Mercurial > emacs
changeset 13233:8b29f638af52
Initial revision
author | Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 17 Oct 1995 18:10:37 +0000 |
parents | e31057e55df7 |
children | e3b1df16f4b4 |
files | lisp/emulation/pc-select.el |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 572 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/lisp/emulation/pc-select.el Tue Oct 17 18:10:37 1995 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,572 @@ +;;; pc-select.el --- emulate mark, cut, copy and paste from motif +;;; (or MAC GUI) or MS-windoze (bah)) look-and-feel +;;; including key bindings + +;; Copyright (C) 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +;; Author: Michael Staats <michael@thp.Uni-Duisburg.DE> +;; Created: 26 Sep 1995 + +;; 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. + +;;; Commentary: +;; +;; This package emulates the mark, copy, cut and paste look-and-feel of motif +;; programs (which is the same as the MAC gui and (sorry for that) MS-Windows). +;; It modifies the keybindings of the cursor keys and the next, prior, +;; home and end keys. They will modify mark-active. +;; You can still get the old behaviour of cursor moving with the +;; control sequences C-f, C-b, etc. +;; This package uses transient-mark-mode and +;; delete-selection-mode. +;; +;; In addition to that all key-bindings from the pc-mode are +;; done here too (as suggested by RMS). +;; +;; As I found out after I finished the first version, s-region.el tries +;; to do the same.... But my code is a little more complete and using +;; delete-selection-mode is very important for the look-and-feel. +;; Pete Forman <pete.forman@airgun.wg.waii.com> provided some motif +;; compliant keybindings which I added. I had to modify them a little +;; to add the -mark and -nomark functionality of cursor moving. +;; +;; Credits: +;; Many thanks to all who made comments. +;; Thanks to RMS and Ralf Muschall <prm@rz.uni-jena.de> for criticism. +;; Kevin Cutts <cutts@ukraine.corp.mot.com> added the beginning-of-buffer +;; and end-of-buffer functions which I modified a little. +;; David Biesack <sasdjb@unx.sas.com> suggested some more cleanup. +;; Thanks to Pete Forman <pete.forman@airgun.wg.waii.com> +;; for additional motif keybindings. +;; +;; +;; Ok, some details about the idea of pc-selection-mode: +;; +;; o The standard keys for moving around (right, left, up, down, home, end, +;; prior, next, called "move-keys" from now on) will always de-activate +;; the mark. +;; o If you press "Shift" together with the "move-keys", the region +;; you pass along is activated +;; o You have the copy, cut and paste functions (as in many other programs) +;; which will operate on the active region +;; It was not possible to bind them to C-v, C-x and C-c for obvious +;; emacs reasons. +;; They will be bound according to the "old" behaviour to S-delete (cut), +;; S-insert (paste) and C-insert (copy). These keys do the same in many +;; other programs. +;; +;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; +;;;; +;;;; INSTALLATION: +;;;; o Put this file called "pc-select.el" into a path where emacs +;;;; looks for lisp libraries. Byte-compile if you want to. +;;;; o Put the command '(require 'pc-select) or +;;;; '(load "pc-select")' into your ~/.emacs. After that line +;;;; put the command '(pc-selection-mode)' to activate the mode. +;;;; +;;;; Please note that I am _not_ a lisp expert, I apologise for +;;;; all hacks which look ugly to an experienced lisp programmer. +;;;; Please report all errors and improvement. Thank you. +;;;; +;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; + +;;;; Code: + +;;;; +;; misc +;;;; + +(provide 'pc-select) + +(defun copy-region-as-kill-nomark (beg end) + "Save the region as if killed; but don't kill it; deactivate mark. +If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, also save the text for a window +system cut and paste.\n +Deactivating mark is to avoid confusion with delete-selection-mode +and transient-mark-mode." + (interactive "r") + (copy-region-as-kill beg end) + (setq mark-active nil) + (message "Region saved")) + +;;;; +;; non-interactive +;;;; +(defun ensure-mark() + ;; make sure mark is active + ;; test if it is active, if it isn't, set it and activate it + (and (not mark-active) (set-mark-command nil))) + +;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; +;;;;; forward and mark +;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; + +(defun forward-char-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move point right ARG characters (left if ARG negative). +On reaching end of buffer, stop and signal error." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (forward-char arg)) + +(defun forward-word-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move point right ARG words (backward if ARG is negative). +Normally returns t. +If an edge of the buffer is reached, point is left there +and nil is returned." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (forward-word arg)) + +(defun forward-paragraph-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move forward to end of paragraph. +With arg N, do it N times; negative arg -N means move backward N paragraphs.\n +A line which `paragraph-start' matches either separates paragraphs +(if `paragraph-separate' matches it also) or is the first line of a paragraph. +A paragraph end is the beginning of a line which is not part of the paragraph +to which the end of the previous line belongs, or the end of the buffer." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (forward-paragraph arg)) + +(defun next-line-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move cursor vertically down ARG lines. +If there is no character in the target line exactly under the current column, +the cursor is positioned after the character in that line which spans this +column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough. +If there is no line in the buffer after this one, behavior depends on the +value of `next-line-add-newlines'. If non-nil, it inserts a newline character +to create a line, and moves the cursor to that line. Otherwise it moves the +cursor to the end of the buffer \(if already at the end of the buffer, an error +is signaled).\n +The command C-x C-n can be used to create +a semipermanent goal column to which this command always moves. +Then it does not try to move vertically. This goal column is stored +in `goal-column', which is nil when there is none." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (next-line arg)) + +(defun end-of-line-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move point to end of current line. +With argument ARG not nil or 1, move forward ARG - 1 lines first. +If scan reaches end of buffer, stop there without error." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (end-of-line arg)) + +(defun scroll-down-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; scroll down ARG lines; or near full screen if no ARG. +A near full screen is `next-screen-context-lines' less than a full screen. +Negative ARG means scroll upward. +When calling from a program, supply a number as argument or nil." + (interactive "P") + (ensure-mark) + (scroll-down arg)) + +(defun end-of-buffer-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move point to the end of the buffer. +With arg N, put point N/10 of the way from the end.\n +If the buffer is narrowed, this command uses the beginning and size +of the accessible part of the buffer.\n +Don't use this command in Lisp programs! +\(goto-char \(point-max)) is faster and avoids clobbering the mark." + (interactive "P") + (ensure-mark) + (let ((size (- (point-max) (point-min)))) + (goto-char (if arg + (- (point-max) + (if (> size 10000) + ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes! + (* (prefix-numeric-value arg) + (/ size 10)) + (/ (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg)) 10))) + (point-max)))) + ;; If we went to a place in the middle of the buffer, + ;; adjust it to the beginning of a line. + (if arg (forward-line 1) + ;; If the end of the buffer is not already on the screen, + ;; then scroll specially to put it near, but not at, the bottom. + (if (let ((old-point (point))) + (save-excursion + (goto-char (window-start)) + (vertical-motion (window-height)) + (< (point) old-point))) + (progn + (overlay-recenter (point)) + (recenter -3))))) + +;;;;;;;;; +;;;;; no mark +;;;;;;;;; + +(defun forward-char-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move point right ARG characters \(left if ARG negative). +On reaching end of buffer, stop and signal error." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (forward-char arg)) + +(defun forward-word-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move point right ARG words \(backward if ARG is negative). +Normally returns t. +If an edge of the buffer is reached, point is left there +and nil is returned." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (forward-word arg)) + +(defun forward-paragraph-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move forward to end of paragraph. +With arg N, do it N times; negative arg -N means move backward N paragraphs.\n +A line which `paragraph-start' matches either separates paragraphs +(if `paragraph-separate' matches it also) or is the first line of a paragraph. +A paragraph end is the beginning of a line which is not part of the paragraph +to which the end of the previous line belongs, or the end of the buffer." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (forward-paragraph arg)) + +(defun next-line-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move cursor vertically down ARG lines. +If there is no character in the target line exactly under the current column, +the cursor is positioned after the character in that line which spans this +column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough. +If there is no line in the buffer after this one, behavior depends on the +value of `next-line-add-newlines'. If non-nil, it inserts a newline character +to create a line, and moves the cursor to that line. Otherwise it moves the +cursor to the end of the buffer (if already at the end of the buffer, an error +is signaled).\n +The command C-x C-n can be used to create +a semipermanent goal column to which this command always moves. +Then it does not try to move vertically. This goal column is stored +in `goal-column', which is nil when there is none." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (next-line arg)) + +(defun end-of-line-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move point to end of current line. +With argument ARG not nil or 1, move forward ARG - 1 lines first. +If scan reaches end of buffer, stop there without error." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (end-of-line arg)) + +(defun scroll-down-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; scroll down ARG lines; or near full screen if no ARG. +A near full screen is `next-screen-context-lines' less than a full screen. +Negative ARG means scroll upward. +When calling from a program, supply a number as argument or nil." + (interactive "P") + (setq mark-active nil) + (scroll-down arg)) + +(defun end-of-buffer-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move point to the end of the buffer. +With arg N, put point N/10 of the way from the end.\n +If the buffer is narrowed, this command uses the beginning and size +of the accessible part of the buffer.\n +Don't use this command in Lisp programs! +(goto-char (point-max)) is faster and avoids clobbering the mark." + (interactive "P") + (setq mark-active nil) + (let ((size (- (point-max) (point-min)))) + (goto-char (if arg + (- (point-max) + (if (> size 10000) + ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes! + (* (prefix-numeric-value arg) + (/ size 10)) + (/ (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg)) 10))) + (point-max)))) + ;; If we went to a place in the middle of the buffer, + ;; adjust it to the beginning of a line. + (if arg (forward-line 1) + ;; If the end of the buffer is not already on the screen, + ;; then scroll specially to put it near, but not at, the bottom. + (if (let ((old-point (point))) + (save-excursion + (goto-char (window-start)) + (vertical-motion (window-height)) + (< (point) old-point))) + (progn + (overlay-recenter (point)) + (recenter -3))))) + + +;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; +;;;;;; backwards and mark +;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; + +(defun backward-char-mark (&optional arg) +"Ensure mark is active; move point left ARG characters (right if ARG negative). +On attempt to pass beginning or end of buffer, stop and signal error." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (backward-char arg)) + +(defun backward-word-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move backward until encountering the end of a word. +With argument, do this that many times." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (backward-word arg)) + +(defun backward-paragraph-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move backward to start of paragraph. +With arg N, do it N times; negative arg -N means move forward N paragraphs.\n +A paragraph start is the beginning of a line which is a +`first-line-of-paragraph' or which is ordinary text and follows a +paragraph-separating line; except: if the first real line of a +paragraph is preceded by a blank line, the paragraph starts at that +blank line.\n +See `forward-paragraph' for more information." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (backward-paragraph arg)) + +(defun previous-line-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move cursor vertically up ARG lines. +If there is no character in the target line exactly over the current column, +the cursor is positioned after the character in that line which spans this +column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough.\n +The command C-x C-n can be used to create +a semipermanent goal column to which this command always moves. +Then it does not try to move vertically.\n +If you are thinking of using this in a Lisp program, consider using +`forward-line' with a negative argument instead. It is usually easier +to use and more reliable (no dependence on goal column, etc.)." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (previous-line arg)) + +(defun beginning-of-line-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move point to beginning of current line. +With argument ARG not nil or 1, move forward ARG - 1 lines first. +If scan reaches end of buffer, stop there without error." + (interactive "p") + (ensure-mark) + (beginning-of-line arg)) + + +(defun scroll-up-mark (&optional arg) +"Ensure mark is active; scroll upward ARG lines; or near full screen if no ARG. +A near full screen is `next-screen-context-lines' less than a full screen. +Negative ARG means scroll downward. +When calling from a program, supply a number as argument or nil." + (interactive "P") + (ensure-mark) + (scroll-up arg)) + +(defun beginning-of-buffer-mark (&optional arg) + "Ensure mark is active; move point to the beginning of the buffer. +With arg N, put point N/10 of the way from the beginning.\n +If the buffer is narrowed, this command uses the beginning and size +of the accessible part of the buffer.\n +Don't use this command in Lisp programs! +\(goto-char (p\oint-min)) is faster and avoids clobbering the mark." + (interactive "P") + (ensure-mark) + (let ((size (- (point-max) (point-min)))) + (goto-char (if arg + (+ (point-min) + (if (> size 10000) + ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes! + (* (prefix-numeric-value arg) + (/ size 10)) + (/ (+ 10 (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg))) 10))) + (point-min)))) + (if arg (forward-line 1))) + +;;;;;;;; +;;; no mark +;;;;;;;; + +(defun backward-char-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move point left ARG characters (right if ARG negative). +On attempt to pass beginning or end of buffer, stop and signal error." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (backward-char arg)) + +(defun backward-word-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move backward until encountering the end of a word. +With argument, do this that many times." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (backward-word arg)) + +(defun backward-paragraph-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move backward to start of paragraph. +With arg N, do it N times; negative arg -N means move forward N paragraphs.\n +A paragraph start is the beginning of a line which is a +`first-line-of-paragraph' or which is ordinary text and follows a +paragraph-separating line; except: if the first real line of a +paragraph is preceded by a blank line, the paragraph starts at that +blank line.\n +See `forward-paragraph' for more information." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (backward-paragraph arg)) + +(defun previous-line-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move cursor vertically up ARG lines. +If there is no character in the target line exactly over the current column, +the cursor is positioned after the character in that line which spans this +column, or at the end of the line if it is not long enough.\n +The command C-x C-n can be used to create +a semipermanent goal column to which this command always moves. +Then it does not try to move vertically." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (previous-line arg)) + +(defun beginning-of-line-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move point to beginning of current line. +With argument ARG not nil or 1, move forward ARG - 1 lines first. +If scan reaches end of buffer, stop there without error." + (interactive "p") + (setq mark-active nil) + (beginning-of-line arg)) + +(defun scroll-up-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; scroll upward ARG lines; or near full screen if no ARG. +A near full screen is `next-screen-context-lines' less than a full screen. +Negative ARG means scroll downward. +When calling from a program, supply a number as argument or nil." + (interactive "P") + (setq mark-active nil) + (scroll-up arg)) + +(defun beginning-of-buffer-nomark (&optional arg) + "Deactivate mark; move point to the beginning of the buffer. +With arg N, put point N/10 of the way from the beginning.\n +If the buffer is narrowed, this command uses the beginning and size +of the accessible part of the buffer.\n +Don't use this command in Lisp programs! +(goto-char (point-min)) is faster and avoids clobbering the mark." + (interactive "P") + (setq mark-active nil) + (let ((size (- (point-max) (point-min)))) + (goto-char (if arg + (+ (point-min) + (if (> size 10000) + ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes! + (* (prefix-numeric-value arg) + (/ size 10)) + (/ (+ 10 (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg))) 10))) + (point-min)))) + (if arg (forward-line 1))) + +(defun pc-selection-mode () + "Change mark behaviour to emulate motif, MAC or MS-Windows cut and paste style.\n +This mode will switch on delete-selection-mode and +transient-mark-mode.\n +The cursor keys (and others) are bound to new functions +which will modify the status of the mark. It will be +possible to select regions with shift-cursorkeys. All this +tries to emulate the look-and-feel of GUIs like motif, +the MAC GUI or MS-Windows (sorry for the last one)." + (interactive) + ;; + ;; keybindings + ;; + + ;; This is to avoid confusion with the delete-selection-mode + ;; On simple displays you can't see that a region is active and + ;; will be deleted on the next keypress. IMHO especially for + ;; copy-region-as-kill this is confusing + (define-key global-map "\M-w" 'copy-region-as-kill-nomark) + + + ;; The followong keybindings are for standard ISO keyboards + ;; as they are used with IBM compatible PCs, IBM RS/6000, + ;; MACs, many X-Stations and probably more + (define-key global-map [S-right] 'forward-char-mark) + (define-key global-map [right] 'forward-char-nomark) + (define-key global-map [C-S-right] 'forward-word-mark) + (define-key global-map [C-right] 'forward-word-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-down] 'next-line-mark) + (define-key global-map [down] 'next-line-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-end] 'end-of-line-mark) + (define-key global-map [end] 'end-of-line-nomark) + (global-set-key [S-C-end] 'end-of-buffer-mark) + (global-set-key [C-end] 'end-of-buffer-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-next] 'scroll-up-mark) + (define-key global-map [next] 'scroll-up-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-left] 'backward-char-mark) + (define-key global-map [left] 'backward-char-nomark) + (define-key global-map [C-S-left] 'backward-word-mark) + (define-key global-map [C-left] 'backward-word-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-up] 'previous-line-mark) + (define-key global-map [up] 'previous-line-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-home] 'beginning-of-line-mark) + (define-key global-map [home] 'beginning-of-line-nomark) + (global-set-key [S-C-home] 'beginning-of-buffer-mark) + (global-set-key [C-home] 'beginning-of-buffer-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-prior] 'scroll-down-mark) + (define-key global-map [prior] 'scroll-down-nomark) + + (define-key global-map [S-insert] 'yank) + (define-key global-map [C-insert] 'copy-region-as-kill) + (define-key global-map [S-delete] 'kill-region) + + ;; The following bindings are usueful on Sun Type 3 keyboards + ;; They implement the Get-Delete-Put (copy-cut-paste) + ;; functions from sunview on the L6, L8 and L10 keys + (define-key global-map [f16] 'yank) + (define-key global-map [f18] 'copy-region-as-kill) + (define-key global-map [f20] 'kill-region) + + ;; The following bindings are from Pete Forman. + ;; I modified them a little to work together with the + ;; mark functionality I added. + + (global-set-key [f1] 'help) ; KHelp F1 + (global-set-key [f6] 'other-window) ; KNextPane F6 + (global-set-key [delete] 'delete-char) ; KDelete Del + (global-set-key [C-delete] 'kill-line) ; KEraseEndLine cDel + (global-set-key [M-backspace] 'undo) ; KUndo aBS + (define-key c-mode-map [M-backspace] 'undo) + (global-set-key [C-down] 'forward-paragraph-nomark) ; KNextPara cDn + (global-set-key [C-up] 'backward-paragraph-nomark) ; KPrevPara cUp + (global-set-key [S-C-down] 'forward-paragraph-mark) + (global-set-key [S-C-up] 'backward-paragraph-mark) + + ;; The following bindings are taken from pc-mode.el + ;; as suggested by RMS. + ;; I only used the ones that are not covered above. + (define-key function-key-map [M-delete] [?\M-d]) + (global-set-key [C-M-delete] 'kill-sexp) + (global-set-key [C-backspace] 'backward-kill-word) + (global-set-key [C-escape] 'list-buffers) + + ;; + ;; setup + ;; + (setq transient-mark-mode t) + (setq mark-even-if-inactive t) + (delete-selection-mode 1)) + +;;; pc-select.el ends here