view lisp/mouse-copy.el @ 40819:668787248f9b

* dired.el (dired-move-to-filename-regexp): Do not distinguish between ASCII letters and non-ASCII characters. Don't allow comma except in the form "month day, year". Don't allow space between month name and comma. Clean up the code that checks for trailing period, comma, and space. Remove now-obsolete comments, and add more commentary about Japanese dates. Always gobble up trailing spaces, instead of doing it only sometimes.
author Paul Eggert <eggert@twinsun.com>
date Wed, 07 Nov 2001 21:59:39 +0000
parents da252e5249cd
children 3629687a948d
line wrap: on
line source

;;; mouse-copy.el --- one-click text copy and move

;; Copyright (C) 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

;; Author: John Heidemann <johnh@ISI.EDU>
;; Keywords: mouse

;; 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, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.

;;; Commentary:

;;; What is ``mouse-copy.el''?
;;;
;;; It provides one-click text copy and move.  Rather than the
;;; standard stroke-out-a-region (down-mouse-1, up-mouse-1) followed
;;; by a yank (down-mouse-2, up-mouse-2 or C-y), you can now stroke
;;; out a region and have it automatically pasted at the current
;;; point.  You can also move text just as easily.  Although the
;;; difference may not sound like much, it does make mousing text
;;; around a lot easier, IMHO.
;;;
;;; If you like mouse-copy, you should also check out mouse-drag
;;; for ``one-click scrolling''.
;;;
;;; To use mouse-copy, place the following in your .emacs file:
;;;	(require 'mouse-copy)
;;;     (global-set-key [M-down-mouse-1] 'mouse-drag-secondary-pasting)
;;;     (global-set-key [M-S-down-mouse-1] 'mouse-drag-secondary-moving)
;;;
;;; (These definitions override the old binding of M-mouse-1 to
;;; mouse-drag-secondary.  I find I don't use that command much so its
;;; loss is not important, and it can be made up with a M-mouse-1
;;; followed by a M-mouse-3.  I personally reserve M-mouse bindings
;;; for my window manager and bind everything to C-mouse.)
;;;
;;;
;;; History and related work:
;;;
;;; One-click copying and moving was inspired by lemacs-19.8.
;;; Throw-scrolling was inspired by MacPaint's ``hand'' and by Tk's
;;; mouse-2 scrolling.  The package mouse-scroll.el by Tom Wurgler
;;; <twurgler@goodyear.com> is similar to mouse-drag-throw, but
;;; doesn't pass clicks through.
;;;
;;; These functions have been tested in emacs version 19.30,
;;; and this package has run in the past on 19.25-19.29.
;;;
;;; Originally mouse-copy was part of a larger package.
;;; As of 11 July 96 the scrolling functions were split out
;;; in preparation for incorporation into (the future) emacs-19.32.
;;;
;;;
;;; Known Bugs:
;;;
;;; - Highlighting is sub-optimal under 19.29 and XFree86-3.1.1
;;;   (see \\[mouse-copy-work-around-drag-bug] for details).
;;; - mouse-drag-secondary-pasting and mouse-drag-secondary-moving
;;;   require X11R5 (or better) and so fail under older versions
;;;   of Open Windows (like that present in Solaris/x86 2.1).
;;;
;;;
;;; Future plans:
;;;
;;; I read about the chording features of Plan-9's Acme environment at
;;; <http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/app/wily/auug.html>.  I'd like
;;; to incorporate some of these ideas into mouse-copy.  The only
;;; lose is that this is not the current Emacs Way Of Doing Things, so
;;; there would be a learning curve for existing emacs users.
;;;
;;;
;;; Thanks:
;;;
;;; Thanks to Kai Grossjohann
;;; <grossjoh@dusty.informatik.uni-dortmund.de> for reporting bugs, to
;;; Tom Wurgler <twurgler@goodyear.com> for reporting bugs and
;;; suggesting fixes, and to Joel Graber <jgraber@ti.com> for
;;; prompting me to do drag-scrolling and for an initial
;;; implementation of horizontal drag-scrolling.
;;;
;;;    -johnh, 11-Jul-96

;;; Code:

;;
;; move/paste code
;;

(defvar mouse-copy-last-paste-start nil
  "Internal to `mouse-drag-secondary-pasting'.")
(defvar mouse-copy-last-paste-end nil
  "Internal to `mouse-drag-secondary-pasting'.")

(defvar mouse-copy-have-drag-bug nil
  "Set to enable mouse-copy-work-around-drag-bug.
See `mouse-copy-work-around-drag-bug' for details.")

(defun mouse-copy-work-around-drag-bug (start-event end-event)
  "Code to work around a bug in post-19.29 emacs:  it drops mouse-drag events.
The problem occurs under XFree86-3.1.1 (X11R6pl11) but not under X11R5,
and under post-19.29 but not early versions of emacs.

19.29 and 19.30 seems to drop mouse drag events
sometimes. (Reproducable under XFree86-3.1.1 (X11R6pl11) and
XFree86-3.1.2 under Linux 1.2.x.  Doesn't occur under X11R5 and SunOS
4.1.1.)

To see if you have the problem:
Disable this routine (with (setq mouse-copy-have-drag-bug nil))..
Click and drag for a while.
If highlighting stops tracking, you have the bug.
If you have the bug (or the real fix :-), please let me know."

  ;; To work-around, call mouse-set-secondary with a fake
  ;; drag event to set the overlay,
  ;; the load the x-selection.
  (save-excursion
    (let*
	((start-posn (event-start start-event))
	 (end-posn (event-end end-event))
	 (end-buffer (window-buffer (posn-window end-posn)))
	 ;; First, figure out the region (left as point/mark).
	 (range (progn
		  (set-buffer end-buffer)
		  (mouse-start-end (posn-point start-posn)
				 (posn-point end-posn)
				 (1- (event-click-count start-event)))))
	 (beg (car range))
	 (end (car (cdr range))))
      ;; Second, set the overlay.
      (if mouse-secondary-overlay
	  (move-overlay mouse-secondary-overlay beg end)
	(setq mouse-secondary-overlay (make-overlay beg (posn-point end))))
      (overlay-put mouse-secondary-overlay 'face 'secondary-selection)
      ;; Third, set the selection.
      ;; (setq me-beg beg me-end end me-range range)  ; for debugging
      (set-buffer end-buffer)
      (x-set-selection 'SECONDARY (buffer-substring beg end)))))

    
(defun mouse-drag-secondary-pasting (start-event)
  "Drag out a secondary selection, then paste it at the current point.

To test this function, evaluate:
	(global-set-key [M-down-mouse-1] 'mouse-drag-secondary-pasting)
put the point at one place, then click and drag over some other region."
  (interactive "e")
  ;; Work-around: We see and react to each part of a multi-click event
  ;; as it proceeds.  For a triple-event, this means the double-event
  ;; has already copied something that the triple-event will re-copy
  ;; (a Bad Thing).  We therefore undo the prior insertion if we're on
  ;; a multiple event.
  (if (and mouse-copy-last-paste-start
	   (>= (event-click-count start-event) 2))
      (delete-region mouse-copy-last-paste-start
		     mouse-copy-last-paste-end))

  ;; HACK: We assume that mouse-drag-secondary returns nil if
  ;; there's no secondary selection.  This assumption holds as of
  ;; emacs-19.22 but is not documented.  It's not clear that there's
  ;; any other way to get this information.
  (if (mouse-drag-secondary start-event)
      (progn
	(if mouse-copy-have-drag-bug
	    (mouse-copy-work-around-drag-bug start-event last-input-event))
	;; Remember what we do so we can undo it, if necessary.
	(setq mouse-copy-last-paste-start (point))
	(insert (x-get-selection 'SECONDARY))
	(setq mouse-copy-last-paste-end (point)))
    (setq mouse-copy-last-paste-start nil)))
  

(defun mouse-kill-preserving-secondary ()
  "Kill the text in the secondary selection, but leave the selection set.

This command is like \\[mouse-kill-secondary] (that is, the secondary
selection is deleted and placed in the kill ring), except that it also
leaves the secondary buffer active on exit.

This command was derived from mouse-kill-secondary in emacs-19.28
by johnh@ficus.cs.ucla.edu."
  (interactive)
  (let* ((keys (this-command-keys))
	 (click (elt keys (1- (length keys)))))
    (or (eq (overlay-buffer mouse-secondary-overlay)
	    (if (listp click)
		(window-buffer (posn-window (event-start click)))
	      (current-buffer)))
	(error "Select or click on the buffer where the secondary selection is")))
  (save-excursion
    (set-buffer (overlay-buffer mouse-secondary-overlay))
    (kill-region (overlay-start mouse-secondary-overlay)
		 (overlay-end mouse-secondary-overlay)))
  ;; (delete-overlay mouse-secondary-overlay)
  ;; (x-set-selection 'SECONDARY nil)
  ;; (setq mouse-secondary-overlay nil)
)

(defun mouse-drag-secondary-moving (start-event)
  "Sweep out a secondary selection, then move it to the current point."
  (interactive "e")
  ;; HACK:  We assume that mouse-drag-secondary returns nil if
  ;; there's no secondary selection.  This works as of emacs-19.22.
  ;; It's not clear that there's any other way to get this information.
  (if (mouse-drag-secondary start-event)
      (progn
	(mouse-kill-preserving-secondary)
	(insert (x-get-selection 'SECONDARY))))
)

(provide 'mouse-copy)

;;; mouse-copy.el ends here