view lisp/button.el @ 45079:bf76420e3297

(occur-mode-map): Bind "q" to `delete-window'. (occur-1): If one of the buffers we're searching is the *Occur* buffer itself, handle it by creating a temporary buffer. If any of the buffers being searched are killed, note that in the search result message. Also, set local variables before we possibly kill the buffer.
author Colin Walters <walters@gnu.org>
date Thu, 02 May 2002 21:22:47 +0000
parents 4c6b45c79a59
children 85b083d06a17
line wrap: on
line source

;;; button.el --- clickable buttons
;;
;; Copyright (C) 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;;
;; Author: Miles Bader <miles@gnu.org>
;; Keywords: extensions
;;
;; 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:
;;
;; This package defines functions for inserting and manipulating
;; clickable buttons in Emacs buffers, such as might be used for help
;; hyperlinks, etc.
;;
;; In some ways it duplicates functionality also offered by the
;; `widget' package, but the button package has the advantage that it
;; is (1) much faster, (2) much smaller, and (3) much, much, simpler
;; (the code, that is, not the interface).
;;
;; Buttons can either use overlays, in which case the button is
;; represented by the overlay itself, or text-properties, in which case
;; the button is represented by a marker or buffer-position pointing
;; somewhere in the button.  In the latter case, no markers into the
;; buffer are retained, which is important for speed if there are are
;; extremely large numbers of buttons.
;;
;; Using `define-button-type' to define default properties for buttons
;; is not necessary, but it is is encouraged, since doing so makes the
;; resulting code clearer and more efficient.
;;

;;; Code:


;; Globals

(defface button '((((type pc) (class color))
		   (:foreground "lightblue"))
		  (t :underline t))
  "Default face used for buttons.")

;;;###autoload
(defvar button-map
  (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
    (define-key map "\r" 'push-button)
    (define-key map [mouse-2] 'push-button)
    map)
  "Keymap used by buttons.")

;;;###autoload
(defvar button-buffer-map
  (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
    (define-key map [?\t] 'forward-button)
    (define-key map [backtab] 'backward-button)
    map)
  "Keymap useful for buffers containing buttons.
Mode-specific keymaps may want to use this as their parent keymap.")

;; Default properties for buttons
(put 'default-button 'face 'button)
(put 'default-button 'mouse-face 'highlight)
(put 'default-button 'keymap button-map)
(put 'default-button 'type 'button)
(put 'default-button 'action 'ignore)
(put 'default-button 'help-echo "mouse-2, RET: Push this button")
;; Make overlay buttons go away if their underlying text is deleted.
(put 'default-button 'evaporate t)
;; Prevent insertions adjacent to the text-property buttons from
;; inheriting its properties.
(put 'default-button 'rear-nonsticky t)
;; Text property buttons don't have a `button' property of their own, so
;; they inherit this.
(put 'default-button 'button t)

;; A `category-symbol' property for the default button type
(put 'button 'button-category-symbol 'default-button)


;; Button types (which can be used to hold default properties for buttons)

;; Because button-type properties are inherited by buttons using the
;; special `category' property (implemented by both overlays and
;; text-properties), we need to store them on a symbol to which the
;; `category' properties can point.  Instead of using the symbol that's
;; the name of each button-type, however, we use a separate symbol (with
;; `-button' appended, and uninterned) to store the properties.  This is
;; to avoid name clashes.

;; [this is an internal function]
(defsubst button-category-symbol (type)
  "Return the symbol used by button-type TYPE to store properties.
Buttons inherit them by setting their `category' property to that symbol."
  (or (get type 'button-category-symbol)
      (error "Unknown button type `%s'" type)))

;;;###autoload
(defun define-button-type (name &rest properties)
  "Define a `button type' called NAME.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
specifying properties to use as defaults for buttons with this type
\(a button's type may be set by giving it a `type' property when
creating the button, using the :type keyword argument).

In addition, the keyword argument :supertype may be used to specify a
button-type from which NAME inherits its default property values
\(however, the inheritance happens only when NAME is defined; subsequent
changes to a supertype are not reflected in its subtypes)."
  (let ((catsym (make-symbol (concat (symbol-name name) "-button")))
	(super-catsym
	 (button-category-symbol
	  (or (plist-get properties 'supertype)
	      (plist-get properties :supertype)
	      'button))))
    ;; Provide a link so that it's easy to find the real symbol.
    (put name 'button-category-symbol catsym)
    ;; Initialize NAME's properties using the global defaults.
    (let ((default-props (symbol-plist super-catsym)))
      (while default-props
	(put catsym (pop default-props) (pop default-props))))
    ;; Add NAME as the `type' property, which will then be returned as
    ;; the type property of individual buttons.
    (put catsym 'type name)
    ;; Add the properties in PROPERTIES to the real symbol.
    (while properties
      (let ((prop (pop properties)))
	(when (eq prop :supertype)
	  (setq prop 'supertype))
	(put catsym prop (pop properties))))
    ;; Make sure there's a `supertype' property
    (unless (get catsym 'supertype)
      (put catsym 'supertype 'button))
    name))

(defun button-type-put (type prop val)
  "Set the button-type TYPE's PROP property to VAL."
  (put (button-category-symbol type) prop val))

(defun button-type-get (type prop)
  "Get the property of button-type TYPE named PROP."
  (get (button-category-symbol type) prop))

(defun button-type-subtype-p (type supertype)
  "Return t if button-type TYPE is a subtype of SUPERTYPE."
  (or (eq type supertype)
      (and type
	   (button-type-subtype-p (button-type-get type 'supertype)
				  supertype))))


;; Button properties and other attributes

(defun button-start (button)
  "Return the position at which BUTTON starts."
  (if (overlayp button)
      (overlay-start button)
    ;; Must be a text-property button.
    (or (previous-single-property-change (1+ button) 'button)
	(point-min))))

(defun button-end (button)
  "Return the position at which BUTTON ends."
  (if (overlayp button)
      (overlay-end button)
    ;; Must be a text-property button.
    (or (next-single-property-change button 'button)
	(point-max))))

(defun button-get (button prop)
  "Get the property of button BUTTON named PROP."
  (if (overlayp button)
      (overlay-get button prop)
    ;; Must be a text-property button.
    (get-text-property button prop)))

(defun button-put (button prop val)
  "Set BUTTON's PROP property to VAL."
  ;; Treat some properties specially.
  (cond ((memq prop '(type :type))
	 ;; We translate a `type' property a `category' property, since
	 ;; that's what's actually used by overlays/text-properties for
	 ;; inheriting properties.
	 (setq prop 'category)
	 (setq val (button-category-symbol val)))
	((eq prop 'category)
	 ;; Disallow updating the `category' property directly.
	 (error "Button `category' property may not be set directly")))
  ;; Add the property.
  (if (overlayp button)
      (overlay-put button prop val)
    ;; Must be a text-property button.
    (put-text-property
     (or (previous-single-property-change (1+ button) 'button)
	 (point-min))
     (or (next-single-property-change button 'button)
	 (point-max))
     prop val)))

(defsubst button-activate (button &optional use-mouse-action)
  "Call BUTTON's action property.
If USE-MOUSE-ACTION is non-nil, invoke the button's mouse-action
instead of its normal action; if the button has no mouse-action,
the normal action is used instead."
  (funcall (or (and use-mouse-action (button-get button 'mouse-action))
	       (button-get button 'action))
	   button))

(defun button-label (button)
  "Return BUTTON's text label."
  (buffer-substring-no-properties (button-start button) (button-end button)))

(defsubst button-type (button)
  "Return BUTTON's button-type."
  (button-get button 'type))

(defun button-has-type-p (button type)
  "Return t if BUTTON has button-type TYPE, or one of TYPE's subtypes."
  (button-type-subtype-p (button-get button 'type) type))


;; Creating overlay buttons

;;;###autoload
(defun make-button (beg end &rest properties)
  "Make a button from BEG to END in the current buffer.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
specifying properties to add to the button.
In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
`define-button-type'.

Also see `make-text-button', `insert-button'."
  (let ((overlay (make-overlay beg end nil t nil)))
    (while properties
      (button-put overlay (pop properties) (pop properties)))
    ;; Put a pointer to the button in the overlay, so it's easy to get
    ;; when we don't actually have a reference to the overlay.
    (overlay-put overlay 'button overlay)
    ;; If the user didn't specify a type, use the default.
    (unless (overlay-get overlay 'category)
      (overlay-put overlay 'category 'default-button))
    ;; OVERLAY is the button, so return it
    overlay))

;;;###autoload
(defun insert-button (label &rest properties)
  "Insert a button with the label LABEL.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
specifying properties to add to the button.
In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
`define-button-type'.

Also see `insert-text-button', `make-button'."
  (apply #'make-button
	 (prog1 (point) (insert label))
	 (point)
	 properties))


;; Creating text-property buttons

;;;###autoload
(defun make-text-button (beg end &rest properties)
  "Make a button from BEG to END in the current buffer.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
specifying properties to add to the button.
In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
`define-button-type'.

This function is like `make-button', except that the button is actually
part of the text instead of being a property of the buffer.  Creating
large numbers of buttons can also be somewhat faster using
`make-text-button'.

Also see `insert-text-button'."
  (let (prop val)
    (while properties
      (setq prop (pop properties))
      (setq val (pop properties))
      ;; Note that all the following code is basically equivalent to
      ;; `button-put', but we can do it much more efficiently since we
      ;; already have BEG and END.
      (cond ((memq prop '(type :type))
	     ;; We translate a `type' property into a `category'
	     ;; property, since that's what's actually used by
	     ;; text-properties for inheritance.
	     (setq prop 'category)
	     (setq val (button-category-symbol val)))
	    ((eq prop 'category)
	     ;; Disallow setting the `category' property directly.
	     (error "Button `category' property may not be set directly")))
      ;; Add the property.
      (put-text-property beg end prop val)))
  ;; Return something that can be used to get at the button.
  beg)

;;;###autoload
(defun insert-text-button (label &rest properties)
  "Insert a button with the label LABEL.
The remaining arguments form a sequence of PROPERTY VALUE pairs,
specifying properties to add to the button.
In addition, the keyword argument :type may be used to specify a
button-type from which to inherit other properties; see
`define-button-type'.

This function is like `insert-button', except that the button is
actually part of the text instead of being a property of the buffer.
Creating large numbers of buttons can also be somewhat faster using
`insert-text-button'.

Also see `make-text-button'."
  (apply #'make-text-button
	 (prog1 (point) (insert label))
	 (point)
	 properties))


;; Finding buttons in a buffer

(defun button-at (pos)
  "Return the button at position POS in the current buffer, or nil."
  (let ((button (get-char-property pos 'button)))
    (if (or (overlayp button) (null button))
	button
      ;; Must be a text-property button; return a marker pointing to it.
      (copy-marker pos t))))

(defun next-button (pos &optional count-current)
  "Return the next button after position POS in the current buffer.
If COUNT-CURRENT is non-nil, count any button at POS in the search,
instead of starting at the next button."
    (unless count-current
      ;; Search for the next button boundary.
      (setq pos (next-single-char-property-change pos 'button)))
    (and (< pos (point-max))
	 (or (button-at pos)
	     ;; We must have originally been on a button, and are now in
	     ;; the inter-button space.  Recurse to find a button.
	     (next-button pos))))

(defun previous-button (pos &optional count-current)
  "Return the Nth button before position POS in the current buffer.
If COUNT-CURRENT is non-nil, count any button at POS in the search,
instead of starting at the next button."
  (unless count-current
    (setq pos (previous-single-char-property-change pos 'button)))
  (and (> pos (point-min))
       (or (button-at (1- pos))
	   ;; We must have originally been on a button, and are now in
	   ;; the inter-button space.  Recurse to find a button.
	   (previous-button pos))))


;; User commands

(defun push-button (&optional pos use-mouse-action)
  "Perform the action specified by a button at location POS.
POS may be either a buffer position or a mouse-event.
If USE-MOUSE-ACTION is non-nil, invoke the button's mouse-action
instead of its normal action; if the button has no mouse-action,
the normal action is used instead.
POS defaults to point, except when `push-button' is invoked
interactively as the result of a mouse-event, in which case, the
mouse event is used.
If there's no button at POS, do nothing and return nil, otherwise
return t."
  (interactive
   (list (if (integerp last-command-event) (point) last-command-event)))
  (if (and (not (integerp pos)) (eventp pos))
      ;; POS is a mouse event; switch to the proper window/buffer
      (let ((posn (event-start pos)))
	(with-current-buffer (window-buffer (posn-window posn))
	  (push-button (posn-point posn) t)))
    ;; POS is just normal position
    (let ((button (button-at (or pos (point)))))
      (if (not button)
	  nil
	(button-activate button use-mouse-action)
	t))))

(defun forward-button (n &optional wrap display-message)
  "Move to the Nth next button, or Nth previous button if N is negative.
If N is 0, move to the start of any button at point.
If WRAP is non-nil, moving past either end of the buffer continues from the
other end.
If DISPLAY-MESSAGE is non-nil, the button's help-echo string is displayed.
Any button with a non-nil `skip' property is skipped over.
Returns the button found."
  (interactive "p\nd\nd")
  (let (button)
    (if (zerop n)
	;; Move to start of current button
	(if (setq button (button-at (point)))
	    (goto-char (button-start button)))
      ;; Move to Nth next button
      (let ((iterator (if (> n 0) #'next-button #'previous-button))
	    (wrap-start (if (> n 0) (point-min) (point-max))))
	(setq n (abs n))
	(setq button t)			; just to start the loop
	(while (and (> n 0) button)
	  (setq button (funcall iterator (point)))
	  (when (and (not button) wrap)
	    (setq button (funcall iterator wrap-start t)))
	  (when button
	    (goto-char (button-start button))
	    (unless (button-get button 'skip)
	      (setq n (1- n)))))))
    (if (null button)
	(error (if wrap "No buttons!" "No more buttons"))
      (let ((msg (and display-message (button-get button 'help-echo))))
	(when msg
	  (message "%s" msg)))
      button)))

(defun backward-button (n &optional wrap display-message)
  "Move to the Nth previous button, or Nth next button if N is negative.
If N is 0, move to the start of any button at point.
If WRAP is non-nil, moving past either end of the buffer continues from the
other end.
If DISPLAY-MESSAGE is non-nil, the button's help-echo string is displayed.
Any button with a non-nil `skip' property is skipped over.
Returns the button found."
  (interactive "p\nd\nd")
  (forward-button (- n) wrap display-message))


(provide 'button)

;;; button.el ends here