view etc/emacs.bash @ 39890:bc9296467c86

(sh-font-lock-syntactic-keywords): Handle here-docs differently. (sh-font-lock-heredoc): Remove. (sh-here-doc-open-re, sh-here-doc-markers, sh-here-doc-re): New vars. (sh-font-lock-here-doc, sh-font-lock-close-heredoc) (sh-font-lock-open-heredoc): New functions. (sh-mode): Don't copy sh-font-lock-syntactic-keywords any more. (sh-font-lock-keywords-1): Use regexp-opt. (sh-in-comment-or-string): Use syntax-ppss. (sh-case, sh-for, sh-indexed-loop, sh-function, sh-if, sh-repeat) (sh-select, sh-tmp-file): Add explicit terminating \n.
author Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca>
date Sat, 13 Oct 2001 19:08:30 +0000
parents e96ffe544684
children 23a1cea22d13
line wrap: on
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# This defines a bash command named `edit' which contacts/resumes an
# existing emacs or starts a new one if none exists.
#
# One way or another, any arguments are passed to emacs to specify files
# (provided you have loaded `resume.el').
#
# This function assumes the emacs program is named `emacs' and is somewhere
# in your load path.  If either of these is not true, the most portable
# (and convenient) thing to do is to make an alias called emacs which
# refers to the real program, e.g. 
#
#        alias emacs=/usr/local/bin/gemacs
#
# Written by Noah Friedman.

function edit ()
{
 local windowsys="${WINDOW_PARENT+sun}"

 windowsys="${windowsys:-${DISPLAY+x}}"

 if [ -n "${windowsys:+set}" ]; then
    # Do not just test if these files are sockets.  On some systems
    # ordinary files or fifos are used instead.  Just see if they exist.
    if [ -e "${HOME}/.emacs_server" -o -e "/tmp/esrv${UID}-"* ]; then
       emacsclient "$@"
       return $?
    else
       echo "edit: starting emacs in background..." 1>&2
    fi

    case "${windowsys}" in
      x ) (emacs "$@" &) ;;
      sun ) (emacstool "$@" &) ;;
    esac
 else   
    if jobs %emacs 2> /dev/null ; then
       echo "$(pwd)" "$@" >| ${HOME}/.emacs_args && fg %emacs
    else
       emacs "$@"
    fi
 fi
}