view lisp/textmodes/paragraphs.el @ 13728:4b7903cfa7ee

(bibtex-auto-fill-function): Adapted for use with changed autofill policy of emacs-19.30 (uses now fill-prefix instead of indent-line-function). (bibtex-indent-line-function): Removed (not used any more). (bibtex-make-field): Was broken when called non-interactively. (bibtex-make-field): Point is now placed on closing brace or quote (suggested by Karl Eichwalder <ke@ke.Central.DE>). (bibtex-clean-entry): Comma after last field isn't deleted anymore (new standard in BibTeX 0.99 and 1.xx). (bibtex-enclosing-reference-maybe-empty-head): Works with entries with comma after last field. (bibtex-reference): Permits entries with comma after last field. (bibtex-font-lock-keywords): Enhanced to support new field-name characters (suggested by Martin Maechler <maechler@stat.math.ethz.ch>). (bibtex-field-name): Now numbers (not as the first sign), dashes, and underscores are allowed (suggested by Martin Maechler <maechler@stat.math.ethz.ch> and Oren Patashnik <opbibtex@labrea.Stanford.EDU>). (bibtex-make-field): Was broken on lines containing non-parenthesized entries (reported by Karl Eichwalder <ke@ke.Central.DE>). (bibtex-validate-buffer): Changed so that preamble references are ignored (same as string entries) (reported by Martin Maechler <maechler@stat.math.ethz.ch>). (bibtex-enclosing-reference-maybe-empty-head): New function to be used in case reference head may be empty. (bibtex-clean-entry, bibtex-pop-previous, bibtex-pop-next): Uses now bibtex-enclosing-reference-maybe-empty-head. (bibtex-mode): Added support for font-lock mode. (bibtex-font-lock-keywords): New variable with font-lock keywords for BibTeX mode. (bibtex-make-optional-field): Not longer interactive (suggested by Karl Eichwalder <karl@pertron.central.de>). (bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries): Set to nil, since it requires more user attention and more restricted files to have this set to t. (bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries, bibtex-sort-ignore-string-entries): Made buffer local, since it may depend on the buffer which preferences to use. (bibtex-validate-buffer): Looking for correct sort order only when bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is non-nil. Put a comment in the `KNOWN BUGS' section about the quote-inside-quotes problem. (whole file): Changed string `true' in some documentation strings to `non-nil' (e.g. `if variable has a true/non-nil value'). (bibtex-mode-map): Changed `move/edit' to `bibtex-edit'. (bibtex-sort-entries): Now works correctly with `@String' entries inside BibTeX files (i.e. after the occurence of other references). (bibtex-validate-buffer): Inserted code which looks if entries are balanced (a single non-escaped quote inside braces was not detected till now, but bibtex-sort-entries stumbles about it). (bibtex-entry): bibtex-move-outside-of-entry is only called when bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is nil (otherwise bibtex-find-entry-location determines the correct location). (bibtex-find-entry-location): Now uses binary search. As before, it assumes that the buffer is sorted without duplicates (but as before it is only called when bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries is t). Ignores `@String' entries if told so via variable bibtex-sort-ignore-string-entries. (bibtex-clean-entry): Respect bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries when inserting autokey. (bibtex-validate-buffer): Searching whole buffer for duplicates and correct order is now done directly instead of calling bibtex-find-entry-location (since this is to be reprogrammed to use a binary search instead a sequential one). (bibtex-parse-keys): May now be called with an optional parameter which (if t) tells bibtex-parse-keys that it should abort if input is pending. (bibtex-mode): The instance of bibtex-parse-keys called in auto-save-mode-hook is now called with this new parameter set to t, so an auto-save caused by exceeding auto-save-interval is now aborted immediately if user is still typing. (bibtex-print-help-message, bibtex-clean-entry): Use now constant strings instead of custom ones. (bibtex-clean-entry): Changed the call of bibtex-enclosing-reference to a more specific call so entries without a key (here allowed) can be handled. (bibtex-reference-key): Cleared off parentheses (caused string entries enclosed by parentheses instead of braces to be not added to bibtex-completion-candidates). (bibtex-complete-string): Made it use bibtex-string. (bibtex-keys, bibtex-buffer-last-parsed-for-keys-tick): New buffer-local variables to make parsing of BibTeX buffer for reference keys (needed by TAB completion in minibuffer when entering key) more occasional. (bibtex-parse-keys): New function to parse for keys (functionality was partially included in bibtex-entry). (bibtex-entry): Changed to use bibtex-parse-keys. (bibtex-mode): Installs bibtex-parse-keys as an auto-save-mode-hook, so whole buffer is parsed at most when it is autosaved. (bibtex-clean-entry): Calls bibtex-parse-keys on the new entry, so bibtex-keys remains consistent for new entries that are finished by calling this function (most should). (bibtex-inside-field): Be independent on current setting of bibtex-field-right-delimiter (allows more intermixing between quotes and braces). (bibtex-make-field): Last change didn't make it work correctly when called non-interactively by bibtex-entry (fixed).
author Karl Heuer <kwzh@gnu.org>
date Wed, 13 Dec 1995 20:26:13 +0000
parents 1619fcabdb99
children 83f275dcd93a
line wrap: on
line source

;;; paragraphs.el --- paragraph and sentence parsing.

;; Copyright (C) 1985, 86, 87, 91, 94, 95 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

;; Maintainer: FSF
;; Keywords: wp

;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.

;; GNU Emacs 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 2, or (at your option)
;; any later version.

;; GNU Emacs 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 GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to
;; the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

;;; Commentary:

;; This package provides the paragraph-oriented commands documented in the
;; Emacs manual.

;;; Code:

(defvar use-hard-newlines nil
    "Non-nil means to distinguish hard and soft newlines.
When this is non-nil, the functions `newline' and `open-line' add the
text-property `hard' to newlines that they insert.  Also, a line is
only considered as a candidate to match `paragraph-start' or
`paragraph-separate' if it follows a hard newline.  Newlines not
marked hard are called \"soft\", and are always internal to
paragraphs.  The fill functions always insert soft newlines.

Each buffer has its own value of this variable.")
(make-variable-buffer-local 'use-hard-newlines)

(defconst paragraph-start "[ \t\n\f]" "\
*Regexp for beginning of a line that starts OR separates paragraphs.
This regexp should match lines that separate paragraphs
and should also match lines that start a paragraph
\(and are part of that paragraph).

This is matched against the text at the left margin, which is not necessarily
the beginning of the line, so it should never use \"^\" as an anchor.  This
ensures that the paragraph functions will work equally well within a region
of text indented by a margin setting.

The variable `paragraph-separate' specifies how to distinguish
lines that start paragraphs from lines that separate them.

If the variable `use-hard-newlines' is nonnil, then only lines following a
hard newline are considered to match.")

;; paragraph-start requires a hard newline, but paragraph-separate does not:
;; It is assumed that paragraph-separate is distinctive enough to be believed
;; whenever it occurs, while it is reasonable to set paragraph-start to
;; something very minimal, even including "." (which makes every hard newline
;; start a new paragraph).

(defconst paragraph-separate "[ \t\f]*$" "\
*Regexp for beginning of a line that separates paragraphs.
If you change this, you may have to change paragraph-start also.

This is matched against the text at the left margin, which is not necessarily
the beginning of the line, so it should not use \"^\" as an anchor.  This
ensures that the paragraph functions will work equally within a region of
text indented by a margin setting.")

(defconst sentence-end (purecopy "[.?!][]\"')}]*\\($\\| $\\|\t\\|  \\)[ \t\n]*") "\
*Regexp describing the end of a sentence.
All paragraph boundaries also end sentences, regardless.

In order to be recognized as the end of a sentence, the ending period,
question mark, or exclamation point must be followed by two spaces,
unless it's inside some sort of quotes or parenthesis.")

(defconst page-delimiter "^\014" "\
*Regexp describing line-beginnings that separate pages.")

(defvar paragraph-ignore-fill-prefix nil "\
Non-nil means the paragraph commands are not affected by `fill-prefix'.
This is desirable in modes where blank lines are the paragraph delimiters.")

(defun forward-paragraph (&optional arg)
  "Move forward to end of paragraph.
With arg N, do it N times; negative arg -N means move backward N paragraphs.

A line which `paragraph-start' matches either separates paragraphs
\(if `paragraph-separate' matches it also) or is the first line of a paragraph.
A paragraph end is the beginning of a line which is not part of the paragraph
to which the end of the previous line belongs, or the end of the buffer."
  (interactive "p")
  (or arg (setq arg 1))
  (let* ((fill-prefix-regexp
	  (and fill-prefix (not (equal fill-prefix ""))
	       (not paragraph-ignore-fill-prefix)
	       (regexp-quote fill-prefix)))
	 ;; Remove ^ from paragraph-start and paragraph-sep if they are there.
	 ;; These regexps shouldn't be anchored, because we look for them
	 ;; starting at the left-margin.  This allows paragraph commands to
	 ;; work normally with indented text.
	 ;; This hack will not find problem cases like "whatever\\|^something".
	 (paragraph-start (if (and (not (equal "" paragraph-start))
				   (equal ?^ (aref paragraph-start 0)))
			      (substring paragraph-start 1)
			    paragraph-start))
	 (paragraph-separate (if (and (not (equal "" paragraph-start))
				      (equal ?^ (aref paragraph-separate 0)))
			      (substring paragraph-separate 1)
			    paragraph-separate))
	 (paragraph-separate
	  (if fill-prefix-regexp
	      (concat paragraph-separate "\\|"
		      fill-prefix-regexp "[ \t]*$")
	    paragraph-separate))
	 ;; This is used for searching.
	 (sp-paragraph-start (concat "^[ \t]*\\(" paragraph-start "\\)"))
	 start)
    (while (and (< arg 0) (not (bobp)))
      (if (and (not (looking-at paragraph-separate))
	       (re-search-backward "^\n" (max (1- (point)) (point-min)) t)
	       (looking-at paragraph-separate))
	  nil
	(setq start (point))
	;; Move back over paragraph-separating lines.
	(forward-char -1) (beginning-of-line)
	(while (and (not (bobp))
		    (progn (move-to-left-margin)
			   (looking-at paragraph-separate)))
	  (forward-line -1)) 
	(if (bobp)
	    nil
	  ;; Go to end of the previous (non-separating) line.
	  (end-of-line)
	  ;; Search back for line that starts or separates paragraphs.
	  (if (if fill-prefix-regexp
		  ;; There is a fill prefix; it overrides paragraph-start.
		  (let (multiple-lines)
		    (while (and (progn (beginning-of-line) (not (bobp)))
				(progn (move-to-left-margin)
				       (not (looking-at paragraph-separate)))
				(looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
		      (if (not (= (point) start))
			  (setq multiple-lines t))
		      (forward-line -1))
		    (move-to-left-margin)
		    ;; Don't move back over a line before the paragraph
		    ;; which doesn't start with fill-prefix
		    ;; unless that is the only line we've moved over.
		    (and (not (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
			 multiple-lines
			 (forward-line 1))
		    (not (bobp)))
		(while (and (re-search-backward sp-paragraph-start nil 1)
			    ;; Found a candidate, but need to check if it is a
			    ;; REAL paragraph-start.
			    (not (bobp))
			    (progn (setq start (point))
				   (move-to-left-margin)
				   (not (looking-at paragraph-separate)))
			    (or (not (looking-at paragraph-start))
				(and use-hard-newlines
				     (not (get-text-property (1- start)
							     'hard)))))
		  (goto-char start))
		(> (point) (point-min)))
	      ;; Found one.
	      (progn
		;; Move forward over paragraph separators.
		;; We know this cannot reach the place we started
		;; because we know we moved back over a non-separator.
		(while (and (not (eobp))
			    (progn (move-to-left-margin)
				   (looking-at paragraph-separate)))
		  (forward-line 1))
		;; If line before paragraph is just margin, back up to there.
		(end-of-line 0)
		(if (> (current-column) (current-left-margin))
		    (forward-char 1)
		  (skip-chars-backward " \t")
		  (if (not (bolp))
		      (forward-line 1))))
	    ;; No starter or separator line => use buffer beg.
	    (goto-char (point-min)))))
      (setq arg (1+ arg)))
    (while (and (> arg 0) (not (eobp)))
      (while (prog1 (and (not (eobp))
			 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
			 (looking-at paragraph-separate))
	       (forward-line 1)))
      (if fill-prefix-regexp
	  ;; There is a fill prefix; it overrides paragraph-start.
	  (while (and (not (eobp))
		      (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
		      (not (looking-at paragraph-separate))
		      (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
	    (forward-line 1))
	(while (and (re-search-forward sp-paragraph-start nil 1)
		    (progn (setq start (match-beginning 0))
			   (goto-char start)
			   (not (eobp)))
		    (progn (move-to-left-margin)
			   (not (looking-at paragraph-separate)))
		    (or (not (looking-at paragraph-start))
			(and use-hard-newlines
			     (not (get-text-property (1- start) 'hard)))))
	  (forward-char 1))
	(if (< (point) (point-max))
	    (goto-char start)))
      (setq arg (1- arg)))))

(defun backward-paragraph (&optional arg)
  "Move backward to start of paragraph.
With arg N, do it N times; negative arg -N means move forward N paragraphs.

A paragraph start is the beginning of a line which is a
`first-line-of-paragraph' or which is ordinary text and follows a
paragraph-separating line; except: if the first real line of a
paragraph is preceded by a blank line, the paragraph starts at that
blank line.

See `forward-paragraph' for more information."
  (interactive "p")
  (or arg (setq arg 1))
  (forward-paragraph (- arg)))

(defun mark-paragraph ()
  "Put point at beginning of this paragraph, mark at end.
The paragraph marked is the one that contains point or follows point."
  (interactive)
  (forward-paragraph 1)
  (push-mark nil t t)
  (backward-paragraph 1))

(defun kill-paragraph (arg)
  "Kill forward to end of paragraph.
With arg N, kill forward to Nth end of paragraph;
negative arg -N means kill backward to Nth start of paragraph."
  (interactive "p")
  (kill-region (point) (progn (forward-paragraph arg) (point))))

(defun backward-kill-paragraph (arg)
  "Kill back to start of paragraph.
With arg N, kill back to Nth start of paragraph;
negative arg -N means kill forward to Nth end of paragraph."
  (interactive "p")
  (kill-region (point) (progn (backward-paragraph arg) (point))))

(defun transpose-paragraphs (arg)
  "Interchange this (or next) paragraph with previous one."
  (interactive "*p")
  (transpose-subr 'forward-paragraph arg))

(defun start-of-paragraph-text ()
  (let ((opoint (point)) npoint)
    (forward-paragraph -1)
    (setq npoint (point))
    (skip-chars-forward " \t\n")
    ;; If the range of blank lines found spans the original start point,
    ;; try again from the beginning of it.
    ;; Must be careful to avoid infinite loop
    ;; when following a single return at start of buffer.
    (if (and (>= (point) opoint) (< npoint opoint))
	(progn
	  (goto-char npoint)
	  (if (> npoint (point-min))
	      (start-of-paragraph-text))))))

(defun end-of-paragraph-text ()
  (let ((opoint (point)))
    (forward-paragraph 1)
    (if (eq (preceding-char) ?\n) (forward-char -1))
    (if (<= (point) opoint)
	(progn
	  (forward-char 1)
	  (if (< (point) (point-max))
	      (end-of-paragraph-text))))))

(defun forward-sentence (&optional arg)
  "Move forward to next `sentence-end'.  With argument, repeat.
With negative argument, move backward repeatedly to `sentence-beginning'.

The variable `sentence-end' is a regular expression that matches ends of
sentences.  Also, every paragraph boundary terminates sentences as well."
  (interactive "p")
  (or arg (setq arg 1))
  (while (< arg 0)
    (let ((par-beg (save-excursion (start-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
      (if (re-search-backward (concat sentence-end "[^ \t\n]") par-beg t)
	  (goto-char (1- (match-end 0)))
	(goto-char par-beg)))
    (setq arg (1+ arg)))
  (while (> arg 0)
    (let ((par-end (save-excursion (end-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
      (if (re-search-forward sentence-end par-end t)
	  (skip-chars-backward " \t\n")
	(goto-char par-end)))
    (setq arg (1- arg))))

(defun backward-sentence (&optional arg)
  "Move backward to start of sentence.  With arg, do it arg times.
See `forward-sentence' for more information."
  (interactive "p")
  (or arg (setq arg 1))
  (forward-sentence (- arg)))

(defun kill-sentence (&optional arg)
  "Kill from point to end of sentence.
With arg, repeat; negative arg -N means kill back to Nth start of sentence."
  (interactive "p")
  (kill-region (point) (progn (forward-sentence arg) (point))))

(defun backward-kill-sentence (&optional arg)
  "Kill back from point to start of sentence.
With arg, repeat, or kill forward to Nth end of sentence if negative arg -N."
  (interactive "p")
  (kill-region (point) (progn (backward-sentence arg) (point))))

(defun mark-end-of-sentence (arg)
  "Put mark at end of sentence.  Arg works as in `forward-sentence'."
  (interactive "p")
  (push-mark
    (save-excursion
      (forward-sentence arg)
      (point))
    nil t))

(defun transpose-sentences (arg)
  "Interchange this (next) and previous sentence."
  (interactive "*p")
  (transpose-subr 'forward-sentence arg))

;;; paragraphs.el ends here