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1 ;;; repeat.el --- convenient way to repeat the previous command
2
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 ;; Author: Will Mengarini <seldon@eskimo.com>
6 ;; Created: Mo 02 Mar 98
7 ;; Version: 0.51, We 13 May 98
8 ;; Keywords: convenience, vi, repeat
9
10 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
11
12 ;; This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
13 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
14 ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
15 ;; any later version.
16
17 ;; This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
20 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
21
22 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
23 ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
24 ;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
25 ;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
26
27 ;;; Commentary:
28
29 ;; Sometimes the fastest way to get something done is just to lean on a key;
30 ;; moving forward through a series of words by leaning on M-f is an example.
31 ;; But 'forward-page is orthodoxily bound to C-x ], so moving forward through
32 ;; several pages requires
33 ;; Loop until desired page is reached:
34 ;; Hold down control key with left pinkie.
35 ;; Tap <x>.
36 ;; Lift left pinkie off control key.
37 ;; Tap <]>.
38 ;; This is a pain in the ass.
39
40 ;; This package defines a command that repeats the preceding command,
41 ;; whatever that was, including its arguments, whatever they were.
42 ;; This command is connected to the key C-x z.
43 ;; To repeat the previous command once, type C-x z.
44 ;; To repeat it a second time immediately after, type just z.
45 ;; By typing z again and again, you can repeat the command over and over.
46
47 ;; This works correctly inside a keyboard macro as far as recording and
48 ;; playback go, but `edit-kbd-macro' gets it wrong. That shouldn't really
49 ;; matter; if you need to edit something like
50 ;; C-x ] ;; forward-page
51 ;; C-x z ;; repeat
52 ;; zz ;; self-insert-command * 2
53 ;; C-x ;; Control-X-prefix
54 ;; you can just kill the bogus final 2 lines, then duplicate the repeat line
55 ;; as many times as it's really needed. Also, `edit-kbd-macro' works
56 ;; correctly if `repeat' is invoked through a rebinding to a single keystroke
57 ;; and the global variable repeat-on-final-keystroke is set to a value
58 ;; that doesn't include that keystroke. For example, the lines
59 ;; (global-set-key "\C-z" 'repeat)
60 ;; (setq repeat-on-final-keystroke "z")
61 ;; in your .emacs would allow `edit-kbd-macro' to work correctly when C-z was
62 ;; used in a keyboard macro to invoke `repeat', but would still allow C-x z
63 ;; to be used for `repeat' elsewhere. The real reason for documenting this
64 ;; isn't that anybody would need it for the `edit-kbd-macro' problem, but
65 ;; that there might be other unexpected ramifications of re-executing on
66 ;; repetitions of the final keystroke, and this shows how to do workarounds.
67
68 ;; If the preceding command had a prefix argument, that argument is applied
69 ;; to the repeat command, unless the repeat command is given a new prefix
70 ;; argument, in which case it applies that new prefix argument to the
71 ;; preceding command. This means a key sequence like C-u - C-x C-t can be
72 ;; repeated. (It shoves the preceding line upward in the buffer.)
73
74 ;; Here are some other key sequences with which repeat might be useful:
75 ;; C-u - C-t [shove preceding character backward in line]
76 ;; C-u - M-t [shove preceding word backward in sentence]
77 ;; C-x ^ enlarge-window [one line] (assuming frame has > 1 window)
78 ;; C-u - C-x ^ [shrink window one line]
79 ;; C-x ` next-error
80 ;; C-u - C-x ` [previous error]
81 ;; C-x DEL backward-kill-sentence
82 ;; C-x e call-last-kbd-macro
83 ;; C-x r i insert-register
84 ;; C-x r t string-rectangle
85 ;; C-x TAB indent-rigidly [one character]
86 ;; C-u - C-x TAB [outdent rigidly one character]
87 ;; C-x { shrink-window-horizontally
88 ;; C-x } enlarge-window-horizontally
89
90 ;; This command was first called `vi-dot', because
91 ;; it was inspired by the `.' command in the vi editor,
92 ;; but it was renamed to make its name more meaningful.
93
94 ;;; Code:
95
96 ;;;;; ************************* USER OPTIONS ************************** ;;;;;
97
98 (defcustom repeat-too-dangerous '(kill-this-buffer)
99 "Commands too dangerous to repeat with \\[repeat]."
100 :group 'convenience
101 :type '(repeat function))
102
103 ;; If the last command was self-insert-command, the char to be inserted was
104 ;; obtained by that command from last-command-char, which has now been
105 ;; clobbered by the command sequence that invoked `repeat'. We could get it
106 ;; from (recent-keys) & set last-command-char to that, "unclobbering" it, but
107 ;; this has the disadvantage that if the user types a sequence of different
108 ;; chars then invokes repeat, only the final char will be inserted. In vi,
109 ;; the dot command can reinsert the entire most-recently-inserted sequence.
110
111 (defvar repeat-message-function nil
112 "If non-nil, function used by `repeat' command to say what it's doing.
113 Message is something like \"Repeating command glorp\".
114 To disable such messages, set this variable to `ignore'. To customize
115 display, assign a function that takes one string as an arg and displays
116 it however you want.")
117
118 (defcustom repeat-on-final-keystroke t
119 "Allow `repeat' to re-execute for repeating lastchar of a key sequence.
120 If this variable is t, `repeat' determines what key sequence
121 it was invoked by, extracts the final character of that sequence, and
122 re-executes as many times as that final character is hit; so for example
123 if `repeat' is bound to C-x z, typing C-x z z z repeats the previous command
124 3 times. If this variable is a sequence of characters, then re-execution
125 only occurs if the final character by which `repeat' was invoked is a
126 member of that sequence. If this variable is nil, no re-execution occurs."
127 :group 'convenience
128 :type 'boolean)
129
130 ;;;;; ****************** HACKS TO THE REST OF EMACS ******************* ;;;;;
131
132 ;; The basic strategy is to use last-command, a variable built in to Emacs.
133 ;; There are 2 issues that complicate this strategy. The first is that
134 ;; last-command is given a bogus value when any kill command is executed;
135 ;; this is done to make it easy for `yank-pop' to know that it's being invoked
136 ;; after a kill command. The second is that the meaning of the command is
137 ;; often altered by the prefix arg, but although Emacs (19.34) has a
138 ;; builtin prefix-arg specifying the arg for the next command, as well as a
139 ;; builtin current-prefix-arg, it has no builtin last-prefix-arg.
140
141 ;; There's a builtin (this-command-keys), the return value of which could be
142 ;; executed with (command-execute), but there's no (last-command-keys).
143 ;; Using (last-command-keys) if it existed wouldn't be optimal, however,
144 ;; since it would complicate checking membership in repeat-too-dangerous.
145
146 ;; It would of course be trivial to implement last-prefix-arg &
147 ;; true-last-command by putting something in post-command-hook, but that
148 ;; entails a performance hit; the approach taken below avoids that.
149
150 ;; First cope with (kill-region). It's straightforward to advise it to save
151 ;; the true value of this-command before clobbering it.
152
153 (require 'advice)
154
155 (defvar repeat-last-kill-command nil
156 "True value of `this-command' before (`kill-region') clobbered it.")
157
158 ;; Coping with strings of self-insert commands gets hairy when they interact
159 ;; with auto-filling. Most problems are eliminated by remembering what we're
160 ;; self-inserting, so we only need to get it from the undo information once.
161
162 (defvar repeat-last-self-insert nil
163 "If last repeated command was `self-insert-command', it inserted this.")
164
165 ;; That'll require another keystroke count so we know we're in a string of
166 ;; repetitions of self-insert commands:
167
168 (defvar repeat-num-input-keys-at-self-insert -1
169 "# key sequences read in Emacs session when `self-insert-command' repeated.")
170
171 ;;;;; *************** ANALOGOUS HACKS TO `repeat' ITSELF **************** ;;;;;
172
173 ;; That mechanism of checking num-input-keys to figure out what's really
174 ;; going on can be useful to other commands that need to fine-tune their
175 ;; interaction with repeat. Instead of requiring them to advise repeat, we
176 ;; can just defvar the value they need here, & setq it in the repeat command:
177
178 (defvar repeat-num-input-keys-at-repeat -1
179 "# key sequences read in Emacs session when `repeat' last invoked.")
180
181 ;; Also, we can assign a name to the test for which that variable is
182 ;; intended, which thereby documents here how to use it, & makes code that
183 ;; uses it self-documenting:
184
185 (defsubst repeat-is-really-this-command ()
186 "Return t if this command is happening because user invoked `repeat'.
187 Usually, when a command is executing, the Emacs builtin variable
188 `this-command' identifies the command the user invoked. Some commands modify
189 that variable on the theory they're doing more good than harm; `repeat' does
190 that, and usually does do more good than harm. However, like all do-gooders,
191 sometimes `repeat' gets surprising results from its altruism. The value of
192 this function is always whether the value of `this-command' would've been
193 'repeat if `repeat' hadn't modified it."
194 (= repeat-num-input-keys-at-repeat num-input-keys))
195
196 ;; An example of the use of (repeat-is-really-this-command) may still be
197 ;; available in <http://www.eskimo.com/~seldon/dotemacs.el>; search for
198 ;; "defun wm-switch-buffer".
199
200 ;;;;; ******************* THE REPEAT COMMAND ITSELF ******************* ;;;;;
201
202 (defvar repeat-previous-repeated-command nil
203 "The previous repeated command.")
204
205 ;;;###autoload
206 (defun repeat (repeat-arg)
207 "Repeat most recently executed command.
208 With prefix arg, apply new prefix arg to that command; otherwise, use
209 the prefix arg that was used before (if any).
210 This command is like the `.' command in the vi editor.
211
212 If this command is invoked by a multi-character key sequence, it can then
213 be repeated by repeating the final character of that sequence. This behavior
214 can be modified by the global variable `repeat-on-final-keystroke'."
215 ;; The most recently executed command could be anything, so surprises could
216 ;; result if it were re-executed in a context where new dynamically
217 ;; localized variables were shadowing global variables in a `let' clause in
218 ;; here. (Remember that GNU Emacs 19 is dynamically localized.)
219 ;; To avoid that, I tried the `lexical-let' of the Common Lisp extensions,
220 ;; but that entails a very noticeable performance hit, so instead I use the
221 ;; "repeat-" prefix, reserved by this package, for *local* variables that
222 ;; might be visible to re-executed commands, including this function's arg.
223 (interactive "P")
224 (when (eq real-last-command 'repeat)
225 (setq real-last-command repeat-previous-repeated-command))
226 (when (null real-last-command)
227 (error "There is nothing to repeat"))
228 (when (eq real-last-command 'mode-exit)
229 (error "real-last-command is mode-exit & can't be repeated"))
230 (when (memq real-last-command repeat-too-dangerous)
231 (error "Command %S too dangerous to repeat automatically" real-last-command))
232 (setq this-command real-last-command
233 repeat-num-input-keys-at-repeat num-input-keys)
234 (setq repeat-previous-repeated-command this-command)
235 (when (null repeat-arg)
236 (setq repeat-arg last-prefix-arg))
237 ;; Now determine whether to loop on repeated taps of the final character
238 ;; of the key sequence that invoked repeat. The Emacs global
239 ;; last-command-char contains the final character now, but may not still
240 ;; contain it after the previous command is repeated, so the character
241 ;; needs to be saved.
242 (let ((repeat-repeat-char
243 (if (eq repeat-on-final-keystroke t)
244 ;; allow any final input event that was a character
245 (when (eq last-command-char
246 last-command-event)
247 last-command-char)
248 ;; allow only specified final keystrokes
249 (car (memq last-command-char
250 (listify-key-sequence
251 repeat-on-final-keystroke))))))
252 (if (memq real-last-command '(exit-minibuffer
253 minibuffer-complete-and-exit
254 self-insert-and-exit))
255 (let ((repeat-command (car command-history)))
256 (repeat-message "Repeating %S" repeat-command)
257 (eval repeat-command))
258 (if (null repeat-arg)
259 (repeat-message "Repeating command %S" real-last-command)
260 (setq current-prefix-arg repeat-arg)
261 (repeat-message "Repeating command %S %S" repeat-arg real-last-command))
262 (if (eq real-last-command 'self-insert-command)
263 (let ((insertion
264 (if (<= (- num-input-keys
265 repeat-num-input-keys-at-self-insert)
266 1)
267 repeat-last-self-insert
268 (let ((range (nth 1 buffer-undo-list)))
269 (condition-case nil
270 (setq repeat-last-self-insert
271 (buffer-substring (car range)
272 (cdr range)))
273 (error (error "%s %s %s" ;Danger, Will Robinson!
274 "repeat can't intuit what you"
275 "inserted before auto-fill"
276 "clobbered it, sorry")))))))
277 (setq repeat-num-input-keys-at-self-insert num-input-keys)
278 ;; If the self-insert had a repeat count, INSERTION
279 ;; includes that many copies of the same character.
280 ;; So use just the first character
281 ;; and repeat it the right number of times.
282 (setq insertion (substring insertion 0 1))
283 (let ((count (prefix-numeric-value repeat-arg))
284 (i 0))
285 (while (< i count)
286 (repeat-self-insert insertion)
287 (setq i (1+ i)))))
288 (if (or (stringp real-last-command)
289 (vectorp real-last-command))
290 (execute-kbd-macro real-last-command)
291 (call-interactively real-last-command))))
292 (when repeat-repeat-char
293 ;; A simple recursion here gets into trouble with max-lisp-eval-depth
294 ;; on long sequences of repetitions of a command like `forward-word'
295 ;; (only 32 repetitions are possible given the default value of 200 for
296 ;; max-lisp-eval-depth), but if I now locally disable the repeat char I
297 ;; can iterate indefinitely here around a single level of recursion.
298 (let (repeat-on-final-keystroke)
299 (while (eq (read-event) repeat-repeat-char)
300 ;; Make each repetition undo separately.
301 (undo-boundary)
302 (repeat repeat-arg))
303 (setq unread-command-events (list last-input-event))))))
304
305 (defun repeat-self-insert (string)
306 (let ((i 0))
307 (while (< i (length string))
308 (let ((last-command-char (aref string i)))
309 (self-insert-command 1))
310 (setq i (1+ i)))))
311
312 (defun repeat-message (format &rest args)
313 "Like `message' but displays with `repeat-message-function' if non-nil."
314 (let ((message (apply 'format format args)))
315 (if repeat-message-function
316 (funcall repeat-message-function message)
317 (message "%s" message))))
318
319 ;; OK, there's one situation left where that doesn't work correctly: when the
320 ;; most recent self-insertion provoked an auto-fill. The problem is that
321 ;; unravelling the undo information after an auto-fill is too hard, since all
322 ;; kinds of stuff can get in there as a result of comment prefixes etc. It'd
323 ;; be possible to advise do-auto-fill to record the most recent
324 ;; self-insertion before it does its thing, but that's a performance hit on
325 ;; auto-fill, which already has performance problems; so it's better to just
326 ;; leave it like this. If text didn't provoke an auto-fill when the user
327 ;; typed it, this'll correctly repeat its self-insertion, even if the
328 ;; repetition does cause auto-fill.
329
330 ;; If you wanted perfection, probably it'd be necessary to hack do-auto-fill
331 ;; into 2 functions, maybe-do-auto-fill & really-do-auto-fill, because only
332 ;; really-do-auto-fill should be advised. As things are, either the undo
333 ;; information would need to be scanned on every do-auto-fill invocation, or
334 ;; the code at the top of do-auto-fill deciding whether filling is necessary
335 ;; would need to be duplicated in the advice, wasting execution time when
336 ;; filling does turn out to be necessary.
337
338 ;; I thought maybe this story had a moral, something about functional
339 ;; decomposition; but now I'm not even sure of that, since a function
340 ;; call per se is a performance hit, & even the code that would
341 ;; correspond to really-do-auto-fill has performance problems that
342 ;; can make it necessary to stop typing while Emacs catches up.
343 ;; Maybe the real moral is that perfection is a chimera.
344
345 ;; Ah, hell, it's all going to fall into a black hole someday anyway.
346
347 ;;;;; ************************* EMACS CONTROL ************************* ;;;;;
348
349 (provide 'repeat)
350
351 ;;; repeat.el ends here