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view lisp/=old-shell.el @ 10219:d97313bb6f39
(bibtex-string, bibtex-preamble): Use forward-line.
(sort-subr): Don't call autload for this--that's done in loaddefs.el.
(bibtex-mode): Add autoload cookie.
Changed keybinding for bibtex-print-help-message
(from \C-ch to \C-c?). Therefore, describe-mode is not longer on
\C-c?. Also, changed prefix \C-cn for bibtex-narrow functions to
\C-c\C-r.
(bibtex-string-files): Changed documentation.
(bibtex-mode-map): Inscriptions of menu bar changed from "Entry
Types" to "Entry-Types" and "Bibtex Edit" to "BibTeX-Edit".
(bibtex-string-files): Changed documentation.
(bibtex-mode): If environment variable BIBINPUTS isn't defined,
string files are searched in the current directory.
(bibtex-completion-candidates): Now buffer-local to allow
evaluation of different bibtex-string-files in different buffers.
(bibtex-autokey-edit-before-use, bibtex-clean-entry): New variable
that determines, if the user is allowed to edit auto-generated
reference keys before they are used.
(bibtex-generate-autokey, bibtex-clean-entry): New function to
generate an autokey if necessary.
(bibtex-autokey-names, bibtex-autokey-name-change-strings,
bibtex-autokey-name-length, bibtex-autokey-name-separator,
bibtex-autokey-year-length, bibtex-autokey-titlewords,
bibtex-autokey-title-terminators,
bibtex-autokey-titlewords-stretch,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-first-ignore,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-abbrevs,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-change-strings,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-length,
bibtex-autokey-titleword-separator,
bibtex-autokey-name-year-separator,
bibtex-autokey-year-title-separator): New variables related to
bibtex-generate-autokey.
(bibtex-find-entry-location): Optional second parameter maybedup
to tell it that entering a duplicate entry isn't to report by an
error but by the return value of the function (necessary for
bibtex-clean-entry to find the correct position of an entry with
an autogenerated key without disturbing the user with unwanted
messages).
(bibtex-help-message): New variable to avoid printing of help
messages in the echo area.
(assoc-of-regexp): New function to match an alist of regexps.
(bibtex-string-files, bibtex-completion-candidates, bibtex-mode):
New variables to allow bibtex-complete-string to work on strings
initialized from a variable and from @String definitions in a list
of files, too.
(bibtex-predefined-strings, bibtex-entry-field-alist): Changed to
user options.
(bibtex-mode): Changed doc string.
(many functions and variables): Changed documentation strings of
variables and functions to hold a complete sentence in the first
line.
(bibtex-print-help-message): Now line dependent and reports if it
is called outside a BibTeX field.
(validate-bibtex-buffer): Completely rewritten to validate, if
buffer is syntactically correct.
(find-bibtex-duplicates): Moved into validate-bibtex-buffer.
(ispell-abstract, bibtex-ispell-abstract, ispell-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-ispell-entry, beginning-of-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-beginning-of-entry, end-of-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-end-of-entry, hide-bibtex-entry-bodies,
bibtex-hide-entry-bodies, narrow-to-bibtex-entry,
bibtex-narrow-to-entry, sort-bibtex-entries, bibtex-sort-entries,
validate-bibtex-buffer, bibtex-validate-buffer,
find-bibtex-entry-location, bibtex-find-entry-location): All
interactive functions are renamed, so that any interface function
begins with "bibtex-". Mapping:
ispell-abstract --> bibtex-ispell-abstract
ispell-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-ispell-entry
beginning-of-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-beginning-of-entry
end-of-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-end-of-entry
hide-bibtex-entry-bodies --> bibtex-hide-entry-bodies
narrow-to-bibtex-entry --> bibtex-narrow-to-entry
sort-bibtex-entries --> bibtex-sort-entries
validate-bibtex-buffer --> bibtex-validate-buffer
find-bibtex-entry-location --> bibtex-find-entry-location
(bibtex-maintain-sorted-entries,
bibtex-sort-ignore-string-entries): Default is now t.
(bibtex-complete-string): String list is built from additional
string list bibtex-predefined-string and current strings in file.
(string-equalp): Deleted and substituted by string-equal.
(assoc-string-equalp): Renamed to assoc-ignore-case.
(bibtex-entry): Reference key can be entered with completion. All
reference keys that are defined in buffer and all labels that
appear in crossreference entries are object to completion.
(Entry types): Changed order of entries in menu "entry types".
(bibtex-entry-field-alist): Changed order of entries slightly to
be more conform with standard BibTeX style layouts.
(bibtex-mode-map): Uniform keybindings for \C-c\C-e prefix (often
used types on control keys, sometimes used types on normal keys,
rarely used types on shift keys, almost never used types on meta
keys).
(bibtex-mode-map): Function narrow-to-bibtex-entry and counterpart
widen and function hide-bibtex-entry-bodies and counterpart
show-all bounded to appropriate local keys.
(bibtex-abbrev-table): Deleted
(bibtex-current-entry-label, put-string-on-kill-ring): Deleted
(AUCTeX provides all the functionality needed for citation
completion).
(bibtex-enclosing-reference, bibtex-pop-previous, bibtex-pop-next,
bibtex-clean-entry): Hacked for speed (bibtex-pop-previous and
bibtex-pop-next were to slow for larger BibTeX files).
(bibtex-pop-previous, bibtex-pop-next): Delimiters from previous
or next entry are changed to actual delimters if necessary.
(bibtex-entry): Fixed bug (False entry wasn't reported in error
message if bibtex-entry was called with undefined reference name).
(bibtex-entry-field-alist, bibtex-entry, bibtex-make-field,
bibtex-next-field, bibtex-clean-entry): Every reference entry now
contains a comment in addition to the name of the reference. This
comment appears in the echo area if you start editing that field
(after calling bibtex-next-field).
(bibtex-include-OPTcrossref, bibtex-entry): Changed
bibtex-include-OPTcrossref from single boolean variable to hold a
list of reference names which should have a crossref field.
(bibtex-complete-word): New function, which completes word
fragment before point to the longest prefix of predefined strings
in the buffer in the same way that ispell-complete-word operates
for words found in the dictionary.
(bibtex-reference-head): Start of bibtex-reference-head changed
from "^[ \t]*\\(" to "^\\( \\|\t\\)*\\(" (bibtex-pop-previous and
bibtex-pop-next didn't work, probably due to a bug in
re-search-forward).
(several functions): Added support for {} as field delimiters
(better than '"' for accented characters.
(bibtex-clean-entry): If optional field crossref is empty or
missing, former optional fields (if bibtex-include-OPTcrossref was
t) are necessary again. bibtex-clean-entry complains if they are
empty but not if they are missing, so you can intenionally omit
them, e. g. for a pseudo @Journal entry (needed for
crossreferences) made out of an @article with missing non-optional
fields.
Menu bar entries aren't centered anymore.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 23 Dec 1994 04:18:29 +0000 |
parents | 2c7997f249eb |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
;;; old-shell.el --- run a shell in an Emacs window ;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1990 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; Keywords: processes ;; 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. ;;; Hacked from tea.el and shell.el by Olin Shivers (shivers@cs.cmu.edu). 8/88 ;;; Since this mode is built on top of the general command-interpreter-in- ;;; a-buffer mode (comint mode), it shares a common base functionality, ;;; and a common set of bindings, with all modes derived from comint mode. ;;; For documentation on the functionality provided by comint mode, and ;;; the hooks available for customising it, see the file comint.el. ;;; Needs fixin: ;;; When sending text from a source file to a subprocess, the process-mark can ;;; move off the window, so you can lose sight of the process interactions. ;;; Maybe I should ensure the process mark is in the window when I send ;;; text to the process? Switch selectable? ;;; Code: (require 'comint) (defvar shell-popd-regexp "popd" "*Regexp to match subshell commands equivalent to popd.") (defvar shell-pushd-regexp "pushd" "*Regexp to match subshell commands equivalent to pushd.") (defvar shell-cd-regexp "cd" "*Regexp to match subshell commands equivalent to cd.") (defvar explicit-shell-file-name nil "*If non-nil, is file name to use for explicitly requested inferior shell.") (defvar explicit-csh-args (if (eq system-type 'hpux) ;; -T persuades HP's csh not to think it is smarter ;; than us about what terminal modes to use. '("-i" "-T") '("-i")) "*Args passed to inferior shell by M-x shell, if the shell is csh. Value is a list of strings, which may be nil.") (defvar shell-dirstack nil "List of directories saved by pushd in this buffer's shell.") (defvar shell-dirstack-query "dirs" "Command used by shell-resync-dirlist to query shell.") (defvar shell-mode-map ()) (cond ((not shell-mode-map) (setq shell-mode-map (copy-keymap comint-mode-map)) (define-key shell-mode-map "\t" 'comint-dynamic-complete) (define-key shell-mode-map "\M-?" 'comint-dynamic-list-completions))) (defvar shell-mode-hook '() "*Hook for customising shell mode") ;;; Basic Procedures ;;; =========================================================================== ;;; (defun shell-mode () "Major mode for interacting with an inferior shell. Return after the end of the process' output sends the text from the end of process to the end of the current line. Return before end of process output copies rest of line to end (skipping the prompt) and sends it. M-x send-invisible reads a line of text without echoing it, and sends it to the shell. If you accidentally suspend your process, use \\[comint-continue-subjob] to continue it. cd, pushd and popd commands given to the shell are watched by Emacs to keep this buffer's default directory the same as the shell's working directory. M-x dirs queries the shell and resyncs Emacs' idea of what the current directory stack is. M-x dirtrack-toggle turns directory tracking on and off. \\{shell-mode-map} Customisation: Entry to this mode runs the hooks on comint-mode-hook and shell-mode-hook (in that order). Variables shell-cd-regexp, shell-pushd-regexp and shell-popd-regexp are used to match their respective commands." (interactive) (comint-mode) (setq major-mode 'shell-mode mode-name "Shell" comint-prompt-regexp shell-prompt-pattern comint-input-sentinel 'shell-directory-tracker) (use-local-map shell-mode-map) (make-local-variable 'shell-dirstack) (set (make-local-variable 'shell-dirtrackp) t) (run-hooks 'shell-mode-hook)) (defun shell () "Run an inferior shell, with I/O through buffer *shell*. If buffer exists but shell process is not running, make new shell. If buffer exists and shell process is running, just switch to buffer *shell*. The shell to use comes from the first non-nil variable found from these: explicit-shell-file-name in Emacs, ESHELL in the environment or SHELL in the environment. If none is found, /bin/sh is used. If a file ~/.emacs_SHELLNAME exists, it is given as initial input, simulating a start-up file for the shell like .profile or .cshrc. Note that this may lose due to a timing error if the shell discards input when it starts up. The buffer is put in shell-mode, giving commands for sending input and controlling the subjobs of the shell. The shell file name, sans directories, is used to make a symbol name such as `explicit-csh-arguments'. If that symbol is a variable, its value is used as a list of arguments when invoking the shell. Otherwise, one argument `-i' is passed to the shell. \(Type \\[describe-mode] in the shell buffer for a list of commands.)" (interactive) (if (not (comint-check-proc "*shell*")) (let* ((prog (or explicit-shell-file-name (getenv "ESHELL") (getenv "SHELL") "/bin/sh")) (name (file-name-nondirectory prog)) (startfile (concat "~/.emacs_" name)) (xargs-name (intern-soft (concat "explicit-" name "-args")))) (set-buffer (apply 'make-comint "shell" prog (if (file-exists-p startfile) startfile) (if (and xargs-name (boundp xargs-name)) (symbol-value xargs-name) '("-i")))) (shell-mode))) (switch-to-buffer "*shell*")) ;;; Directory tracking ;;; =========================================================================== ;;; This code provides the shell mode input sentinel ;;; SHELL-DIRECTORY-TRACKER ;;; that tracks cd, pushd, and popd commands issued to the shell, and ;;; changes the current directory of the shell buffer accordingly. ;;; ;;; This is basically a fragile hack, although it's more accurate than ;;; the original version in shell.el. It has the following failings: ;;; 1. It doesn't know about the cdpath shell variable. ;;; 2. It only spots the first command in a command sequence. E.g., it will ;;; miss the cd in "ls; cd foo" ;;; 3. More generally, any complex command (like ";" sequencing) is going to ;;; throw it. Otherwise, you'd have to build an entire shell interpreter in ;;; emacs lisp. Failing that, there's no way to catch shell commands where ;;; cd's are buried inside conditional expressions, aliases, and so forth. ;;; ;;; The whole approach is a crock. Shell aliases mess it up. File sourcing ;;; messes it up. You run other processes under the shell; these each have ;;; separate working directories, and some have commands for manipulating ;;; their w.d.'s (e.g., the lcd command in ftp). Some of these programs have ;;; commands that do *not* effect the current w.d. at all, but look like they ;;; do (e.g., the cd command in ftp). In shells that allow you job ;;; control, you can switch between jobs, all having different w.d.'s. So ;;; simply saying %3 can shift your w.d.. ;;; ;;; The solution is to relax, not stress out about it, and settle for ;;; a hack that works pretty well in typical circumstances. Remember ;;; that a half-assed solution is more in keeping with the spirit of Unix, ;;; anyway. Blech. ;;; ;;; One good hack not implemented here for users of programmable shells ;;; is to program up the shell w.d. manipulation commands to output ;;; a coded command sequence to the tty. Something like ;;; ESC | <cwd> | ;;; where <cwd> is the new current working directory. Then trash the ;;; directory tracking machinery currently used in this package, and ;;; replace it with a process filter that watches for and strips out ;;; these messages. ;;; REGEXP is a regular expression. STR is a string. START is a fixnum. ;;; Returns T if REGEXP matches STR where the match is anchored to start ;;; at position START in STR. Sort of like LOOKING-AT for strings. (defun shell-front-match (regexp str start) (eq start (string-match regexp str start))) (defun shell-directory-tracker (str) "Tracks cd, pushd and popd commands issued to the shell. This function is called on each input passed to the shell. It watches for cd, pushd and popd commands and sets the buffer's default directory to track these commands. You may toggle this tracking on and off with M-x dirtrack-toggle. If emacs gets confused, you can resync with the shell with M-x dirs. See variables shell-cd-regexp, shell-pushd-regexp, and shell-popd-regexp. Environment variables are expanded, see function substitute-in-file-name." (condition-case err (cond (shell-dirtrackp (string-match "^\\s *" str) ; skip whitespace (let ((bos (match-end 0)) (x nil)) (cond ((setq x (shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg shell-popd-regexp str bos)) (shell-process-popd (substitute-in-file-name x))) ((setq x (shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg shell-pushd-regexp str bos)) (shell-process-pushd (substitute-in-file-name x))) ((setq x (shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg shell-cd-regexp str bos)) (shell-process-cd (substitute-in-file-name x))))))) (error (message (car (cdr err)))))) ;;; Try to match regexp CMD to string, anchored at position START. ;;; CMD may be followed by a single argument. If a match, then return ;;; the argument, if there is one, or the empty string if not. If ;;; no match, return nil. (defun shell-match-cmd-w/optional-arg (cmd str start) (and (shell-front-match cmd str start) (let ((eoc (match-end 0))) ; end of command (cond ((shell-front-match "\\s *\\(\;\\|$\\)" str eoc) "") ; no arg ((shell-front-match "\\s +\\([^ \t\;]+\\)\\s *\\(\;\\|$\\)" str eoc) (substring str (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))) ; arg (t nil))))) ; something else. ;;; The first regexp is [optional whitespace, (";" or the end of string)]. ;;; The second regexp is [whitespace, (an arg), optional whitespace, ;;; (";" or end of string)]. ;;; popd [+n] (defun shell-process-popd (arg) (let ((num (if (zerop (length arg)) 0 ; no arg means +0 (shell-extract-num arg)))) (if (and num (< num (length shell-dirstack))) (if (= num 0) ; condition-case because the CD could lose. (condition-case nil (progn (cd (car shell-dirstack)) (setq shell-dirstack (cdr shell-dirstack)) (shell-dirstack-message)) (error (message "Couldn't cd."))) (let* ((ds (cons nil shell-dirstack)) (cell (nthcdr (- num 1) ds))) (rplacd cell (cdr (cdr cell))) (setq shell-dirstack (cdr ds)) (shell-dirstack-message))) (message "Bad popd.")))) ;;; cd [dir] (defun shell-process-cd (arg) (condition-case nil (progn (cd (if (zerop (length arg)) (getenv "HOME") arg)) (shell-dirstack-message)) (error (message "Couldn't cd.")))) ;;; pushd [+n | dir] (defun shell-process-pushd (arg) (if (zerop (length arg)) ;; no arg -- swap pwd and car of shell stack (condition-case nil (if shell-dirstack (let ((old default-directory)) (cd (car shell-dirstack)) (setq shell-dirstack (cons old (cdr shell-dirstack))) (shell-dirstack-message)) (message "Directory stack empty.")) (message "Couldn't cd.")) (let ((num (shell-extract-num arg))) (if num ; pushd +n (if (> num (length shell-dirstack)) (message "Directory stack not that deep.") (let* ((ds (cons default-directory shell-dirstack)) (dslen (length ds)) (front (nthcdr num ds)) (back (reverse (nthcdr (- dslen num) (reverse ds)))) (new-ds (append front back))) (condition-case nil (progn (cd (car new-ds)) (setq shell-dirstack (cdr new-ds)) (shell-dirstack-message)) (error (message "Couldn't cd."))))) ;; pushd <dir> (let ((old-wd default-directory)) (condition-case nil (progn (cd arg) (setq shell-dirstack (cons old-wd shell-dirstack)) (shell-dirstack-message)) (error (message "Couldn't cd.")))))))) ;; If STR is of the form +n, for n>0, return n. Otherwise, nil. (defun shell-extract-num (str) (and (string-match "^\\+[1-9][0-9]*$" str) (string-to-int str))) (defun shell-dirtrack-toggle () "Turn directory tracking on and off in a shell buffer." (interactive) (setq shell-dirtrackp (not shell-dirtrackp)) (message "directory tracking %s." (if shell-dirtrackp "ON" "OFF"))) ;;; For your typing convenience: (fset 'dirtrack-toggle 'shell-dirtrack-toggle) (defun shell-resync-dirs () "Resync the buffer's idea of the current directory stack. This command queries the shell with the command bound to shell-dirstack-query (default \"dirs\"), reads the next line output and parses it to form the new directory stack. DON'T issue this command unless the buffer is at a shell prompt. Also, note that if some other subprocess decides to do output immediately after the query, its output will be taken as the new directory stack -- you lose. If this happens, just do the command again." (interactive) (let* ((proc (get-buffer-process (current-buffer))) (pmark (process-mark proc))) (goto-char pmark) (insert shell-dirstack-query) (insert "\n") (sit-for 0) ; force redisplay (comint-send-string proc shell-dirstack-query) (comint-send-string proc "\n") (set-marker pmark (point)) (let ((pt (point))) ; wait for 1 line ;; This extra newline prevents the user's pending input from spoofing us. (insert "\n") (backward-char 1) (while (not (looking-at ".+\n")) (accept-process-output proc) (goto-char pt))) (goto-char pmark) (delete-char 1) ; remove the extra newline ;; That's the dirlist. grab it & parse it. (let* ((dl (buffer-substring (match-beginning 0) (- (match-end 0) 1))) (dl-len (length dl)) (ds '()) ; new dir stack (i 0)) (while (< i dl-len) ;; regexp = optional whitespace, (non-whitespace), optional whitespace (string-match "\\s *\\(\\S +\\)\\s *" dl i) ; pick off next dir (setq ds (cons (substring dl (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)) ds)) (setq i (match-end 0))) (let ((ds (reverse ds))) (condition-case nil (progn (cd (car ds)) (setq shell-dirstack (cdr ds)) (shell-dirstack-message)) (error (message "Couldn't cd."))))))) ;;; For your typing convenience: (fset 'dirs 'shell-resync-dirs) ;;; Show the current dirstack on the message line. ;;; Pretty up dirs a bit by changing "/usr/jqr/foo" to "~/foo". ;;; (This isn't necessary if the dirlisting is generated with a simple "dirs".) ;;; All the commands that mung the buffer's dirstack finish by calling ;;; this guy. (defun shell-dirstack-message () (let ((msg "") (ds (cons default-directory shell-dirstack))) (while ds (let ((dir (car ds))) (if (string-match (format "^%s\\(/\\|$\\)" (getenv "HOME")) dir) (setq dir (concat "~/" (substring dir (match-end 0))))) (if (string-equal dir "~/") (setq dir "~")) (setq msg (concat msg dir " ")) (setq ds (cdr ds)))) (message msg))) (provide 'shell) ;;; old-shell.el ends here