Mercurial > emacs
changeset 12686:8a11e11d3365
(tpu-version): New version.
(tpu-help-keypad-map): New help text.
(tpu-backward-line): Only move to BOL if not already there.
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 27 Jul 1995 07:37:12 +0000 |
parents | 2005991db844 |
children | e7e04fe05a17 |
files | lisp/emulation/tpu-edt.el |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 264 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lisp/emulation/tpu-edt.el Thu Jul 27 07:35:25 1995 +0000 +++ b/lisp/emulation/tpu-edt.el Thu Jul 27 07:37:12 1995 +0000 @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ ;; Author: Rob Riepel <riepel@networking.stanford.edu> ;; Maintainer: Rob Riepel <riepel@networking.stanford.edu> -;; Version: 4.0 +;; Version: 4.2 ;; Keywords: emulations ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. @@ -25,13 +25,251 @@ ;; TPU-edt is based on tpu.el by Jeff Kowalski and Bob Covey. +;;; Commentary: + +;; %% TPU-edt -- Emacs emulating TPU emulating EDT + +;; %% Contents + +;; % Introduction +;; % Differences Between TPU-edt and DEC TPU/edt +;; % Starting TPU-edt +;; % Customizing TPU-edt using the Emacs Initialization File +;; % Regular Expressions in TPU-edt + + +;; %% Introduction + +;; TPU-edt emulates the popular DEC VMS editor EDT (actually, it emulates +;; DEC TPU's EDT emulation, hence the name TPU-edt). TPU-edt features the +;; following TPU/edt functionality: + +;; . EDT keypad +;; . On-line help +;; . Repeat counts +;; . Scroll margins +;; . Learn sequences +;; . Free cursor mode +;; . Rectangular cut and paste +;; . Multiple windows and buffers +;; . TPU line-mode REPLACE command +;; . Wild card search and substitution +;; . Configurable through an initialization file +;; . History recall of search strings, file names, and commands + +;; Please note that TPU-edt does NOT emulate TPU. It emulates TPU's EDT +;; emulation. Very few TPU line-mode commands are supported. + +;; TPU-edt, like it's VMS cousin, works on VT-series terminals with DEC +;; style keyboards. VT terminal emulators, including xterm with the +;; appropriate key translations, work just fine too. + +;; TPU-edt works with X-windows. This is accomplished through a TPU-edt X +;; key map. The TPU-edt module tpu-mapper creates this map and stores it +;; in a file. Tpu-mapper will be run automatically the first time you +;; invoke the X-windows version of emacs, or you can run it by hand. See +;; the commentary in tpu-mapper.el for details. + + +;; %% Differences Between TPU-edt and DEC TPU/edt + +;; In some cases, Emacs doesn't support text highlighting, so selected +;; regions are not shown in inverse video. Emacs uses the concept of "the +;; mark". The mark is set at one end of a selected region; the cursor is +;; at the other. The letter "M" appears in the mode line when the mark is +;; set. The native emacs command ^X^X (Control-X twice) exchanges the +;; cursor with the mark; this provides a handy way to find the location of +;; the mark. + +;; In TPU the cursor can be either bound or free. Bound means the cursor +;; cannot wander outside the text of the file being edited. Free means +;; the arrow keys can move the cursor past the ends of lines. Free is the +;; default mode in TPU; bound is the only mode in EDT. Bound is the only +;; mode in the base version of TPU-edt; optional extensions add an +;; approximation of free mode, see the commentary in tpu-extras.el for +;; details. + +;; Like TPU, emacs uses multiple buffers. Some buffers are used to hold +;; files you are editing; other "internal" buffers are used for emacs' own +;; purposes (like showing you help). Here are some commands for dealing +;; with buffers. + +;; Gold-B moves to next buffer, including internal buffers +;; Gold-N moves to next buffer containing a file +;; Gold-M brings up a buffer menu (like TPU "show buffers") + +;; Emacs is very fond of throwing up new windows. Dealing with all these +;; windows can be a little confusing at first, so here are a few commands +;; to that may help: + +;; Gold-Next_Scr moves to the next window on the screen +;; Gold-Prev_Scr moves to the previous window on the screen +;; Gold-TAB also moves to the next window on the screen + +;; Control-x 1 deletes all but the current window +;; Control-x 0 deletes the current window + +;; Note that the buffers associated with deleted windows still exist! + +;; Like TPU, TPU-edt has a "command" function, invoked with Gold-KP7 or +;; Do. Most of the commands available are emacs commands. Some TPU +;; commands are available, they are: replace, exit, quit, include, and +;; Get (unfortunately, "get" is an internal emacs function, so we are +;; stuck with "Get" - to make life easier, Get is available as Gold-g). + +;; TPU-edt supports the recall of commands, file names, and search +;; strings. The history of strings recalled differs slightly from +;; TPU/edt, but it is still very convenient. + +;; Help is available! The traditional help keys (Help and PF2) display +;; a small help file showing the default keypad layout, control key +;; functions, and Gold key functions. Pressing any key inside of help +;; splits the screen and prints a description of the function of the +;; pressed key. Gold-PF2 invokes the native emacs help, with it's +;; zillions of options. + +;; Thanks to emacs, TPU-edt has some extensions that may make your life +;; easier, or at least more interesting. For example, Gold-r toggles +;; TPU-edt rectangular mode. In rectangular mode, Remove and Insert work +;; on rectangles. Likewise, Gold-* toggles TPU-edt regular expression +;; mode. In regular expression mode Find, Find Next, and the line-mode +;; replace command work with regular expressions. [A regular expression +;; is a pattern that denotes a set of strings; like VMS wildcards.] + +;; Emacs also gives TPU-edt the undo and occur functions. Undo does +;; what it says; it undoes the last change. Multiple undos in a row +;; undo multiple changes. For your convenience, undo is available on +;; Gold-u. Occur shows all the lines containing a specific string in +;; another window. Moving to that window, and typing ^C^C (Control-C +;; twice) on a particular line moves you back to the original window +;; at that line. Occur is on Gold-o. + +;; Finally, as you edit, remember that all the power of emacs is at +;; your disposal. It really is a fantastic tool. You may even want to +;; take some time and read the emacs tutorial; perhaps not to learn the +;; native emacs key bindings, but to get a feel for all the things +;; emacs can do for you. The emacs tutorial is available from the +;; emacs help function: "Gold-PF2 t" + + +;; %% Starting TPU-edt + +;; All you have to do to start TPU-edt, is turn it on. This can be +;; done from the command line when running emacs. + +;; prompt> emacs -f tpu-edt + +;; If you've already started emacs, turn on TPU-edt using the tpu-edt +;; command. First press `M-x' (that's usually `ESC' followed by `x') +;; and type `tpu-edt' followed by a carriage return. + +;; If you like TPU-edt and want to use it all the time, you can start +;; TPU-edt using the emacs initialization file, .emacs. Simply create +;; a .emacs file in your home directory containing the line: + +;; (tpu-edt) + +;; That's all you need to do to start TPU-edt. + + +;; %% Customizing TPU-edt using the Emacs Initialization File + +;; The following is a sample emacs initialization file. It shows how to +;; invoke TPU-edt, and how to customize it. + +;; ; .emacs - a sample emacs initialization file + +;; ; Turn on TPU-edt +;; (tpu-edt) + +;; ; Set scroll margins 10% (top) and 15% (bottom). +;; (tpu-set-scroll-margins "10%" "15%") + +;; ; Load the vtxxx terminal control functions. +;; (load "vt-control" t) + +;; ; TPU-edt treats words like EDT; here's how to add word separators. +;; ; Note that backslash (\) and double quote (") are quoted with '\'. +;; (tpu-add-word-separators "]\\[-_,.\"=+()'/*#:!&;$") + +;; ; Emacs is happy to save files without a final newline; other Unix +;; ; programs hate that! Here we make sure that files end with newlines. +;; (setq require-final-newline t) + +;; ; Emacs uses Control-s and Control-q. Problems can occur when using +;; ; emacs on terminals that use these codes for flow control (Xon/Xoff +;; ; flow control). These lines disable emacs' use of these characters. +;; (global-unset-key "\C-s") +;; (global-unset-key "\C-q") + +;; ; The emacs universal-argument function is very useful. +;; ; This line maps universal-argument to Gold-PF1. +;; (define-key GOLD-SS3-map "P" 'universal-argument) ; Gold-PF1 + +;; ; Make KP7 move by paragraphs, instead of pages. +;; (define-key SS3-map "w" 'tpu-paragraph) ; KP7 + +;; ; Repeat the preceding mappings for X-windows. +;; (cond +;; (window-system +;; (global-set-key [kp_7] 'tpu-paragraph) ; KP7 +;; (define-key GOLD-map [kp_f1] 'universal-argument))) ; GOLD-PF1 + +;; ; Display the TPU-edt version. +;; (tpu-version) + + +;; %% Regular Expressions in TPU-edt + +;; Gold-* toggles TPU-edt regular expression mode. In regular expression +;; mode, find, find next, replace, and substitute accept emacs regular +;; expressions. A complete list of emacs regular expressions can be found +;; using the emacs "info" command (it's somewhat like the VMS help +;; command). Try the following sequence of commands: + +;; DO info <enter info mode> +;; m emacs <select the "emacs" topic> +;; m regexs <select the "regular expression" topic> + +;; Type "q" to quit out of info mode. + +;; There is a problem in regular expression mode when searching for empty +;; strings, like beginning-of-line (^) and end-of-line ($). When searching +;; for these strings, find-next may find the current string, instead of the +;; next one. This can cause global replace and substitute commands to loop +;; forever in the same location. For this reason, commands like + +;; replace "^" "> " <add "> " to beginning of line> +;; replace "$" "00711" <add "00711" to end of line> + +;; may not work properly. + +;; Commands like those above are very useful for adding text to the +;; beginning or end of lines. They might work on a line-by-line basis, but +;; go into an infinite loop if the "all" response is specified. If the +;; goal is to add a string to the beginning or end of a particular set of +;; lines TPU-edt provides functions to do this. + +;; Gold-^ Add a string at BOL in region or buffer +;; Gold-$ Add a string at EOL in region or buffer + +;; There is also a TPU-edt interface to the native emacs string replacement +;; commands. Gold-/ invokes this command. It accepts regular expressions +;; if TPU-edt is in regular expression mode. Given a repeat count, it will +;; perform the replacement without prompting for confirmation. + +;; This command replaces empty strings correctly, however, it has its +;; drawbacks. As a native emacs command, it has a different interface +;; than the emulated TPU commands. Also, it works only in the forward +;; direction, regardless of the current TPU-edt direction. + ;;; Code: ;;; ;;; Version Information ;;; -(defconst tpu-version "4.0" "TPU-edt version number.") +(defconst tpu-version "4.2" "TPU-edt version number.") ;;; @@ -639,25 +877,45 @@ B Next Buffer - display the next buffer (all buffers) C Recall - edit and possibly repeat previous commands E Exit - save current buffer and ask about others + G Get - load a file into a new edit buffer - G Get - load a file into a new edit buffer I Include - include a file in this buffer K Kill Buffer - abandon edits and delete buffer - M Buffer Menu - display a list of all buffers N Next File Buffer - display next buffer containing a file + O Occur - show following lines containing REGEXP - Q Quit - exit without saving anything R Toggle rectangular mode for remove and insert S Search and substitute - line mode REPLACE command + ^T Toggle control key bindings between TPU and emacs U Undo - undo the last edit W Write - save current buffer X Exit - save all modified buffers and exit \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\f + More extensive documentation on TPU-edt can be found in the `Commentary' + section of tpu-edt.el. This section can be accessed through the standard + Emacs help facility using the `p' option. Once you exit TPU-edt Help, one + of the following key sequences is sure to get you there. + + ^h p if you're not yet using TPU-edt + Gold-PF2 p if you're using TPU-edt + + Alternatively, fire up Emacs help from the command prompt, with + + M-x help-for-help <CR> p <CR> + + Where `M-x' might be any of `Gold-KP7', 'Do', or 'ESC-x'. + + When you successfully invoke this part of the Emacs help facility, you + will see a buffer named `*Finder*' listing a number of topics. Look for + tpu-edt under `emulations'. + +\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\f + *** No more help, use P to view previous screen") (defvar tpu-help-enter (format "%s" "\eOM")) ; tpu-help enter key symbol @@ -1556,6 +1814,7 @@ "Move to beginning of previous line. Prefix argument serves as repeat count." (interactive "p") + (or (bolp) (>= 0 num) (setq num (- num 1))) (forward-line (- num)))