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authorRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>1998-05-18 05:28:11 +0000
committerRichard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>1998-05-18 05:28:11 +0000
commitfd51b1bc2c5b4976bf820897c6b9776e26b76141 (patch)
tree76bfc78a81ee437658db4b8cd1a41b8ccb7368ba /lisp/repeat.el
parent130901129f0de5bafd30384ace1b797884359ba8 (diff)
downloademacs-fd51b1bc2c5b4976bf820897c6b9776e26b76141.tar.gz
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+;;; vi-dot.el --- convenient way to repeat the previous command
+
+;; Copyright (C) 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+;; Author: Will Mengarini <seldon@eskimo.com>
+;; Created: Mo 02 Mar 98
+;; Version: 0.51, We 13 May 98
+;; Keywords: convenience, abbrev, vi, universal argument, typematic, repeat
+
+;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
+
+;; This program 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.
+
+;; This program 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:
+
+;; Sometimes the fastest way to get something done is just to lean on a key;
+;; moving forward through a series of words by leaning on M-f is an example.
+;; But 'forward-page is orthodoxily bound to C-x ], so moving forward through
+;; several pages requires
+;; Loop until desired page is reached:
+;; Hold down control key with left pinkie.
+;; Tap <x>.
+;; Lift left pinkie off control key.
+;; Tap <]>.
+;; This is a pain in the ass.
+
+;; This package defines a command that repeats the preceding command,
+;; whatever that was. The command is called `vi-dot' because the vi editor,
+;; Emacs's arch-rival among the Great Unwashed, does that when "." is pressed
+;; in its command mode.
+
+;; Starting with Emacs 20.3, this package is part of Emacs, and the
+;; `vi-dot' command is bound to the key sequence C-x z. (You can actually
+;; keep repeating the most recent command by just repeating the z after the
+;; first C-x z.) However, you can use this package with older versions of
+;; Emacs. Make the binding with
+;; (require 'vi-dot)
+;; (global-set-key "\C-xz" 'vi-dot)
+;; in your .emacs to give the command its orthodox binding of C-x z.
+
+;; Since the whole point of vi-dot is to let you repeat commands that are
+;; bound to multiple keystrokes by leaning on a *single* key, it seems not to
+;; make sense to bind vi-dot itself to a multiple-character key sequence, but
+;; there aren't any appropriate single characters left in the orthodox global
+;; map. (Meta characters don't count because they require two keystrokes if
+;; you don't have a real meta key, and things like function keys can't be
+;; relied on to be available to all users. We considered rebinding C-z,
+;; since C-x C-z is also bound to the same command, but RMS decided too many
+;; users were accustomed to the orthodox meaning of C-z.) So the vi-dot
+;; command checks what key sequence it was invoked by, and allows you to
+;; repeat the final key in that sequence to keep repeating the command.
+;; For example, C-x ] C-x z z z will move forward 4 pages.
+
+;; This works correctly inside a keyboard macro as far as recording and
+;; playback go, but `edit-kbd-macro' gets it wrong. That shouldn't really
+;; matter; if you need to edit something like
+;; C-x ] ;; forward-page
+;; C-x z ;; vi-dot
+;; zz ;; self-insert-command * 2
+;; C-x ;; Control-X-prefix
+;; you can just kill the bogus final 2 lines, then duplicate the vi-dot line
+;; as many times as it's really needed. Also, `edit-kbd-macro' works
+;; correctly if `vi-dot' is invoked through a rebinding to a single keystroke
+;; and the global variable vi-dot-repeat-on-final-keystroke is set to a value
+;; that doesn't include that keystroke. For example, the lines
+;; (global-set-key "\C-z" 'vi-dot)
+;; (setq vi-dot-repeat-on-final-keystroke "z")
+;; in your .emacs would allow `edit-kbd-macro' to work correctly when C-z was
+;; used in a keyboard macro to invoke `vi-dot', but would still allow C-x z
+;; to be used for `vi-dot' elsewhere. The real reason for documenting this
+;; isn't that anybody would need it for the `edit-kbd-macro' problem, but
+;; that there might be other unexpected ramifications of re-executing on
+;; repetitions of the final keystroke, and this shows how to do workarounds.
+
+;; If the preceding command had a prefix argument, that argument is applied
+;; to the vi-dot command, unless the vi-dot command is given a new prefix
+;; argument, in which case it applies that new prefix argument to the
+;; preceding command. This means a key sequence like C-u - C-x C-t can be
+;; repeated. (It shoves the preceding line upward in the buffer.)
+
+;; Here are some other key sequences with which vi-dot might be useful:
+;; C-u - C-t [shove preceding character backward in line]
+;; C-u - M-t [shove preceding word backward in sentence]
+;; C-x ^ enlarge-window [one line] (assuming frame has > 1 window)
+;; C-u - C-x ^ [shrink window one line]
+;; C-x ` next-error
+;; C-u - C-x ` [previous error]
+;; C-x DEL backward-kill-sentence
+;; C-x e call-last-kbd-macro
+;; C-x r i insert-register
+;; C-x r t string-rectangle
+;; C-x TAB indent-rigidly [one character]
+;; C-u - C-x TAB [outdent rigidly one character]
+;; C-x { shrink-window-horizontally
+;; C-x } enlarge-window-horizontally
+
+;; Using vi-dot.el doesn't entail a performance hit. There's a
+;; straightforward way to implement a package like this that would save some
+;; data about each command as it was executed, but that Lisp would need to be
+;; interpreted on every keystroke, which is Bad. This implementation doesn't
+;; do it that way; the peformance impact on almost all keystrokes is 0.
+
+;; Buried in the implementation is a reference to a function in my
+;; typematic.el package, which isn't part of GNU Emacs. However, that
+;; package is *not* required by vi-dot; the reference allows it to be used,
+;; but doesn't require it.
+
+;;; Code:
+
+(eval-when-compile (require 'cl))
+
+;;;;; ************************* USER OPTIONS ************************** ;;;;;
+
+(defvar vi-dot-too-dangerous '(kill-this-buffer)
+ "Commands too dangerous to repeat with `vi-dot'.")
+
+;; If the last command was self-insert-command, the char to be inserted was
+;; obtained by that command from last-command-char, which has now been
+;; clobbered by the command sequence that invoked vi-dot. We could get it
+;; from (recent-keys) & set last-command-char to that, "unclobbering" it, but
+;; this has the disadvantage that if the user types a sequence of different
+;; chars then invokes vi-dot, only the final char will be inserted. In vi,
+;; the dot command can reinsert the entire most-recently-inserted sequence.
+;; To do the same thing here, we need to extract the string to insert from
+;; the undo information, then insert a new copy in the buffer. However, the
+;; built-in `insert', which takes a string as an arg, is a little different
+;; from `self-insert-command', which takes only a prefix arg; `insert' ignores
+;; `overwrite-mode'. Emacs 19.34 has no self-insert-string. But there's
+;; one in my dotemacs.el (on the web), so if you want to, you can define that
+;; in your .emacs, & it'll Just Work, as it will in any future Emaecse that
+;; have self-insert-string. Or users can code their own
+;; insert-string-with-trumpet-fanfare and use that by customizing this:
+
+(defvar vi-dot-insert-function
+ (catch t (mapcar (lambda (f) (if (fboundp f) (throw t f)))
+ [self-insert-string
+ insert]))
+ "Function used by `vi-dot' command to re-insert a string of characters.
+In a vanilla Emacs this will default to `insert', which doesn't respect
+`overwrite-mode'; customize with your own insertion function, taking a single
+string as an argument, if you have one.")
+
+(defvar vi-dot-message-function nil
+ "If non-nil, function used by `vi-dot' command to say what it's doing.
+Message is something like \"Repeating command glorp\".
+To disable such messages, assign 'ignore to this variable. To customize
+display, assign a function that takes one string as an arg and displays
+it however you want.")
+
+(defvar vi-dot-repeat-on-final-keystroke t
+ "Allow `vi-dot' to re-execute for repeating lastchar of a key sequence.
+If this variable is t, `vi-dot' determines what key sequence
+it was invoked by, extracts the final character of that sequence, and
+re-executes as many times as that final character is hit; so for example
+if `vi-dot' is bound to C-x z, typing C-x z z z repeats the previous command
+3 times. If this variable is a sequence of characters, then re-execution
+only occurs if the final character by which `vi-dot' was invoked is a
+member of that sequence. If this variable is nil, no re-execution occurs.")
+
+;;;;; ****************** HACKS TO THE REST OF EMACS ******************* ;;;;;
+
+;; The basic strategy is to use last-command, a variable built in to Emacs.
+;; There are 2 issues that complicate this strategy. The first is that
+;; last-command is given a bogus value when any kill command is executed;
+;; this is done to make it easy for 'yank-pop to know that it's being invoked
+;; after a kill command. The second is that the meaning of the command is
+;; often altered by the prefix arg, but although Emacs (GNU 19.34) has a
+;; builtin prefix-arg specifying the arg for the next command, as well as a
+;; builtin current-prefix-arg, it has no builtin last-prefix-arg.
+
+;; There's a builtin (this-command-keys), the return value of which could be
+;; executed with (command-execute), but there's no (last-command-keys).
+;; Using (last-command-keys) if it existed wouldn't be optimal, however,
+;; since it would complicate checking membership in vi-dot-too-dangerous.
+
+;; It would of course be trivial to implement last-prefix-arg &
+;; true-last-command by putting something in post-command-hook, but that
+;; entails a performance hit; the approach taken below avoids that.
+
+;; First cope with (kill-region). It's straightforward to advise it to save
+;; the true value of this-command before clobbering it.
+
+(require 'advice)
+
+(defvar vi-dot-last-kill-command nil
+ "True value of `this-command' before (`kill-region') clobbered it.")
+
+(defadvice kill-region (before vi-dot-save-last-kill-command act)
+ "Remember true value of this-command before (`kill-region') clobbers it."
+ (setq vi-dot-last-kill-command this-command))
+
+;; Next cope with the prefix arg. I can advise the various functions that
+;; create prefix args to save the arg in a variable ...
+
+(defvar vi-dot-prefix-arg nil
+ "Prefix arg created as most recent universal argument.")
+
+;; ... but alone that's not enough, because if last-command's prefix arg was
+;; nil, none of those functions were ever called, so whatever command before
+;; last-command did have a prefix arg has left it in vi-dot-prefix-arg, & I
+;; need a way to tell whether whatever's in there applies to last-command.
+
+;; From Info|ELisp|Command Loop|Reading Input|Key Sequence Input:
+;; - Variable: num-input-keys
+;; This variable's value is the number of key sequences processed so far
+;; in this Emacs session. This includes key sequences read from the
+;; terminal and key sequences read from keyboard macros being executed.
+;; num-input-keys counts key *sequences*, not key *strokes*; it's only
+;; incremented after reading a complete key sequence mapping to a command.
+
+(defvar vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-prefix -1
+ "# of key sequences read in Emacs session when prefix-arg defined.")
+
+(mapcar (lambda (f)
+ (eval
+ `(defadvice ,f (after vi-dot-save-universal-arg act)
+ (setq vi-dot-prefix-arg current-prefix-arg
+ vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-prefix num-input-keys))))
+ [universal-argument-more
+ universal-argument-other-key
+ typematic-universal-argument-more-or-less])
+
+;; Coping with strings of self-insert commands gets hairy when they interact
+;; with auto-filling. Most problems are eliminated by remembering what we're
+;; self-inserting, so we only need to get it from the undo information once.
+
+(defvar vi-dot-last-self-insert nil
+ "If last repeated command was `self-insert-command', it inserted this.")
+
+;; That'll require another keystroke count so we know we're in a string of
+;; repetitions of self-insert commands:
+
+(defvar vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-self-insert -1
+ "# key sequences read in Emacs session when `self-insert-command' repeated.")
+
+;;;;; *************** ANALOGOUS HACKS TO VI-DOT ITSELF **************** ;;;;;
+
+;; That mechanism of checking num-input-keys to figure out what's really
+;; going on can be useful to other commands that need to fine-tune their
+;; interaction with vi-dot. Instead of requiring them to advise vi-dot, we
+;; can just defvar the value they need here, & setq it in the vi-dot command:
+
+(defvar vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-vi-dot -1
+ "# key sequences read in Emacs session when `vi-dot' last invoked.")
+
+;; Also, we can assign a name to the test for which that variable is
+;; intended, which thereby documents here how to use it, & makes code that
+;; uses it self-documenting:
+
+(defsubst vi-dot-is-really-this-command ()
+ "Return t if this command is happening because user invoked `vi-dot'.
+Usually, when a command is executing, the Emacs builtin variable
+`this-command' identifies the command the user invoked. Some commands modify
+that variable on the theory they're doing more good than harm; `vi-dot' does
+that, and usually does do more good than harm. However, like all do-gooders,
+sometimes `vi-dot' gets surprising results from its altruism. The value of
+this function is always whether the value of `this-command' would've been
+'vi-dot if `vi-dot' hadn't modified it."
+ (= vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-vi-dot num-input-keys))
+
+;; An example of the use of (vi-dot-is-really-this-command) may still be
+;; available in <http://www.eskimo.com/~seldon/dotemacs.el>; search for
+;; "defun wm-switch-buffer".
+
+;;;;; ******************* THE VI-DOT COMMAND ITSELF ******************* ;;;;;
+
+;;;###autoload
+(defun vi-dot (vi-dot-arg)
+ "Repeat most recently executed command.
+With prefix arg, apply new prefix arg to that command; otherwise, maintain
+prefix arg of most recently executed command if it had one.
+This command is named after the `.' command in the vi editor.
+
+If this command is invoked by a multi-character key sequence, it can then
+be repeated by repeating the final character of that sequence. This behavior
+can be modified by the global variable `vi-dot-repeat-on-final-keystroke'."
+ ;; The most recently executed command could be anything, so surprises could
+ ;; result if it were re-executed in a context where new dynamically
+ ;; localized variables were shadowing global variables in a `let' clause in
+ ;; here. (Remember that GNU Emacs 19 is dynamically localized.)
+ ;; To avoid that, I tried the `lexical-let' of the Common Lisp extensions,
+ ;; but that entails a very noticeable performance hit, so instead I use the
+ ;; "vi-dot-" prefix, reserved by this package, for *local* variables that
+ ;; might be visible to re-executed commands, including this function's arg.
+ (interactive "P")
+ (when (eq last-command 'kill-region)
+ (setq last-command vi-dot-last-kill-command))
+ (setq this-command last-command
+ vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-vi-dot num-input-keys)
+ (when (eq last-command 'mode-exit)
+ (error "last-command is mode-exit & can't be repeated"))
+ (when (memq last-command vi-dot-too-dangerous)
+ (error "Command %S too dangerous to repeat automatically" last-command))
+ (when (and (null vi-dot-arg)
+ (<= (- num-input-keys vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-prefix) 2))
+ (setq vi-dot-arg vi-dot-prefix-arg))
+ ;; Now determine whether to loop on repeated taps of the final character
+ ;; of the key sequence that invoked vi-dot. The Emacs global
+ ;; last-command-char contains the final character now, but may not still
+ ;; contain it after the previous command is repeated, so the character
+ ;; needs to be saved.
+ (let ((vi-dot-repeat-char
+ (if (eq vi-dot-repeat-on-final-keystroke t)
+ ;; allow any final input event that was a character
+ (when (eq last-command-char
+ last-command-event)
+ last-command-char)
+ ;; allow only specified final keystrokes
+ (car (memq last-command-char
+ (listify-key-sequence
+ vi-dot-repeat-on-final-keystroke))))))
+ (if (memq last-command '(exit-minibuffer
+ minibuffer-complete-and-exit
+ self-insert-and-exit))
+ (let ((vi-dot-command (car command-history)))
+ (vi-dot-message "Repeating %S" vi-dot-command)
+ (eval vi-dot-command))
+ (if (null vi-dot-arg)
+ (vi-dot-message "Repeating command %S" last-command)
+ (setq vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-prefix num-input-keys
+ current-prefix-arg vi-dot-arg)
+ (vi-dot-message "Repeating command %S %S" vi-dot-arg last-command))
+ (if (eq last-command 'self-insert-command)
+ (let ((insertion
+ (if (<= (- num-input-keys
+ vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-self-insert)
+ 1)
+ vi-dot-last-self-insert
+ (let ((range (nth 1 buffer-undo-list)))
+ (condition-case nil
+ (setq vi-dot-last-self-insert
+ (buffer-substring (car range)
+ (cdr range)))
+ (error (error "%s %s %s" ;Danger, Will Robinson!
+ "vi-dot can't intuit what you"
+ "inserted before auto-fill"
+ "clobbered it, sorry")))))))
+ (setq vi-dot-num-input-keys-at-self-insert num-input-keys)
+ (loop repeat (prefix-numeric-value vi-dot-arg) do
+ (funcall vi-dot-insert-function insertion)))
+ (call-interactively last-command)))
+ (when vi-dot-repeat-char
+ ;; A simple recursion here gets into trouble with max-lisp-eval-depth
+ ;; on long sequences of repetitions of a command like `forward-word'
+ ;; (only 32 repetitions are possible given the default value of 200 for
+ ;; max-lisp-eval-depth), but if I now locally disable the repeat char I
+ ;; can iterate indefinitely here around a single level of recursion.
+ (let (vi-dot-repeat-on-final-keystroke)
+ (while (eq (read-event) vi-dot-repeat-char)
+ (vi-dot vi-dot-arg))
+ (setq unread-command-events (list last-input-event))))))
+
+(defun vi-dot-message (format &rest args)
+ "Like `message' but displays with `vi-dot-message-function' if non-nil."
+ (let ((message (apply 'format format args)))
+ (if vi-dot-message-function
+ (funcall vi-dot-message-function message)
+ (message "%s" message))))
+
+;; OK, there's one situation left where that doesn't work correctly: when the
+;; most recent self-insertion provoked an auto-fill. The problem is that
+;; unravelling the undo information after an auto-fill is too hard, since all
+;; kinds of stuff can get in there as a result of comment prefixes etc. It'd
+;; be possible to advise do-auto-fill to record the most recent
+;; self-insertion before it does its thing, but that's a performance hit on
+;; auto-fill, which already has performance problems; so it's better to just
+;; leave it like this. If text didn't provoke an auto-fill when the user
+;; typed it, this'll correctly repeat its self-insertion, even if the
+;; repetition does cause auto-fill.
+
+;; If you wanted perfection, probably it'd be necessary to hack do-auto-fill
+;; into 2 functions, maybe-do-auto-fill & really-do-auto-fill, because only
+;; really-do-auto-fill should be advised. As things are, either the undo
+;; information would need to be scanned on every do-auto-fill invocation, or
+;; the code at the top of do-auto-fill deciding whether filling is necessary
+;; would need to be duplicated in the advice, wasting execution time when
+;; filling does turn out to be necessary.
+
+;; I thought maybe this story had a moral, something about functional
+;; decomposition; but now I'm not even sure of that, since a function
+;; call per se is a performance hit, & even the code that would
+;; correspond to really-do-auto-fill has performance problems that
+;; can make it necessary to stop typing while Emacs catches up.
+;; Maybe the real moral is that perfection is a chimera.
+
+;; Ah, hell, it's all going to fall into a black hole someday anyway.
+
+;;;;; ************************* EMACS CONTROL ************************* ;;;;;
+
+(provide 'vi-dot)
+
+;;; vi-dot.el ends here