view lisp/window.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 75c6a5e1ee7a
children 84de7ffae8ae
line wrap: on
line source

;;; window.el --- GNU Emacs window commands aside from those written in C.

;;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

;; Maintainer: FSF

;; 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.

;;; Code:

;;;; Window tree functions.

(defun one-window-p (&optional nomini all-frames)
  "Returns non-nil if the selected window is the only window (in its frame).
Optional arg NOMINI non-nil means don't count the minibuffer
even if it is active.

The optional arg ALL-FRAMES t means count windows on all frames.
If it is `visible', count windows on all visible frames.
ALL-FRAMES nil or omitted means count only the selected frame, 
plus the minibuffer it uses (which may be on another frame).
If ALL-FRAMES is neither nil nor t, count only the selected frame."
  (let ((base-window (selected-window)))
    (if (and nomini (eq base-window (minibuffer-window)))
	(setq base-window (next-window base-window)))
    (eq base-window
	(next-window base-window (if nomini 'arg) all-frames))))

(defun walk-windows (proc &optional minibuf all-frames)
  "Cycle through all visible windows, calling PROC for each one.
PROC is called with a window as argument.

Optional second arg MINIBUF t means count the minibuffer window even
if not active.  MINIBUF nil or omitted means count the minibuffer iff
it is active.  MINIBUF neither t nor nil means not to count the
minibuffer even if it is active.

Several frames may share a single minibuffer; if the minibuffer
counts, all windows on all frames that share that minibuffer count
too.  Therefore, when a separate minibuffer frame is active,
`walk-windows' includes the windows in the frame from which you
entered the minibuffer, as well as the minibuffer window.  But if the
minibuffer does not count, only windows from WINDOW's frame count.

ALL-FRAMES is the optional third argument.
ALL-FRAMES nil or omitted means cycle within the frames as specified above.
ALL-FRAMES = `visible' means include windows on all visible frames.
ALL-FRAMES = 0 means include windows on all visible and iconified frames.
ALL-FRAMES = t means include windows on all frames including invisible frames.
Anything else means restrict to WINDOW's frame."
  ;; If we start from the minibuffer window, don't fail to come back to it.
  (if (window-minibuffer-p (selected-window))
      (setq minibuf t))
  (let* ((walk-windows-start (selected-window))
	 (walk-windows-current walk-windows-start))
    (while (progn
	     (setq walk-windows-current
		   (next-window walk-windows-current minibuf all-frames))
	     (funcall proc walk-windows-current)
	     (not (eq walk-windows-current walk-windows-start))))))

(defun minibuffer-window-active-p (window)
  "Return t if WINDOW (a minibuffer window) is now active."
  (eq window (active-minibuffer-window)))

(defmacro save-selected-window (&rest body)
  "Execute BODY, then select the window that was selected before BODY."
  (list 'let
	'((save-selected-window-window (selected-window)))
	(list 'unwind-protect
	      (cons 'progn body)
	      (list 'select-window 'save-selected-window-window)))) 

(defun count-windows (&optional minibuf)
   "Returns the number of visible windows.
Optional arg NO-MINI non-nil means don't count the minibuffer
even if it is active."
   (let ((count 0))
     (walk-windows (function (lambda (w)
			       (setq count (+ count 1))))
		   minibuf)
     count))

(defun balance-windows ()
  "Makes all visible windows the same height (approximately)."
  (interactive)
  (let ((count -1) levels newsizes size
	;; Don't count the lines that are above the uppermost windows.
	;; (These are the menu bar lines, if any.)
	(mbl (nth 1 (window-edges (frame-first-window (selected-frame))))))
    ;; Find all the different vpos's at which windows start,
    ;; then count them.  But ignore levels that differ by only 1.
    (save-window-excursion
      (let (tops (prev-top -2))
	(walk-windows (function (lambda (w)
				  (setq tops (cons (nth 1 (window-edges w))
						   tops))))
		      'nomini)
	(setq tops (sort tops '<))
	(while tops
	  (if (> (car tops) (1+ prev-top))
	      (setq prev-top (car tops)
		    count (1+ count)))
	  (setq levels (cons (cons (car tops) count) levels))
	  (setq tops (cdr tops)))
	(setq count (1+ count))))
    ;; Subdivide the frame into that many vertical levels.
    (setq size (/ (- (frame-height) mbl) count))
    (walk-windows (function
		   (lambda (w)
		     (select-window w)
		     (let ((newtop (cdr (assq (nth 1 (window-edges))
					      levels)))
			   (newbot (or (cdr (assq (+ (window-height)
						     (nth 1 (window-edges)))
						  levels))
				       count)))
		       (setq newsizes
			     (cons (cons w (* size (- newbot newtop)))
				   newsizes)))))
		  'nomini)
    (walk-windows (function (lambda (w)
			      (select-window w)
			      (let ((newsize (cdr (assq w newsizes))))
				(enlarge-window (- newsize
						   (window-height))))))
		  'nomini)))

;;; I think this should be the default; I think people will prefer it--rms.
(defvar split-window-keep-point t
  "*If non-nil, split windows keeps the original point in both children.
This is often more convenient for editing.
If nil, adjust point in each of the two windows to minimize redisplay.
This is convenient on slow terminals, but point can move strangely.")

(defun split-window-vertically (&optional arg)
  "Split current window into two windows, one above the other.
The uppermost window gets ARG lines and the other gets the rest.
Negative arg means select the size of the lowermost window instead.
With no argument, split equally or close to it.
Both windows display the same buffer now current.

If the variable split-window-keep-point is non-nil, both new windows
will get the same value of point as the current window.  This is often
more convenient for editing.

Otherwise, we chose window starts so as to minimize the amount of
redisplay; this is convenient on slow terminals.  The new selected
window is the one that the current value of point appears in.  The
value of point can change if the text around point is hidden by the
new mode line."
  (interactive "P")
  (let ((old-w (selected-window))
	(old-point (point))
	(size (and arg (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
	new-w bottom switch)
    (and size (< size 0) (setq size (+ (window-height) size)))
    (setq new-w (split-window nil size))
    (or split-window-keep-point
	(progn
	  (save-excursion
	    (set-buffer (window-buffer))
	    (goto-char (window-start))
	    (vertical-motion (window-height))
	    (set-window-start new-w (point))
	    (if (> (point) (window-point new-w))
		(set-window-point new-w (point)))
	    (vertical-motion -1)
	    (setq bottom (point)))
	  (if (<= bottom (point))
	      (set-window-point old-w (1- bottom)))
	  (if (< (window-start new-w) old-point)
	      (progn
		(set-window-point new-w old-point)
		(select-window new-w)))))
    new-w))

(defun split-window-horizontally (&optional arg)
  "Split current window into two windows side by side.
This window becomes the leftmost of the two, and gets ARG columns.
Negative arg means select the size of the rightmost window instead.
No arg means split equally."
  (interactive "P")
  (let ((size (and arg (prefix-numeric-value arg))))
    (and size (< size 0)
	 (setq size (+ (window-width) size)))
    (split-window nil size t)))

(defun enlarge-window-horizontally (arg)
  "Make current window ARG columns wider."
  (interactive "p")
  (enlarge-window arg t))

(defun shrink-window-horizontally (arg)
  "Make current window ARG columns narrower."
  (interactive "p")
  (shrink-window arg t))

(defun shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer (&optional window)
  "Shrink the WINDOW to be as small as possible to display its contents.
Do not shrink to less than `window-min-height' lines.
Do nothing if the buffer contains more lines than the present window height,
or if some of the window's contents are scrolled out of view,
or if the window is not the full width of the frame,
or if the window is the only window of its frame."
  (interactive)
  (or window (setq window (selected-window)))
  (save-excursion
    (set-buffer (window-buffer window))
    (let* ((w (selected-window))	;save-window-excursion can't win
	   (buffer-file-name buffer-file-name)
	   (p (point))
	   (n 0)
	   (ignore-final-newline
	    ;; If buffer ends with a newline, ignore it when counting height
	    ;; unless point is after it.
	    (and (not (eobp))
		 (eq ?\n (char-after (1- (point-max))))))
	   (buffer-read-only nil)
	   (modified (buffer-modified-p))
	   (buffer (current-buffer))
	   (params (frame-parameters (window-frame window)))
	   (mini (cdr (assq 'minibuffer params)))
	   (edges (window-edges (selected-window))))
      (if (and (< 1 (let ((frame (selected-frame)))
		      (select-frame (window-frame window))
		      (unwind-protect
			  (count-windows)
			(select-frame frame))))
	       (= (window-width window) (frame-width (window-frame window)))
	       (pos-visible-in-window-p (point-min) window)
	       (not (eq mini 'only))
	       (or (not mini)
		   (< (nth 3 edges)
		      (nth 1 (window-edges mini)))
		   (> (nth 1 edges)
		      (cdr (assq 'menu-bar-lines params)))))
	  (unwind-protect
	      (progn
		(select-window (or window w))
		(goto-char (point-min))
		(while (pos-visible-in-window-p
			(- (point-max)
			   (if ignore-final-newline 1 0)))
		  ;; defeat file locking... don't try this at home, kids!
		  (setq buffer-file-name nil)
		  (insert ?\n) (setq n (1+ n)))
		(if (> n 0)
		    (shrink-window (min (1- n)
					(- (window-height)
					   window-min-height)))))
	    (delete-region (point-min) (point))
	    (set-buffer-modified-p modified)
	    (goto-char p)
	    (select-window w)
	    ;; Make sure we unbind buffer-read-only
	    ;; with the proper current buffer.
	    (set-buffer buffer))))))
      
(define-key ctl-x-map "2" 'split-window-vertically)
(define-key ctl-x-map "3" 'split-window-horizontally)
(define-key ctl-x-map "}" 'enlarge-window-horizontally)
(define-key ctl-x-map "{" 'shrink-window-horizontally)
(define-key ctl-x-map "-" 'shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer)
(define-key ctl-x-map "+" 'balance-windows)

;;; windows.el ends here