)) (c-forward-subword arg) (point)))) (t (push-mark (save-excursion (c-forward-subword arg) (point)) nil t)))) (put 'c-backward-subword 'CUA 'move) (defun c-kill-subword (arg) "Do the same as `kill-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `kill-word'." (interactive "p") (kill-region (point) (c-forward-subword arg))) (defun c-backward-kill-subword (arg) "Do the same as `backward-kill-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `backward-kill-word'." (interactive "p") (c-kill-subword (- arg))) (defun c-transpose-subwords (arg) "Do the same as `transpose-words' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `transpose-words'." (interactive "*p") (transpose-subr 'c-forward-subword arg)) (defun c-downcase-subword (arg) "Do the same as `downcase-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `downcase-word'." (interactive "p") (let ((start (point))) (downcase-region (point) (c-forward-subword arg)) (when (< arg 0) (goto-char start)))) (defun c-upcase-subword (arg) "Do the same as `upcase-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `upcase-word'." (interactive "p") (let ((start (point))) (upcase-region (point) (c-forward-subword arg)) (when (< arg 0) (goto-char start)))) (defun c-capitalize-subword (arg) "Do the same as `capitalize-word' but on subwords. See the command `c-subword-mode' for a description of subwords. Optional argument ARG is the same as for `capitalize-word'." (interactive "p") (let ((count (abs arg)) (start (point)) (advance (if (< arg 0) nil t))) (dotimes (i count) (if advance (progn (re-search-forward (concat "[" c-alpha "]") nil t) (goto-char (match-beginning 0))) (c-backward-subword)) (let* ((p (point)) (pp (1+ p)) (np (c-forward-subword))) (upcase-region p pp) (downcase-region pp np) (goto-char (if advance np p)))) (unless advance (goto-char start)))) ;; ;; Internal functions ;; (defun c-forward-subword-internal () (if (and (save-excursion (let ((case-fold-search nil)) (re-search-forward (concat "\\W*\\(\\([" c-upper "]*\\W?\\)[" c-lower c-digit "]*\\)") nil t))) (> (match-end 0) (point))) ; So we don't get stuck at a ; "word-constituent" which isn't c-upper, ; c-lower or c-digit (goto-char (cond ((< 1 (- (match-end 2) (match-beginning 2))) (1- (match-end 2))) (t (match-end 0)))) (forward-word 1))) (defun c-backward-subword-internal () (if (save-excursion (let ((case-fold-search nil)) (re-search-backward (concat "\\(\\(\\W\\|[" c-lower c-digit "]\\)\\([" c-upper "]+\\W*\\)" "\\|\\W\\w+\\)") nil t))) (goto-char (cond ((and (match-end 3) (< 1 (- (match-end 3) (match-beginning 3))) (not (eq (point) (match-end 3)))) (1- (match-end 3))) (t (1+ (match-beginning 0))))) (backward-word 1))) (cc-provide 'cc-subword) ;; arch-tag: 2be9d294-7f30-4626-95e6-9964bb93c7a3 ;;; cc-subword.el ends here