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1 ;;; format.el --- read and save files in multiple formats
2
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,
4 ;; 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5
6 ;; Author: Boris Goldowsky <boris@gnu.org>
7
8 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
9
10 ;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12 ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
13 ;; any later version.
14
15 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
19
20 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21 ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
22 ;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
23 ;; Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
24
25 ;;; Commentary:
26
27 ;; This file defines a unified mechanism for saving & loading files stored
28 ;; in different formats. `format-alist' contains information that directs
29 ;; Emacs to call an encoding or decoding function when reading or writing
30 ;; files that match certain conditions.
31 ;;
32 ;; When a file is visited, its format is determined by matching the
33 ;; beginning of the file against regular expressions stored in
34 ;; `format-alist'. If this fails, you can manually translate the buffer
35 ;; using `format-decode-buffer'. In either case, the formats used are
36 ;; listed in the variable `buffer-file-format', and become the default
37 ;; format for saving the buffer. To save a buffer in a different format,
38 ;; change this variable, or use `format-write-file'.
39 ;;
40 ;; Auto-save files are normally created in the same format as the visited
41 ;; file, but the variable `buffer-auto-save-file-format' can be set to a
42 ;; particularly fast or otherwise preferred format to be used for
43 ;; auto-saving (or nil to do no encoding on auto-save files, but then you
44 ;; risk losing any text-properties in the buffer).
45 ;;
46 ;; You can manually translate a buffer into or out of a particular format
47 ;; with the functions `format-encode-buffer' and `format-decode-buffer'.
48 ;; To translate just the region use the functions `format-encode-region'
49 ;; and `format-decode-region'.
50 ;;
51 ;; You can define a new format by writing the encoding and decoding
52 ;; functions, and adding an entry to `format-alist'. See enriched.el for
53 ;; an example of how to implement a file format. There are various
54 ;; functions defined in this file that may be useful for writing the
55 ;; encoding and decoding functions:
56 ;; * `format-annotate-region' and `format-deannotate-region' allow a
57 ;; single alist of information to be used for encoding and decoding.
58 ;; The alist defines a correspondence between strings in the file
59 ;; ("annotations") and text-properties in the buffer.
60 ;; * `format-replace-strings' is similarly useful for doing simple
61 ;; string->string translations in a reversible manner.
62
63 ;;; Code:
64
65 (put 'buffer-file-format 'permanent-local t)
66 (put 'buffer-auto-save-file-format 'permanent-local t)
67
68 (defvar format-alist
69 '((text/enriched "Extended MIME text/enriched format."
70 "Content-[Tt]ype:[ \t]*text/enriched"
71 enriched-decode enriched-encode t enriched-mode)
72 (plain "ISO 8859-1 standard format, no text properties."
73 ;; Plain only exists so that there is an obvious neutral choice in
74 ;; the completion list.
75 nil nil nil nil nil)
76 (TeX "TeX (encoding)"
77 nil
78 iso-tex2iso iso-iso2tex t nil)
79 (gtex "German TeX (encoding)"
80 nil
81 iso-gtex2iso iso-iso2gtex t nil)
82 (html "HTML/SGML \"ISO 8879:1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN\" (encoding)"
83 nil
84 iso-sgml2iso iso-iso2sgml t nil)
85 (rot13 "rot13"
86 nil
87 "tr a-mn-z n-za-m" "tr a-mn-z n-za-m" t nil)
88 (duden "Duden Ersatzdarstellung"
89 nil
90 "diac" iso-iso2duden t nil)
91 (de646 "German ASCII (ISO 646)"
92 nil
93 "recode -f iso646-ge:latin1" "recode -f latin1:iso646-ge" t nil)
94 (denet "net German"
95 nil
96 iso-german iso-cvt-read-only t nil)
97 (esnet "net Spanish"
98 nil
99 iso-spanish iso-cvt-read-only t nil))
100 "List of information about understood file formats.
101 Elements are of the form \(NAME DOC-STR REGEXP FROM-FN TO-FN MODIFY MODE-FN).
102
103 NAME is a symbol, which is stored in `buffer-file-format'.
104
105 DOC-STR should be a single line providing more information about the
106 format. It is currently unused, but in the future will be shown to
107 the user if they ask for more information.
108
109 REGEXP is a regular expression to match against the beginning of the file;
110 it should match only files in that format. Use nil to avoid
111 matching at all for formats for which it isn't appropriate to
112 require explicit encoding/decoding.
113
114 FROM-FN is called to decode files in that format; it takes two args, BEGIN
115 and END, and can make any modifications it likes, returning the new
116 end. It must make sure that the beginning of the file no longer
117 matches REGEXP, or else it will get called again.
118 Alternatively, FROM-FN can be a string, which specifies a shell command
119 (including options) to be used as a filter to perform the conversion.
120
121 TO-FN is called to encode a region into that format; it takes three
122 arguments: BEGIN, END, and BUFFER. BUFFER is the original buffer that
123 the data being written came from, which the function could use, for
124 example, to find the values of local variables. TO-FN should either
125 return a list of annotations like `write-region-annotate-functions',
126 or modify the region and return the new end.
127 Alternatively, TO-FN can be a string, which specifies a shell command
128 (including options) to be used as a filter to perform the conversion.
129
130 MODIFY, if non-nil, means the TO-FN wants to modify the region. If nil,
131 TO-FN will not make any changes but will instead return a list of
132 annotations.
133
134 MODE-FN, if specified, is called when visiting a file with that format.
135 It is called with a single positive argument, on the assumption
136 that this would turn on some minor mode.
137
138 PRESERVE, if non-nil, means that `format-write-file' should not remove
139 this format from `buffer-file-formats'.")
140
141 ;;; Basic Functions (called from Lisp)
142
143 (defun format-encode-run-method (method from to &optional buffer)
144 "Translate using METHOD the text from FROM to TO.
145 If METHOD is a string, it is a shell command (including options);
146 otherwise, it should be a Lisp function.
147 BUFFER should be the buffer that the output originally came from."
148 (if (stringp method)
149 (let ((error-buff (get-buffer-create "*Format Errors*"))
150 (coding-system-for-read 'no-conversion)
151 format-alist)
152 (with-current-buffer error-buff
153 (widen)
154 (erase-buffer))
155 (if (and (zerop (save-window-excursion
156 (shell-command-on-region from to method t t
157 error-buff)))
158 ;; gzip gives zero exit status with bad args, for instance.
159 (zerop (with-current-buffer error-buff
160 (buffer-size))))
161 (bury-buffer error-buff)
162 (switch-to-buffer-other-window error-buff)
163 (error "Format encoding failed")))
164 (funcall method from to buffer)))
165
166 (defun format-decode-run-method (method from to &optional buffer)
167 "Decode using METHOD the text from FROM to TO.
168 If METHOD is a string, it is a shell command (including options); otherwise,
169 it should be a Lisp function. Decoding is done for the given BUFFER."
170 (if (stringp method)
171 (let ((error-buff (get-buffer-create "*Format Errors*"))
172 (coding-system-for-write 'no-conversion)
173 format-alist)
174 (with-current-buffer error-buff
175 (widen)
176 (erase-buffer))
177 ;; We should perhaps go via a temporary buffer and copy it
178 ;; back, in case of errors.
179 (if (and (zerop (save-window-excursion
180 (shell-command-on-region (point-min) (point-max)
181 method t t
182 error-buff)))
183 ;; gzip gives zero exit status with bad args, for instance.
184 (zerop (with-current-buffer error-buff
185 (buffer-size))))
186 (bury-buffer error-buff)
187 (switch-to-buffer-other-window error-buff)
188 (error "Format decoding failed"))
189 (point))
190 (funcall method from to)))
191
192 (defun format-annotate-function (format from to orig-buf format-count)
193 "Return annotations for writing region as FORMAT.
194 FORMAT is a symbol naming one of the formats defined in `format-alist'.
195 It must be a single symbol, not a list like `buffer-file-format'.
196 FROM and TO delimit the region to be operated on in the current buffer.
197 ORIG-BUF is the original buffer that the data came from.
198
199 FORMAT-COUNT is an integer specifying how many times this function has
200 been called in the process of decoding ORIG-BUF.
201
202 This function works like a function in `write-region-annotate-functions':
203 it either returns a list of annotations, or returns with a different buffer
204 current, which contains the modified text to write. In the latter case,
205 this function's value is nil.
206
207 For most purposes, consider using `format-encode-region' instead."
208 ;; This function is called by write-region (actually
209 ;; build_annotations) for each element of buffer-file-format.
210 (let* ((info (assq format format-alist))
211 (to-fn (nth 4 info))
212 (modify (nth 5 info)))
213 (if to-fn
214 (if modify
215 ;; To-function wants to modify region. Copy to safe place.
216 (let ((copy-buf (get-buffer-create (format " *Format Temp %d*"
217 format-count)))
218 (sel-disp selective-display)
219 (multibyte enable-multibyte-characters)
220 (coding-system buffer-file-coding-system))
221 (with-current-buffer copy-buf
222 (setq selective-display sel-disp)
223 (set-buffer-multibyte multibyte)
224 (setq buffer-file-coding-system coding-system))
225 (copy-to-buffer copy-buf from to)
226 (set-buffer copy-buf)
227 (format-insert-annotations write-region-annotations-so-far from)
228 (format-encode-run-method to-fn (point-min) (point-max) orig-buf)
229 nil)
230 ;; Otherwise just call function, it will return annotations.
231 (funcall to-fn from to orig-buf)))))
232
233 (defun format-decode (format length &optional visit-flag)
234 ;; This function is called by insert-file-contents whenever a file is read.
235 "Decode text from any known FORMAT.
236 FORMAT is a symbol appearing in `format-alist' or a list of such symbols,
237 or nil, in which case this function tries to guess the format of the data by
238 matching against the regular expressions in `format-alist'. After a match is
239 found and the region decoded, the alist is searched again from the beginning
240 for another match.
241
242 Second arg LENGTH is the number of characters following point to operate on.
243 If optional third arg VISIT-FLAG is true, set `buffer-file-format'
244 to the reverted list of formats used, and call any mode functions defined
245 for those formats.
246
247 Return the new length of the decoded region.
248
249 For most purposes, consider using `format-decode-region' instead."
250 (let ((mod (buffer-modified-p))
251 (begin (point))
252 (end (+ (point) length)))
253 (unwind-protect
254 (progn
255 ;; Don't record undo information for the decoding.
256
257 (if (null format)
258 ;; Figure out which format it is in, remember list in `format'.
259 (let ((try format-alist))
260 (while try
261 (let* ((f (car try))
262 (regexp (nth 2 f))
263 (p (point)))
264 (if (and regexp (looking-at regexp)
265 (< (match-end 0) (+ begin length)))
266 (progn
267 (push (car f) format)
268 ;; Decode it
269 (if (nth 3 f)
270 (setq end (format-decode-run-method (nth 3 f) begin end)))
271 ;; Call visit function if required
272 (if (and visit-flag (nth 6 f)) (funcall (nth 6 f) 1))
273 ;; Safeguard against either of the functions changing pt.
274 (goto-char p)
275 ;; Rewind list to look for another format
276 (setq try format-alist))
277 (setq try (cdr try))))))
278 ;; Deal with given format(s)
279 (or (listp format) (setq format (list format)))
280 (let ((do format) f)
281 (while do
282 (or (setq f (assq (car do) format-alist))
283 (error "Unknown format %s" (car do)))
284 ;; Decode:
285 (if (nth 3 f)
286 (setq end (format-decode-run-method (nth 3 f) begin end)))
287 ;; Call visit function if required
288 (if (and visit-flag (nth 6 f)) (funcall (nth 6 f) 1))
289 (setq do (cdr do))))
290 ;; Encode in the opposite order.
291 (setq format (reverse format)))
292 (if visit-flag
293 (setq buffer-file-format format)))
294
295 (set-buffer-modified-p mod))
296
297 ;; Return new length of region
298 (- end begin)))
299
300 ;;;
301 ;;; Interactive functions & entry points
302 ;;;
303
304 (defun format-decode-buffer (&optional format)
305 "Translate the buffer from some FORMAT.
306 If the format is not specified, attempt a regexp-based guess.
307 Set `buffer-file-format' to the format used, and call any
308 format-specific mode functions."
309 (interactive
310 (list (format-read "Translate buffer from format (default guess): ")))
311 (save-excursion
312 (goto-char (point-min))
313 (format-decode format (buffer-size) t)))
314
315 (defun format-decode-region (from to &optional format)
316 "Decode the region from some format.
317 Arg FORMAT is optional; if omitted the format will be determined by looking
318 for identifying regular expressions at the beginning of the region."
319 (interactive
320 (list (region-beginning) (region-end)
321 (format-read "Translate region from format (default guess): ")))
322 (save-excursion
323 (goto-char from)
324 (format-decode format (- to from) nil)))
325
326 (defun format-encode-buffer (&optional format)
327 "Translate the buffer into FORMAT.
328 FORMAT defaults to `buffer-file-format'. It is a symbol naming one of the
329 formats defined in `format-alist', or a list of such symbols."
330 (interactive
331 (list (format-read (format "Translate buffer to format (default %s): "
332 buffer-file-format))))
333 (format-encode-region (point-min) (point-max) format))
334
335 (defun format-encode-region (beg end &optional format)
336 "Translate the region into some FORMAT.
337 FORMAT defaults to `buffer-file-format'. It is a symbol naming
338 one of the formats defined in `format-alist', or a list of such symbols."
339 (interactive
340 (list (region-beginning) (region-end)
341 (format-read (format "Translate region to format (default %s): "
342 buffer-file-format))))
343 (if (null format) (setq format buffer-file-format))
344 (if (symbolp format) (setq format (list format)))
345 (save-excursion
346 (goto-char end)
347 (let ((cur-buf (current-buffer))
348 (end (point-marker)))
349 (while format
350 (let* ((info (assq (car format) format-alist))
351 (to-fn (nth 4 info))
352 (modify (nth 5 info))
353 result)
354 (if to-fn
355 (if modify
356 (setq end (format-encode-run-method to-fn beg end
357 (current-buffer)))
358 (format-insert-annotations
359 (funcall to-fn beg end (current-buffer)))))
360 (setq format (cdr format)))))))
361
362 (defun format-write-file (filename format &optional confirm)
363 "Write current buffer into file FILENAME using some FORMAT.
364 Make buffer visit that file and set the format as the default for future
365 saves. If the buffer is already visiting a file, you can specify a directory
366 name as FILENAME, to write a file of the same old name in that directory.
367
368 If optional third arg CONFIRM is non-nil, ask for confirmation before
369 overwriting an existing file. Interactively, confirmation is required
370 unless you supply a prefix argument."
371 (interactive
372 ;; Same interactive spec as write-file, plus format question.
373 (let* ((file (if buffer-file-name
374 (read-file-name "Write file: "
375 nil nil nil nil)
376 (read-file-name "Write file: "
377 (cdr (assq 'default-directory
378 (buffer-local-variables)))
379 nil nil (buffer-name))))
380 (fmt (format-read (format "Write file `%s' in format: "
381 (file-name-nondirectory file)))))
382 (list file fmt (not current-prefix-arg))))
383 (let ((old-formats buffer-file-format)
384 preserve-formats)
385 (dolist (fmt old-formats)
386 (let ((aelt (assq fmt format-alist)))
387 (if (nth 7 aelt)
388 (push fmt preserve-formats))))
389 (setq buffer-file-format format)
390 (dolist (fmt preserve-formats)
391 (unless (memq fmt buffer-file-format)
392 (setq buffer-file-format (append buffer-file-format (list fmt))))))
393 (write-file filename confirm))
394
395 (defun format-find-file (filename format)
396 "Find the file FILENAME using data format FORMAT.
397 If FORMAT is nil then do not do any format conversion."
398 (interactive
399 ;; Same interactive spec as write-file, plus format question.
400 (let* ((file (read-file-name "Find file: "))
401 (fmt (format-read (format "Read file `%s' in format: "
402 (file-name-nondirectory file)))))
403 (list file fmt)))
404 (let ((format-alist nil))
405 (find-file filename))
406 (if format
407 (format-decode-buffer format)))
408
409 (defun format-insert-file (filename format &optional beg end)
410 "Insert the contents of file FILENAME using data format FORMAT.
411 If FORMAT is nil then do not do any format conversion.
412 The optional third and fourth arguments BEG and END specify
413 the part (in bytes) of the file to read.
414
415 The return value is like the value of `insert-file-contents':
416 a list (ABSOLUTE-FILE-NAME SIZE)."
417 (interactive
418 ;; Same interactive spec as write-file, plus format question.
419 (let* ((file (read-file-name "Find file: "))
420 (fmt (format-read (format "Read file `%s' in format: "
421 (file-name-nondirectory file)))))
422 (list file fmt)))
423 (let (value size)
424 (let ((format-alist nil))
425 (setq value (insert-file-contents filename nil beg end))
426 (setq size (nth 1 value)))
427 (if format
428 (setq size (format-decode format size)
429 value (list (car value) size)))
430 value))
431
432 (defun format-read (&optional prompt)
433 "Read and return the name of a format.
434 Return value is a list, like `buffer-file-format'; it may be nil.
435 Formats are defined in `format-alist'. Optional arg is the PROMPT to use."
436 (let* ((table (mapcar (lambda (x) (list (symbol-name (car x))))
437 format-alist))
438 (ans (completing-read (or prompt "Format: ") table nil t)))
439 (if (not (equal "" ans)) (list (intern ans)))))
440
441
442 ;;;
443 ;;; Below are some functions that may be useful in writing encoding and
444 ;;; decoding functions for use in format-alist.
445 ;;;
446
447 (defun format-replace-strings (alist &optional reverse beg end)
448 "Do multiple replacements on the buffer.
449 ALIST is a list of (FROM . TO) pairs, which should be proper arguments to
450 `search-forward' and `replace-match', respectively.
451 Optional second arg REVERSE, if non-nil, means the pairs are (TO . FROM),
452 so that you can use the same list in both directions if it contains only
453 literal strings.
454 Optional args BEG and END specify a region of the buffer on which to operate."
455 (save-excursion
456 (save-restriction
457 (or beg (setq beg (point-min)))
458 (if end (narrow-to-region (point-min) end))
459 (while alist
460 (let ((from (if reverse (cdr (car alist)) (car (car alist))))
461 (to (if reverse (car (car alist)) (cdr (car alist)))))
462 (goto-char beg)
463 (while (search-forward from nil t)
464 (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
465 (insert to)
466 (set-text-properties (- (point) (length to)) (point)
467 (text-properties-at (point)))
468 (delete-region (point) (+ (point) (- (match-end 0)
469 (match-beginning 0)))))
470 (setq alist (cdr alist)))))))
471
472 ;;; Some list-manipulation functions that we need.
473
474 (defun format-delq-cons (cons list)
475 "Remove the given CONS from LIST by side effect and return the new LIST.
476 Since CONS could be the first element of LIST, write
477 `\(setq foo \(format-delq-cons element foo))' to be sure of changing
478 the value of `foo'."
479 (if (eq cons list)
480 (cdr list)
481 (let ((p list))
482 (while (not (eq (cdr p) cons))
483 (if (null p) (error "format-delq-cons: not an element"))
484 (setq p (cdr p)))
485 ;; Now (cdr p) is the cons to delete
486 (setcdr p (cdr cons))
487 list)))
488
489 (defun format-make-relatively-unique (a b)
490 "Delete common elements of lists A and B, return as pair.
491 Compare using `equal'."
492 (let* ((acopy (copy-sequence a))
493 (bcopy (copy-sequence b))
494 (tail acopy))
495 (while tail
496 (let ((dup (member (car tail) bcopy))
497 (next (cdr tail)))
498 (if dup (setq acopy (format-delq-cons tail acopy)
499 bcopy (format-delq-cons dup bcopy)))
500 (setq tail next)))
501 (cons acopy bcopy)))
502
503 (defun format-common-tail (a b)
504 "Given two lists that have a common tail, return it.
505 Compare with `equal', and return the part of A that is equal to the
506 equivalent part of B. If even the last items of the two are not equal,
507 return nil."
508 (let ((la (length a))
509 (lb (length b)))
510 ;; Make sure they are the same length
511 (if (> la lb)
512 (setq a (nthcdr (- la lb) a))
513 (setq b (nthcdr (- lb la) b))))
514 (while (not (equal a b))
515 (setq a (cdr a)
516 b (cdr b)))
517 a)
518
519 (defun format-proper-list-p (list)
520 "Return t if LIST is a proper list.
521 A proper list is a list ending with a nil cdr, not with an atom "
522 (when (listp list)
523 (while (consp list)
524 (setq list (cdr list)))
525 (null list)))
526
527 (defun format-reorder (items order)
528 "Arrange ITEMS to follow partial ORDER.
529 Elements of ITEMS equal to elements of ORDER will be rearranged
530 to follow the ORDER. Unmatched items will go last."
531 (if order
532 (let ((item (member (car order) items)))
533 (if item
534 (cons (car item)
535 (format-reorder (format-delq-cons item items)
536 (cdr order)))
537 (format-reorder items (cdr order))))
538 items))
539
540 (put 'face 'format-list-valued t) ; These text-properties take values
541 (put 'unknown 'format-list-valued t) ; that are lists, the elements of which
542 ; should be considered separately.
543 ; See format-deannotate-region and
544 ; format-annotate-region.
545
546 ;; This text property has list values, but they are treated atomically.
547
548 (put 'display 'format-list-atomic-p t)
549
550 ;;;
551 ;;; Decoding
552 ;;;
553
554 (defun format-deannotate-region (from to translations next-fn)
555 "Translate annotations in the region into text properties.
556 This sets text properties between FROM to TO as directed by the
557 TRANSLATIONS and NEXT-FN arguments.
558
559 NEXT-FN is a function that searches forward from point for an annotation.
560 It should return a list of 4 elements: \(BEGIN END NAME POSITIVE). BEGIN and
561 END are buffer positions bounding the annotation, NAME is the name searched
562 for in TRANSLATIONS, and POSITIVE should be non-nil if this annotation marks
563 the beginning of a region with some property, or nil if it ends the region.
564 NEXT-FN should return nil if there are no annotations after point.
565
566 The basic format of the TRANSLATIONS argument is described in the
567 documentation for the `format-annotate-region' function. There are some
568 additional things to keep in mind for decoding, though:
569
570 When an annotation is found, the TRANSLATIONS list is searched for a
571 text-property name and value that corresponds to that annotation. If the
572 text-property has several annotations associated with it, it will be used only
573 if the other annotations are also in effect at that point. The first match
574 found whose annotations are all present is used.
575
576 The text property thus determined is set to the value over the region between
577 the opening and closing annotations. However, if the text-property name has a
578 non-nil `format-list-valued' property, then the value will be consed onto the
579 surrounding value of the property, rather than replacing that value.
580
581 There are some special symbols that can be used in the \"property\" slot of
582 the TRANSLATIONS list: PARAMETER and FUNCTION \(spelled in uppercase).
583 Annotations listed under the pseudo-property PARAMETER are considered to be
584 arguments of the immediately surrounding annotation; the text between the
585 opening and closing parameter annotations is deleted from the buffer but saved
586 as a string.
587
588 The surrounding annotation should be listed under the pseudo-property
589 FUNCTION. Instead of inserting a text-property for this annotation,
590 the function listed in the VALUE slot is called to make whatever
591 changes are appropriate. It can also return a list of the form
592 \(START LOC PROP VALUE) which specifies a property to put on. The
593 function's first two arguments are the START and END locations, and
594 the rest of the arguments are any PARAMETERs found in that region.
595
596 Any annotations that are found by NEXT-FN but not defined by TRANSLATIONS
597 are saved as values of the `unknown' text-property \(which is list-valued).
598 The TRANSLATIONS list should usually contain an entry of the form
599 \(unknown \(nil format-annotate-value))
600 to write these unknown annotations back into the file."
601 (save-excursion
602 (save-restriction
603 (narrow-to-region (point-min) to)
604 (goto-char from)
605 (let (next open-ans todo loc unknown-ans)
606 (while (setq next (funcall next-fn))
607 (let* ((loc (nth 0 next))
608 (end (nth 1 next))
609 (name (nth 2 next))
610 (positive (nth 3 next))
611 (found nil))
612
613 ;; Delete the annotation
614 (delete-region loc end)
615 (cond
616 ;; Positive annotations are stacked, remembering location
617 (positive (push `(,name ((,loc . nil))) open-ans))
618 ;; It is a negative annotation:
619 ;; Close the top annotation & add its text property.
620 ;; If the file's nesting is messed up, the close might not match
621 ;; the top thing on the open-annotations stack.
622 ;; If no matching annotation is open, just ignore the close.
623 ((not (assoc name open-ans))
624 (message "Extra closing annotation (%s) in file" name))
625 ;; If one is open, but not on the top of the stack, close
626 ;; the things in between as well. Set `found' when the real
627 ;; one is closed.
628 (t
629 (while (not found)
630 (let* ((top (car open-ans)) ; first on stack: should match.
631 (top-name (car top)) ; text property name
632 (top-extents (nth 1 top)) ; property regions
633 (params (cdr (cdr top))) ; parameters
634 (aalist translations)
635 (matched nil))
636 (if (equal name top-name)
637 (setq found t)
638 (message "Improper nesting in file."))
639 ;; Look through property names in TRANSLATIONS
640 (while aalist
641 (let ((prop (car (car aalist)))
642 (alist (cdr (car aalist))))
643 ;; And look through values for each property
644 (while alist
645 (let ((value (car (car alist)))
646 (ans (cdr (car alist))))
647 (if (member top-name ans)
648 ;; This annotation is listed, but still have to
649 ;; check if multiple annotations are satisfied
650 (if (member nil (mapcar (lambda (r)
651 (assoc r open-ans))
652 ans))
653 nil ; multiple ans not satisfied
654 ;; If there are multiple annotations going
655 ;; into one text property, split up the other
656 ;; annotations so they apply individually to
657 ;; the other regions.
658 (setcdr (car top-extents) loc)
659 (let ((to-split ans) this-one extents)
660 (while to-split
661 (setq this-one
662 (assoc (car to-split) open-ans)
663 extents (nth 1 this-one))
664 (if (not (eq this-one top))
665 (setcar (cdr this-one)
666 (format-subtract-regions
667 extents top-extents)))
668 (setq to-split (cdr to-split))))
669 ;; Set loop variables to nil so loop
670 ;; will exit.
671 (setq alist nil aalist nil matched t
672 ;; pop annotation off stack.
673 open-ans (cdr open-ans))
674 (let ((extents top-extents)
675 (start (car (car top-extents)))
676 (loc (cdr (car top-extents))))
677 (while extents
678 (cond
679 ;; Check for pseudo-properties
680 ((eq prop 'PARAMETER)
681 ;; A parameter of the top open ann:
682 ;; delete text and use as arg.
683 (if open-ans
684 ;; (If nothing open, discard).
685 (setq open-ans
686 (cons
687 (append (car open-ans)
688 (list
689 (buffer-substring
690 start loc)))
691 (cdr open-ans))))
692 (delete-region start loc))
693 ((eq prop 'FUNCTION)
694 ;; Not a property, but a function.
695 (let ((rtn
696 (apply value start loc params)))
697 (if rtn (push rtn todo))))
698 (t
699 ;; Normal property/value pair
700 (setq todo
701 (cons (list start loc prop value)
702 todo))))
703 (setq extents (cdr extents)
704 start (car (car extents))
705 loc (cdr (car extents))))))))
706 (setq alist (cdr alist))))
707 (setq aalist (cdr aalist)))
708 (if (not matched)
709 ;; Didn't find any match for the annotation:
710 ;; Store as value of text-property `unknown'.
711 (let ((extents top-extents)
712 (start (car (car top-extents)))
713 (loc (or (cdr (car top-extents)) loc)))
714 (while extents
715 (setq open-ans (cdr open-ans)
716 todo (cons (list start loc 'unknown top-name)
717 todo)
718 unknown-ans (cons name unknown-ans)
719 extents (cdr extents)
720 start (car (car extents))
721 loc (cdr (car extents))))))))))))
722
723 ;; Once entire file has been scanned, add the properties.
724 (while todo
725 (let* ((item (car todo))
726 (from (nth 0 item))
727 (to (nth 1 item))
728 (prop (nth 2 item))
729 (val (nth 3 item)))
730
731 (if (numberp val) ; add to ambient value if numeric
732 (format-property-increment-region from to prop val 0)
733 (put-text-property
734 from to prop
735 (cond ((get prop 'format-list-valued) ; value gets consed onto
736 ; list-valued properties
737 (let ((prev (get-text-property from prop)))
738 (cons val (if (listp prev) prev (list prev)))))
739 (t val))))) ; normally, just set to val.
740 (setq todo (cdr todo)))
741
742 (if unknown-ans
743 (message "Unknown annotations: %s" unknown-ans))))))
744
745 (defun format-subtract-regions (minu subtra)
746 "Remove from the regions in MINUEND the regions in SUBTRAHEND.
747 A region is a dotted pair (FROM . TO). Both parameters are lists of
748 regions. Each list must contain nonoverlapping, noncontiguous
749 regions, in descending order. The result is also nonoverlapping,
750 noncontiguous, and in descending order. The first element of MINUEND
751 can have a cdr of nil, indicating that the end of that region is not
752 yet known.
753
754 \(fn MINUEND SUBTRAHEND)"
755 (let* ((minuend (copy-alist minu))
756 (subtrahend (copy-alist subtra))
757 (m (car minuend))
758 (s (car subtrahend))
759 results)
760 (while (and minuend subtrahend)
761 (cond
762 ;; The minuend starts after the subtrahend ends; keep it.
763 ((> (car m) (cdr s))
764 (push m results)
765 (setq minuend (cdr minuend)
766 m (car minuend)))
767 ;; The minuend extends beyond the end of the subtrahend. Chop it off.
768 ((or (null (cdr m)) (> (cdr m) (cdr s)))
769 (push (cons (1+ (cdr s)) (cdr m)) results)
770 (setcdr m (cdr s)))
771 ;; The subtrahend starts after the minuend ends; throw it away.
772 ((< (cdr m) (car s))
773 (setq subtrahend (cdr subtrahend) s (car subtrahend)))
774 ;; The subtrahend extends beyond the end of the minuend. Chop it off.
775 (t ;(<= (cdr m) (cdr s)))
776 (if (>= (car m) (car s))
777 (setq minuend (cdr minuend) m (car minuend))
778 (setcdr m (1- (car s)))
779 (setq subtrahend (cdr subtrahend) s (car subtrahend))))))
780 (nconc (nreverse results) minuend)))
781
782 ;; This should probably go somewhere other than format.el. Then again,
783 ;; indent.el has alter-text-property. NOTE: We can also use
784 ;; next-single-property-change instead of text-property-not-all, but then
785 ;; we have to see if we passed TO.
786 (defun format-property-increment-region (from to prop delta default)
787 "In the region from FROM to TO increment property PROP by amount DELTA.
788 DELTA may be negative. If property PROP is nil anywhere
789 in the region, it is treated as though it were DEFAULT."
790 (let ((cur from) val newval next)
791 (while cur
792 (setq val (get-text-property cur prop)
793 newval (+ (or val default) delta)
794 next (text-property-not-all cur to prop val))
795 (put-text-property cur (or next to) prop newval)
796 (setq cur next))))
797
798 ;;;
799 ;;; Encoding
800 ;;;
801
802 (defun format-insert-annotations (list &optional offset)
803 "Apply list of annotations to buffer as `write-region' would.
804 Insert each element of the given LIST of buffer annotations at its
805 appropriate place. Use second arg OFFSET if the annotations' locations are
806 not relative to the beginning of the buffer: annotations will be inserted
807 at their location-OFFSET+1 \(ie, the offset is treated as the position of
808 the first character in the buffer)."
809 (if (not offset)
810 (setq offset 0)
811 (setq offset (1- offset)))
812 (let ((l (reverse list)))
813 (while l
814 (goto-char (- (car (car l)) offset))
815 (insert (cdr (car l)))
816 (setq l (cdr l)))))
817
818 (defun format-annotate-value (old new)
819 "Return OLD and NEW as a \(CLOSE . OPEN) annotation pair.
820 Useful as a default function for TRANSLATIONS alist when the value of the text
821 property is the name of the annotation that you want to use, as it is for the
822 `unknown' text property."
823 (cons (if old (list old))
824 (if new (list new))))
825
826 (defun format-annotate-region (from to translations format-fn ignore)
827 "Generate annotations for text properties in the region.
828 Search for changes between FROM and TO, and describe them with a list of
829 annotations as defined by alist TRANSLATIONS and FORMAT-FN. IGNORE lists text
830 properties not to consider; any text properties that are neither ignored nor
831 listed in TRANSLATIONS are warned about.
832 If you actually want to modify the region, give the return value of this
833 function to `format-insert-annotations'.
834
835 Format of the TRANSLATIONS argument:
836
837 Each element is a list whose car is a PROPERTY, and the following
838 elements have the form (VALUE ANNOTATIONS...).
839 Whenever the property takes on the value VALUE, the annotations
840 \(as formatted by FORMAT-FN) are inserted into the file.
841 When the property stops having that value, the matching negated annotation
842 will be inserted \(it may actually be closed earlier and reopened, if
843 necessary, to keep proper nesting).
844
845 If VALUE is a list, then each element of the list is dealt with
846 separately.
847
848 If a VALUE is numeric, then it is assumed that there is a single annotation
849 and each occurrence of it increments the value of the property by that number.
850 Thus, given the entry \(left-margin \(4 \"indent\")), if the left margin
851 changes from 4 to 12, two <indent> annotations will be generated.
852
853 If the VALUE is nil, then instead of annotations, a function should be
854 specified. This function is used as a default: it is called for all
855 transitions not explicitly listed in the table. The function is called with
856 two arguments, the OLD and NEW values of the property. It should return
857 a cons cell (CLOSE . OPEN) as `format-annotate-single-property-change' does.
858
859 The same TRANSLATIONS structure can be used in reverse for reading files."
860 (let ((all-ans nil) ; All annotations - becomes return value
861 (open-ans nil) ; Annotations not yet closed
862 (loc nil) ; Current location
863 (not-found nil)) ; Properties that couldn't be saved
864 (while (or (null loc)
865 (and (setq loc (next-property-change loc nil to))
866 (< loc to)))
867 (or loc (setq loc from))
868 (let* ((ans (format-annotate-location loc (= loc from) ignore translations))
869 (neg-ans (format-reorder (aref ans 0) open-ans))
870 (pos-ans (aref ans 1))
871 (ignored (aref ans 2)))
872 (setq not-found (append ignored not-found)
873 ignore (append ignored ignore))
874 ;; First do the negative (closing) annotations
875 (while neg-ans
876 ;; Check if it's missing. This can happen (eg, a numeric property
877 ;; going negative can generate closing annotations before there are
878 ;; any open). Warn user & ignore.
879 (if (not (member (car neg-ans) open-ans))
880 (message "Can't close %s: not open." (car neg-ans))
881 (while (not (equal (car neg-ans) (car open-ans)))
882 ;; To close anno. N, need to first close ans 1 to N-1,
883 ;; remembering to re-open them later.
884 (push (car open-ans) pos-ans)
885 (setq all-ans
886 (cons (cons loc (funcall format-fn (car open-ans) nil))
887 all-ans))
888 (setq open-ans (cdr open-ans)))
889 ;; Now remove the one we're really interested in from open list.
890 (setq open-ans (cdr open-ans))
891 ;; And put the closing annotation here.
892 (push (cons loc (funcall format-fn (car neg-ans) nil))
893 all-ans))
894 (setq neg-ans (cdr neg-ans)))
895 ;; Now deal with positive (opening) annotations
896 (let ((p pos-ans))
897 (while pos-ans
898 (push (car pos-ans) open-ans)
899 (push (cons loc (funcall format-fn (car pos-ans) t))
900 all-ans)
901 (setq pos-ans (cdr pos-ans))))))
902
903 ;; Close any annotations still open
904 (while open-ans
905 (setq all-ans
906 (cons (cons to (funcall format-fn (car open-ans) nil))
907 all-ans))
908 (setq open-ans (cdr open-ans)))
909 (if not-found
910 (message "These text properties could not be saved:\n %s"
911 not-found))
912 (nreverse all-ans)))
913
914 ;;; Internal functions for format-annotate-region.
915
916 (defun format-annotate-location (loc all ignore translations)
917 "Return annotation(s) needed at location LOC.
918 This includes any properties that change between LOC - 1 and LOC.
919 If ALL is true, don't look at previous location, but generate annotations for
920 all non-nil properties.
921 Third argument IGNORE is a list of text-properties not to consider.
922 Use the TRANSLATIONS alist (see `format-annotate-region' for doc).
923
924 Return value is a vector of 3 elements:
925 1. List of annotations to close
926 2. List of annotations to open.
927 3. List of properties that were ignored or couldn't be annotated.
928
929 The annotations in lists 1 and 2 need not be strings.
930 They can be whatever the FORMAT-FN in `format-annotate-region'
931 can handle. If that is `enriched-make-annotation', they can be
932 either strings, or lists of the form (PARAMETER VALUE)."
933 (let* ((prev-loc (1- loc))
934 (before-plist (if all nil (text-properties-at prev-loc)))
935 (after-plist (text-properties-at loc))
936 p negatives positives prop props not-found)
937 ;; make list of all property names involved
938 (setq p before-plist)
939 (while p
940 (if (not (memq (car p) props))
941 (push (car p) props))
942 (setq p (cdr (cdr p))))
943 (setq p after-plist)
944 (while p
945 (if (not (memq (car p) props))
946 (push (car p) props))
947 (setq p (cdr (cdr p))))
948
949 (while props
950 (setq prop (pop props))
951 (if (memq prop ignore)
952 nil ; If it's been ignored before, ignore it now.
953 (let ((before (if all nil (car (cdr (memq prop before-plist)))))
954 (after (car (cdr (memq prop after-plist)))))
955 (if (equal before after)
956 nil ; no change; ignore
957 (let ((result (format-annotate-single-property-change
958 prop before after translations)))
959 (if (not result)
960 (push prop not-found)
961 (setq negatives (nconc negatives (car result))
962 positives (nconc positives (cdr result)))))))))
963 (vector negatives positives not-found)))
964
965 (defun format-annotate-single-property-change (prop old new translations)
966 "Return annotations for property PROP changing from OLD to NEW.
967 These are searched for in the translations alist TRANSLATIONS
968 (see `format-annotate-region' for the format).
969 If NEW does not appear in the list, but there is a default function,
970 then call that function.
971 Return a cons of the form (CLOSE . OPEN)
972 where CLOSE is a list of annotations to close
973 and OPEN is a list of annotations to open.
974
975 The annotations in CLOSE and OPEN need not be strings.
976 They can be whatever the FORMAT-FN in `format-annotate-region'
977 can handle. If that is `enriched-make-annotation', they can be
978 either strings, or lists of the form (PARAMETER VALUE)."
979
980 (let ((prop-alist (cdr (assoc prop translations)))
981 default)
982 (if (not prop-alist)
983 nil
984 ;; If either old or new is a list, have to treat both that way.
985 (if (and (or (listp old) (listp new))
986 (not (get prop 'format-list-atomic-p)))
987 (if (or (not (format-proper-list-p old))
988 (not (format-proper-list-p new)))
989 (format-annotate-atomic-property-change prop-alist old new)
990 (let* ((old (if (listp old) old (list old)))
991 (new (if (listp new) new (list new)))
992 (tail (format-common-tail old new))
993 close open)
994 (while old
995 (setq close
996 (append (car (format-annotate-atomic-property-change
997 prop-alist (car old) nil))
998 close)
999 old (cdr old)))
1000 (while new
1001 (setq open
1002 (append (cdr (format-annotate-atomic-property-change
1003 prop-alist nil (car new)))
1004 open)
1005 new (cdr new)))
1006 (format-make-relatively-unique close open)))
1007 (format-annotate-atomic-property-change prop-alist old new)))))
1008
1009 (defun format-annotate-atomic-property-change (prop-alist old new)
1010 "Internal function to annotate a single property change.
1011 PROP-ALIST is the relevant element of a TRANSLATIONS list.
1012 OLD and NEW are the values."
1013 (let (num-ann)
1014 ;; If old and new values are numbers,
1015 ;; look for a number in PROP-ALIST.
1016 (if (and (or (null old) (numberp old))
1017 (or (null new) (numberp new)))
1018 (progn
1019 (setq num-ann prop-alist)
1020 (while (and num-ann (not (numberp (car (car num-ann)))))
1021 (setq num-ann (cdr num-ann)))))
1022 (if num-ann
1023 ;; Numerical annotation - use difference
1024 (progn
1025 ;; If property is numeric, nil means 0
1026 (cond ((and (numberp old) (null new))
1027 (setq new 0))
1028 ((and (numberp new) (null old))
1029 (setq old 0)))
1030
1031 (let* ((entry (car num-ann))
1032 (increment (car entry))
1033 (n (ceiling (/ (float (- new old)) (float increment))))
1034 (anno (car (cdr entry))))
1035 (if (> n 0)
1036 (cons nil (make-list n anno))
1037 (cons (make-list (- n) anno) nil))))
1038
1039 ;; Standard annotation
1040 (let ((close (and old (cdr (assoc old prop-alist))))
1041 (open (and new (cdr (assoc new prop-alist)))))
1042 (if (or close open)
1043 (format-make-relatively-unique close open)
1044 ;; Call "Default" function, if any
1045 (let ((default (assq nil prop-alist)))
1046 (if default
1047 (funcall (car (cdr default)) old new))))))))
1048
1049 (provide 'format)
1050
1051 ;;; arch-tag: c387e9c7-a93d-47bf-89bc-8ca67e96755a
1052 ;;; format.el ends here