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1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c %**start of header
3 @setfilename ../../info/idlwave
4 @settitle IDLWAVE User Manual
5 @dircategory Emacs
6 @direntry
7 * IDLWAVE: (idlwave). Major mode and shell for IDL files.
8 @end direntry
9 @synindex ky cp
10 @syncodeindex vr cp
11 @syncodeindex fn cp
12 @set VERSION 6.1
13 @set EDITION 6.1
14 @set IDLVERSION 6.3
15 @set NSYSROUTINES 4346
16 @set DATE April, 2007
17 @set AUTHOR J.D. Smith & Carsten Dominik
18 @set MAINTAINER J.D. Smith
19 @c %**end of header
20 @finalout
21
22 @ifinfo
23 This file documents IDLWAVE, a major mode for editing IDL files with
24 Emacs, and interacting with an IDL shell run as a subprocess.
25
26 This is edition @value{EDITION} of the IDLWAVE User Manual for IDLWAVE
27 @value{VERSION}
28
29 Copyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
30 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
31
32 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
33 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
34 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
35 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU
36 Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the
37 license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation
38 License'' in the Emacs manual.
39
40 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
41 this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free
42 Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.''
43
44 This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free
45 Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document
46 separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the
47 license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license.
48 @end ifinfo
49
50 @titlepage
51 @title IDLWAVE User Manual
52 @subtitle Emacs major mode and shell for IDL
53 @subtitle Edition @value{EDITION}, @value{DATE}
54
55 @author by J.D. Smith & Carsten Dominik
56 @page
57 This is edition @value{EDITION} of the @cite{IDLWAVE User Manual} for
58 IDLWAVE version @value{VERSION}, @value{DATE}.
59 @sp 2
60 Copyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
61 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
62 @sp 2
63 @cindex Copyright, of IDLWAVE
64 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
65 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
66 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
67 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU
68 Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the
69 license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation
70 License'' in the Emacs manual.
71
72 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
73 this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free
74 Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.''
75
76 This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free
77 Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document
78 separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the
79 license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license.
80 @end titlepage
81 @contents
82
83 @page
84
85 @ifnottex
86
87 @node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir)
88
89 IDLWAVE is a package which supports editing source code written in the
90 Interactive Data Language (IDL), and running IDL as an inferior shell.
91
92 @end ifnottex
93
94 @menu
95 * Introduction:: What IDLWAVE is, and what it is not
96 * IDLWAVE in a Nutshell:: One page quick-start guide
97 * Getting Started:: Tutorial
98 * The IDLWAVE Major Mode:: The mode for editing IDL programs
99 * The IDLWAVE Shell:: The mode for running IDL as an inferior program
100 * Acknowledgements:: Who did what
101 * Sources of Routine Info:: How does IDLWAVE know about routine XYZ
102 * HTML Help Browser Tips::
103 * Configuration Examples:: The user is king
104 * Windows and MacOS:: What still works, and how
105 * Troubleshooting:: When good computers turn bad
106 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
107 * Index:: Fast access
108
109 @detailmenu
110 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
111
112 Getting Started (Tutorial)
113
114 * Lesson I -- Development Cycle::
115 * Lesson II -- Customization::
116 * Lesson III -- User Catalog::
117
118 The IDLWAVE Major Mode
119
120 * Code Formatting:: Making code look nice
121 * Routine Info:: Calling Sequence and Keyword List
122 * Online Help:: One key press from source to help
123 * Completion:: Completing routine names and Keywords
124 * Routine Source:: Finding routines, the easy way
125 * Resolving Routines:: Force the Shell to compile a routine
126 * Code Templates:: Frequent code constructs
127 * Abbreviations:: Abbreviations for common commands
128 * Actions:: Changing case, Padding, End checking
129 * Doc Header:: Inserting a standard header
130 * Motion Commands:: Moving through the structure of a program
131 * Misc Options:: Things that fit nowhere else
132
133 Code Formatting
134
135 * Code Indentation:: Reflecting the logical structure
136 * Continued Statement Indentation::
137 * Comment Indentation:: Special indentation for comment lines
138 * Continuation Lines:: Splitting statements over lines
139 * Syntax Highlighting:: Font-lock support
140 * Octals and Highlighting:: Why "123 causes problems
141
142 Online Help
143
144 * Help with HTML Documentation::
145 * Help with Source::
146
147 Completion
148
149 * Case of Completed Words:: CaseOFcomPletedWords
150 * Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity:: obj->Method, what?
151 * Object Method Completion in the Shell::
152 * Class and Keyword Inheritance:: obj->Method, _EXTRA=e
153 * Structure Tag Completion:: Completing state.Tag
154
155 Actions
156
157 * Block Boundary Check:: Is the END statement correct?
158 * Padding Operators:: Enforcing space around `=' etc
159 * Case Changes:: Enforcing upper case keywords
160
161 The IDLWAVE Shell
162
163 * Starting the Shell:: How to launch IDL as a subprocess
164 * Using the Shell:: Interactively working with the Shell
165 * Commands Sent to the Shell::
166 * Debugging IDL Programs::
167 * Examining Variables::
168 * Custom Expression Examination::
169
170 Debugging IDL Programs
171
172 * A Tale of Two Modes::
173 * Debug Key Bindings::
174 * Breakpoints and Stepping::
175 * Compiling Programs::
176 * Walking the Calling Stack::
177 * Electric Debug Mode::
178
179 Sources of Routine Info
180
181 * Routine Definitions:: Where IDL Routines are defined.
182 * Routine Information Sources:: So how does IDLWAVE know about...
183 * Catalogs::
184 * Load-Path Shadows:: Routines defined in several places
185 * Documentation Scan:: Scanning the IDL Manuals
186
187 Catalogs
188
189 * Library Catalogs::
190 * User Catalog::
191
192 @end detailmenu
193 @end menu
194
195 @node Introduction, IDLWAVE in a Nutshell, Top, Top
196 @chapter Introduction
197 @cindex Introduction
198 @cindex CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture)
199 @cindex Interface Definition Language
200 @cindex Interactive Data Language
201 @cindex cc-mode.el
202 @cindex @file{idl.el}
203 @cindex @file{idl-shell.el}
204 @cindex Feature overview
205
206 IDLWAVE is a package which supports editing source files written in
207 the Interactive Data Language (IDL), and running IDL as an inferior shell@footnote{IDLWAVE can also be used
208 for editing source files for the related WAVE/CL language, but with only
209 limited support.}. It is a feature-rich replacement for the IDLDE
210 development environment included with IDL, and uses the full power of
211 Emacs to make editing and running IDL programs easier, quicker, and more
212 structured.
213
214 IDLWAVE consists of two main parts: a major mode for editing IDL
215 source files (@code{idlwave-mode}) and a mode for running the IDL
216 program as an inferior shell (@code{idlwave-shell-mode}). Although
217 one mode can be used without the other, both work together closely to
218 form a complete development environment. Here is a brief summary of
219 what IDLWAVE does:
220
221 @itemize @bullet
222 @item
223 Smart code indentation and automatic-formatting.
224 @item
225 Three level syntax highlighting support.
226 @item
227 Context-sensitive display of calling sequences and keywords for more
228 than 1000 native IDL routines, extendible to any additional number of
229 local routines, and already available with many pre-scanned libraries.
230 @item
231 Fast, context-sensitive online HTML help, or source-header help for
232 undocumented routines.
233 @item
234 Context sensitive completion of routine names, keywords, system
235 variables, class names and much more.
236 @item
237 Easy insertion of code templates and abbreviations of common constructs.
238 @item
239 Automatic corrections to enforce a variety of customizable coding
240 standards.
241 @item
242 Integrity checks and auto-termination of logical blocks.
243 @item
244 Routine name space conflict search with likelihood-of-use ranking.
245 @item
246 Support for @file{imenu} (Emacs) and @file{func-menu} (XEmacs).
247 @item
248 Documentation support.
249 @item
250 Running IDL as an inferior Shell with history search, command line
251 editing and all the completion and routine info capabilities present in
252 IDL source buffers.
253 @item
254 Full handling of debugging with breakpoints, with interactive setting
255 of break conditions, and easy stepping through code.
256 @item
257 Compilation, execution and interactive single-keystroke debugging of
258 programs directly from the source buffer.
259 @item
260 Quick, source-guided navigation of the calling stack, with variable
261 inspection, etc.
262 @item
263 Examining variables and expressions with a mouse click.
264 @item
265 And much, much more...
266 @end itemize
267
268 @ifnottex
269 @cindex Screenshots
270 Here are a number of screenshots showing IDLWAVE in action:
271
272 @itemize @bullet
273 @item
274 @uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_nav.gif,An IDLWAVE buffer}
275 @item
276 @uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_keys.gif,A keyword being completed}
277 @item
278 @uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_help.gif,Online help text.}
279 @item
280 @uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_ri.gif,Routine information displayed}
281 @item
282 @uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_bp.gif,Debugging code
283 stopped at a breakpoint}
284 @end itemize
285 @end ifnottex
286
287 IDLWAVE is the distant successor to the @file{idl.el} and
288 @file{idl-shell.el} files written by Chris Chase. The modes and files
289 had to be renamed because of a name space conflict with CORBA's
290 @code{idl-mode}, defined in Emacs in the file @file{cc-mode.el}.
291
292 In this manual, each section ends with a list of related user options.
293 Don't be confused by the sheer number of options available --- in most
294 cases the default settings are just fine. The variables are listed here
295 to make sure you know where to look if you want to change anything. For
296 a full description of what a particular variable does and how to
297 configure it, see the documentation string of that variable (available
298 with @kbd{C-h v}). Some configuration examples are also given in the
299 appendix.
300
301 @node IDLWAVE in a Nutshell, Getting Started, Introduction, Top
302 @chapter IDLWAVE in a Nutshell
303 @cindex Summary of important commands
304 @cindex IDLWAVE in a Nutshell
305 @cindex Nutshell, IDLWAVE in a
306
307 @subheading Editing IDL Programs
308
309 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
310 @item @key{TAB}
311 @tab Indent the current line relative to context.
312 @item @kbd{C-M-\}
313 @tab Re-indent all lines in the current region.
314 @item @kbd{C-M-q}
315 @tab Re-indent all lines in the current routine.
316 @item @kbd{C-u @key{TAB}}
317 @tab Re-indent all lines in the current statement.
318 @item @kbd{M-@key{RET}}
319 @tab Start a continuation line, splitting the current line at point.
320 @item @kbd{M-;}
321 @tab Start new comment at line beginning or after code, or (un)comment
322 highlighted region.
323 @item @kbd{M-q}
324 @tab Fill the current comment paragraph.
325 @item @kbd{C-c ?}
326 @tab Display calling sequence and keywords for the procedure or function call
327 at point.
328 @item @kbd{M-?}
329 @tab Load context sensitive online help for nearby routine, keyword, etc.
330 @item @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}
331 @tab Complete a procedure name, function name or keyword in the buffer.
332 @item @kbd{C-c C-i}
333 @tab Update IDLWAVE's knowledge about functions and procedures.
334 @item @kbd{C-c C-v}
335 @tab Visit the source code of a procedure/function.
336 @item @kbd{C-u C-c C-v}
337 @tab Visit the source code of a procedure/function in this buffer.
338 @item @kbd{C-c C-h}
339 @tab Insert a standard documentation header.
340 @item @kbd{C-c @key{RET}}
341 @tab Insert a new timestamp and history item in the documentation header.
342 @end multitable
343
344 @subheading Running the IDLWAVE Shell, Debugging Programs
345
346 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
347 @item @kbd{C-c C-s}
348 @tab Start IDL as a subprocess and/or switch to the shell buffer.
349 @item @key{Up}, @kbd{M-p}
350 @tab Cycle back through IDL command history.
351 @item @key{Down},@kbd{M-n}
352 @tab Cycle forward.
353 @item @kbd{@key{TAB}}
354 @tab Complete a procedure name, function name or keyword in the shell buffer.
355 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-c}
356 @tab Save and compile the source file in the current buffer.
357 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-e}
358 @tab Compile and run the current region.
359 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-x}
360 @tab Go to next syntax error.
361 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-v}
362 @tab Switch to electric debug mode.
363 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}
364 @tab Set a breakpoint at the nearest viable source line.
365 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-d}
366 @tab Clear the nearest breakpoint.
367 @item @kbd{C-c C-d [}
368 @tab Go to the previous breakpoint.
369 @item @kbd{C-c C-d ]}
370 @tab Go to the next breakpoint.
371 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-p}
372 @tab Print the value of the expression near point in IDL.
373 @end multitable
374
375 @subheading Commonly used Settings in @file{.emacs}
376 @lisp
377 ;; Change the indentation preferences
378 ;; Start autoloading routine info after 2 idle seconds
379 (setq idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after 2)
380 ;; Pad operators with spaces
381 (setq idlwave-do-actions t
382 idlwave-surround-by-blank t)
383 ;; Syntax Highlighting
384 (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock)
385 ;; Automatically start the shell when needed
386 (setq idlwave-shell-automatic-start t)
387 ;; Bind debugging commands with CONTROL and SHIFT modifiers
388 (setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(control shift))
389 @end lisp
390
391 @html
392 <A NAME="TUTORIAL"></A>
393 @end html
394
395 @node Getting Started, The IDLWAVE Major Mode, IDLWAVE in a Nutshell, Top
396 @chapter Getting Started (Tutorial)
397 @cindex Quick-Start
398 @cindex Tutorial
399 @cindex Getting Started
400
401 @menu
402 * Lesson I -- Development Cycle::
403 * Lesson II -- Customization::
404 * Lesson III -- User Catalog::
405 @end menu
406
407 @node Lesson I -- Development Cycle, Lesson II -- Customization, Getting Started, Getting Started
408 @section Lesson I: Development Cycle
409
410 The purpose of this tutorial is to guide you through a very basic
411 development cycle using IDLWAVE. We will paste a simple program into
412 a buffer and use the shell to compile, debug and run it. On the way
413 we will use many of the important IDLWAVE commands. Note, however,
414 that IDLWAVE has many more capabilities than covered here, which can
415 be discovered by reading the entire manual, or hovering over the
416 shoulder of your nearest IDLWAVE guru for a few days.
417
418 It is assumed that you have access to Emacs or XEmacs with the full
419 IDLWAVE package including online help. We also assume that you are
420 familiar with Emacs and can read the nomenclature of key presses in
421 Emacs (in particular, @kbd{C} stands for @key{CONTROL} and @kbd{M} for
422 @key{META} (often the @key{ALT} key carries this functionality)).
423
424 Open a new source file by typing:
425
426 @example
427 @kbd{C-x C-f tutorial.pro @key{RET}}
428 @end example
429
430 A buffer for this file will pop up, and it should be in IDLWAVE mode,
431 indicated in the mode line just below the editing window. Also, the
432 menu bar should contain @samp{IDLWAVE}.
433
434 Now cut-and-paste the following code, also available as
435 @file{tutorial.pro} in the IDLWAVE distribution.
436
437 @example
438 function daynr,d,m,y
439 ;; compute a sequence number for a date
440 ;; works 1901-2099.
441 if y lt 100 then y = y+1900
442 if m le 2 then delta = 1 else delta = 0
443 m1 = m + delta*12 + 1
444 y1 = y * delta
445 return, d + floor(m1*30.6)+floor(y1*365.25)+5
446 end
447
448 function weekday,day,month,year
449 ;; compute weekday number for date
450 nr = daynr(day,month,year)
451 return, nr mod 7
452 end
453
454 pro plot_wday,day,month
455 ;; Plot the weekday of a date in the first 10 years of this century.
456 years = 2000,+indgen(10)
457 wdays = intarr(10)
458 for i=0,n_elements(wdays)-1 do begin
459 wdays[i] = weekday(day,month,years[i])
460 end
461 plot,years,wdays,YS=2,YT="Wday (0=Sunday)"
462 end
463 @end example
464
465 The indentation probably looks funny, since it's different from the
466 settings you use, so use the @key{TAB} key in each line to
467 automatically line it up (or, more quickly, @emph{select} the entire
468 buffer with @kbd{C-x h}, and indent the whole region with
469 @kbd{C-M-\}). Notice how different syntactical elements are
470 highlighted in different colors, if you have set up support for
471 font-lock.
472
473 Let's check out two particular editing features of IDLWAVE. Place the
474 cursor after the @code{end} statement of the @code{for} loop and press
475 @key{SPC}. IDLWAVE blinks back to the beginning of the block and
476 changes the generic @code{end} to the specific @code{endfor}
477 automatically (as long as the variable @code{idlwave-expand-generic-end}
478 is turned on --- @pxref{Lesson II -- Customization}). Now place the
479 cursor in any line you would like to split and press @kbd{M-@key{RET}}.
480 The line is split at the cursor position, with the continuation @samp{$}
481 and indentation all taken care of. Use @kbd{C-/} to undo the last
482 change.
483
484 The procedure @code{plot_wday} is supposed to plot the day of the week
485 of a given date for the first 10 years of the 21st century. As in
486 most code, there are a few bugs, which we are going to use IDLWAVE to
487 help us fix.
488
489 First, let's launch the IDLWAVE shell. You do this with the command
490 @kbd{C-c C-s}. The Emacs window will split or another window will popup
491 to display IDL running in a shell interaction buffer. Type a few
492 commands like @code{print,!PI} to convince yourself that you can work
493 there just as well as in a terminal, or the IDLDE. Use the arrow keys
494 to cycle through your command history. Are we having fun now?
495
496 Now go back to the source window and type @kbd{C-c C-d C-c} to compile
497 the program. If you watch the shell buffer, you see that IDLWAVE types
498 @samp{.run "tutorial.pro"} for you. But the compilation fails because
499 there is a comma in the line @samp{years=...}. The line with the error
500 is highlighted and the cursor positioned at the error, so remove the
501 comma (you should only need to hit @kbd{Delete}!). Compile again, using
502 the same keystrokes as before. Notice that the file is automatically
503 saved for you. This time everything should work fine, and you should
504 see the three routines compile.
505
506 Now we want to use the command to plot the day of the week on January
507 1st. We could type the full command ourselves, but why do that? Go
508 back to the shell window, type @samp{plot_} and hit @key{TAB}. After
509 a bit of a delay (while IDLWAVE initializes its routine info database,
510 if necessary), the window will split to show all procedures it knows
511 starting with that string, and @w{@code{plot_wday}} should be one of
512 them. Saving the buffer alerted IDLWAVE about this new routine.
513 Click with the middle mouse button on @code{plot_wday} and it will be
514 copied to the shell buffer, or if you prefer, add @samp{w} to
515 @samp{plot_} to make it unambiguous (depending on what other routines
516 starting with @samp{plot_} you have installed on your system), hit
517 @key{TAB} again, and the full routine name will be completed. Now
518 provide the two arguments:
519
520 @example
521 plot_wday,1,1
522 @end example
523
524 @noindent and press @key{RET}. This fails with an error message telling
525 you the @code{YT} keyword to plot is ambiguous. What are the allowed
526 keywords again? Go back to the source window and put the cursor into
527 the `plot' line and press @kbd{C-c ?}. This shows the routine info
528 window for the plot routine, which contains a list of keywords, along
529 with the argument list. Oh, we wanted @code{YTITLE}. Fix that up.
530 Recompile with @kbd{C-c C-d C-c}. Jump back into the shell with
531 @kbd{C-c C-s}, press the @key{UP} arrow to recall the previous command
532 and execute again.
533
534 This time we get a plot, but it is pretty ugly --- the points are all
535 connected with a line. Hmm, isn't there a way for @code{plot} to use
536 symbols instead? What was that keyword? Position the cursor on the
537 plot line after a comma (where you'd normally type a keyword), and hit
538 @kbd{M-@key{Tab}}. A long list of plot's keywords appears. Aha,
539 there it is, @code{PSYM}. Middle click to insert it. An @samp{=}
540 sign is included for you too. Now what were the values of @code{PSYM}
541 supposed to be? With the cursor on or after the keyword, press
542 @kbd{M-?} for online help (alternatively, you could have right clicked
543 on the colored keyword itself in the completion list). A browser will
544 pop up showing the HTML documentation for the @code{PYSM} keyword.
545 OK, let's use diamonds=4. Fix this, recompile (you know the command
546 by now: @kbd{C-c C-d C-c}), go back to the shell (if it's vanished,
547 you know what to do: @kbd{C-c C-s}) and execute again. Now things
548 look pretty good.
549
550 Let's try a different day --- how about April fool's day?
551
552 @example
553 plot_wday,1,4
554 @end example
555
556 Oops, this looks very wrong. All April Fool's days cannot be Fridays!
557 We've got a bug in the program, perhaps in the @code{daynr} function.
558 Let's put a breakpoint on the last line there. Position the cursor on
559 the @samp{return, d+...} line and press @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}. IDL sets a
560 breakpoint (as you see in the shell window), and the break line is
561 indicated. Back to the shell buffer, re-execute the previous command.
562 IDL stops at the line with the breakpoint. Now hold down the SHIFT
563 key and click with the middle mouse button on a few variables there:
564 @samp{d}, @samp{y}, @samp{m}, @samp{y1}, etc. Maybe @code{d} isn't
565 the correct type. CONTROL-SHIFT middle-click on it for help. Well,
566 it's an integer, so that's not the problem. Aha, @samp{y1} is zero,
567 but it should be the year, depending on delta. Shift click
568 @samp{delta} to see that it's 0. Below, we see the offending line:
569 @samp{y1=y*delta...} the multiplication should have been a minus sign!
570 Hit @kbd{q} to exit the debugging mode, and fix the line to read:
571
572 @example
573 y1 = y - delta
574 @end example
575
576 Now remove all breakpoints: @kbd{C-c C-d C-a}. Recompile and rerun the
577 command. Everything should now work fine. How about those leap years?
578 Change the code to plot 100 years and see that every 28 years, the
579 sequence of weekdays repeats.
580
581 @node Lesson II -- Customization, Lesson III -- User Catalog, Lesson I -- Development Cycle, Getting Started
582 @section Lesson II: Customization
583
584 Emacs is probably the most customizable piece of software ever written,
585 and it would be a shame if you did not make use of this to adapt IDLWAVE
586 to your own preferences. Customizing Emacs or IDLWAVE is accomplished
587 by setting Lisp variables in the @file{.emacs} file in your home
588 directory --- but do not be dismayed; for the most part, you can just
589 copy and work from the examples given here.
590
591 Let's first use a boolean variable. These are variables which you turn
592 on or off, much like a checkbox. A value of @samp{t} means on, a value
593 of @samp{nil} means off. Copy the following line into your
594 @file{.emacs} file, exit and restart Emacs.
595
596 @lisp
597 (setq idlwave-reserved-word-upcase t)
598 @end lisp
599
600 When this option is turned on, each reserved word you type into an IDL
601 source buffer will be converted to upper case when you press @key{SPC}
602 or @key{RET} right after the word. Try it out! @samp{if} changes to
603 @samp{IF}, @samp{begin} to @samp{BEGIN}. If you don't like this
604 behavior, remove the option again from your @file{.emacs} file and
605 restart Emacs.
606
607 You likely have your own indentation preferences for IDL code. For
608 example, some may prefer to indent the main block of an IDL program
609 slightly from the margin and use only 3 spaces as indentation between
610 @code{BEGIN} and @code{END}. Try the following lines in @file{.emacs}:
611
612 @lisp
613 (setq idlwave-main-block-indent 1)
614 (setq idlwave-block-indent 3)
615 (setq idlwave-end-offset -3)
616 @end lisp
617
618 Restart Emacs, and re-indent the program we developed in the first part
619 of this tutorial with @kbd{C-c h} and @kbd{C-M-\}. You may want to keep
620 these lines in @file{.emacs}, with values adjusted to your likings. If
621 you want to get more information about any of these variables, type,
622 e.g., @kbd{C-h v idlwave-main-block-indent @key{RET}}. To find which
623 variables can be customized, look for items marked @samp{User Option:}
624 throughout this manual.
625
626 If you cannot seem to master this Lisp customization in @file{.emacs},
627 there is another, more user-friendly way to customize all the IDLWAVE
628 variables. You can access it through the IDLWAVE menu in one of the
629 @file{.pro} buffers, menu item @code{Customize->Browse IDLWAVE
630 Group}. Here you'll be presented with all the various variables grouped
631 into categories. You can navigate the hierarchy (e.g. @samp{IDLWAVE
632 Code Formatting->Idlwave Abbrev And Indent Action->Idlwave Expand
633 Generic End} to turn on @code{END} expansion), read about the variables,
634 change them, and `Save for Future Sessions'. Few of these variables
635 need customization, but you can exercise considerable control over
636 IDLWAVE's functionality with them.
637
638 You may also find the key bindings used for the debugging commands too
639 long and complicated. Often we have heard complaints along the lines
640 of, ``Do I really have to go through the finger gymnastics of @kbd{C-c
641 C-d C-c} to run a simple command?'' Due to Emacs rules and
642 conventions, shorter bindings cannot be set by default, but you can
643 easily enable them. First, there is a way to assign all debugging
644 commands in a single sweep to another simpler combination. The only
645 problem is that we have to use something which Emacs does not need for
646 other important commands. One good option is to execute debugging
647 commands by holding down @key{CONTROL} and @key{SHIFT} while pressing
648 a single character: @kbd{C-S-b} for setting a breakpoint, @kbd{C-S-c}
649 for compiling the current source file, @kbd{C-S-a} for deleting all
650 breakpoints (try it, it's easier). You can enable this with:
651
652 @lisp
653 (setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(shift control))
654 @end lisp
655
656 @noindent If you have a special keyboard with, for example, a
657 @key{SUPER} key, you could even shorten that:
658
659 @lisp
660 (setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(super))
661 @end lisp
662
663 @noindent to get compilation on @kbd{S-c}. Often, a modifier key like
664 @key{SUPER} or @key{HYPER} is bound or can be bound to an otherwise
665 unused key on your keyboard --- consult your system documentation.
666
667 You can also assign specific commands to keys. This you must do in the
668 @emph{mode-hook}, a special function which is run when a new IDLWAVE
669 buffer gets set up. The possibilities for key customization are
670 endless. Here we set function keys f4-f8 to common debugging commands.
671
672 @lisp
673 ;; First for the source buffer
674 (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook
675 (lambda ()
676 (local-set-key [f4] 'idlwave-shell-retall)
677 (local-set-key [f5] 'idlwave-shell-break-here)
678 (local-set-key [f6] 'idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp)
679 (local-set-key [f7] 'idlwave-shell-cont)
680 (local-set-key [f8] 'idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp)))
681 ;; Then for the shell buffer
682 (add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook
683 (lambda ()
684 (local-set-key [f4] 'idlwave-shell-retall)
685 (local-set-key [f5] 'idlwave-shell-break-here)
686 (local-set-key [f6] 'idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp)
687 (local-set-key [f7] 'idlwave-shell-cont)
688 (local-set-key [f8] 'idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp)))
689 @end lisp
690
691 @node Lesson III -- User Catalog, , Lesson II -- Customization, Getting Started
692 @section Lesson III: User and Library Catalogs
693
694 We have already used the routine info display in the first part of this
695 tutorial. This was the invoked using @kbd{C-c ?}, and displays
696 information about the IDL routine near the cursor position. Wouldn't it
697 be nice to have the same kind of information available for your own
698 routines and for the huge amount of code in major libraries like JHUPL
699 or the IDL-Astro library? In many cases, you may already have this
700 information. Files named @file{.idlwave_catalog} in library directories
701 contain scanned information on the routines in that directory; many
702 popular libraries ship with these ``library catalogs'' pre-scanned.
703 Users can scan their own routines in one of two ways: either using the
704 supplied tool to scan directories and build their own
705 @file{.idlwave_catalog} files, or using the built-in method to create a
706 single ``user catalog'', which we'll show here. @xref{Catalogs}, for
707 more information on choosing which method to use.
708
709 To build a user catalog, select @code{Routine Info/Select Catalog
710 Directories} from the IDLWAVE entry in the menu bar. If necessary,
711 start the shell first with @kbd{C-c C-s} (@pxref{Starting the Shell}).
712 IDLWAVE will find out about the IDL @code{!PATH} variable and offer a
713 list of directories on the path. Simply select them all (or whichever
714 you want --- directories with existing library catalogs will not be
715 selected by default) and click on the @samp{Scan&Save} button. Then
716 go for a cup of coffee while IDLWAVE collects information for each and
717 every IDL routine on your search path. All this information is
718 written to the file @file{.idlwave/idlusercat.el} in your home
719 directory and will from now on automatically load whenever you use
720 IDLWAVE. You may find it necessary to rebuild the catalog on occasion
721 as your local libraries change, or build a library catalog for those
722 directories instead. Invoke routine info (@kbd{C-c ?}) or completion
723 (@kbd{M-@key{TAB}}) on any routine or partial routine name you know to
724 be located in the library. E.g., if you have scanned the IDL-Astro
725 library:
726
727 @example
728 a=readf@key{M-@key{TAB}}
729 @end example
730
731 expands to `readfits('. Then try
732
733 @example
734 a=readfits(@key{C-c ?}
735 @end example
736
737 and you get:
738
739 @example
740 Usage: Result = READFITS(filename, header, heap)
741 ...
742 @end example
743
744 I hope you made it until here. Now you are set to work with IDLWAVE.
745 On the way you will want to change other things, and to learn more
746 about the possibilities not discussed in this short tutorial. Read
747 the manual, look at the documentation strings of interesting variables
748 (with @kbd{C-h v idlwave<-variable-name> @key{RET}}) and ask the
749 remaining questions on the newsgroup @code{comp.lang.idl-pvwave}.
750
751 @node The IDLWAVE Major Mode, The IDLWAVE Shell, Getting Started, Top
752 @chapter The IDLWAVE Major Mode
753 @cindex IDLWAVE major mode
754 @cindex Major mode, @code{idlwave-mode}
755
756 The IDLWAVE major mode supports editing IDL source files. In this
757 chapter we describe the main features of the mode and how to customize
758 them.
759
760 @menu
761 * Code Formatting:: Making code look nice
762 * Routine Info:: Calling Sequence and Keyword List
763 * Online Help:: One key press from source to help
764 * Completion:: Completing routine names and Keywords
765 * Routine Source:: Finding routines, the easy way
766 * Resolving Routines:: Force the Shell to compile a routine
767 * Code Templates:: Frequent code constructs
768 * Abbreviations:: Abbreviations for common commands
769 * Actions:: Changing case, Padding, End checking
770 * Doc Header:: Inserting a standard header
771 * Motion Commands:: Moving through the structure of a program
772 * Misc Options:: Things that fit nowhere else
773 @end menu
774
775 @node Code Formatting, Routine Info, The IDLWAVE Major Mode, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
776 @section Code Formatting
777 @cindex Code formatting
778 @cindex Formatting, of code
779
780 @menu
781 * Code Indentation:: Reflecting the logical structure
782 * Continued Statement Indentation::
783 * Comment Indentation:: Special indentation for comment lines
784 * Continuation Lines:: Splitting statements over lines
785 * Syntax Highlighting:: Font-lock support
786 * Octals and Highlighting:: Why "123 causes problems
787 @end menu
788
789 The IDL language, with its early roots in FORTRAN, modern
790 implementation in C, and liberal borrowing of features of many vector
791 and other languages along its 25+ year history, has inherited an
792 unusual mix of syntax elements. Left to his or her own devices, a
793 novice IDL programmer will often conjure code which is very difficult
794 to read and impossible to adapt. Much can be gleaned from studying
795 available IDL code libraries for coding style pointers, but, due to
796 the variety of IDL syntax elements, replicating this style can be
797 challenging at best. Luckily, IDLWAVE understands the structure of
798 IDL code very well, and takes care of almost all formatting issues for
799 you. After configuring it to match your coding standards, you can
800 rely on it to help keep your code neat and organized.
801
802
803 @node Code Indentation, Continued Statement Indentation, Code Formatting, Code Formatting
804 @subsection Code Indentation
805 @cindex Code indentation
806 @cindex Indentation
807
808 Like all Emacs programming modes, IDLWAVE performs code indentation.
809 The @key{TAB} key indents the current line relative to context.
810 @key{LFD} insert a newline and indents the new line. The indentation is
811 governed by a number of variables. IDLWAVE indents blocks (between
812 @code{PRO}/@code{FUNCTION}/@code{BEGIN} and @code{END}), and
813 continuation lines.
814
815 @cindex Foreign code, adapting
816 @cindex Indentation, of foreign code
817 @kindex C-M-\
818 To re-indent a larger portion of code (e.g. when working with foreign
819 code written with different conventions), use @kbd{C-M-\}
820 (@code{indent-region}) after marking the relevant code. Useful marking
821 commands are @kbd{C-x h} (the entire file) or @kbd{C-M-h} (the current
822 subprogram). The command @kbd{C-M-q} reindents the entire current
823 routine. @xref{Actions}, for information how to impose additional
824 formatting conventions on foreign code.
825
826 @defopt idlwave-main-block-indent (@code{2})
827 Extra indentation for the main block of code. That is the block between
828 the FUNCTION/PRO statement and the END statement for that program
829 unit.
830 @end defopt
831
832 @defopt idlwave-block-indent (@code{3})
833 Extra indentation applied to block lines. If you change this, you
834 probably also want to change @code{idlwave-end-offset}.
835 @end defopt
836
837 @defopt idlwave-end-offset (@code{-3})
838 Extra indentation applied to block END lines. A value equal to negative
839 @code{idlwave-block-indent} will make END lines line up with the block
840 BEGIN lines.
841 @end defopt
842
843 @node Continued Statement Indentation, Comment Indentation, Code Indentation, Code Formatting
844 @subsection Continued Statement Indentation
845 @cindex Indentation, continued statement
846 @cindex Continued statement indentation
847 Continuation lines (following a line ending with @code{$}) can receive a
848 fixed indentation offset from the main level, but in several situations
849 IDLWAVE can use a special form of indentation which aligns continued
850 statements more naturally. Special indentation is calculated for
851 continued routine definition statements and calls, enclosing parentheses
852 (like function calls, structure/class definitions, explicit structures
853 or lists, etc.), and continued assignments. An attempt is made to line
854 up with the first non-whitespace character after the relevant opening
855 punctuation mark (@code{,},@code{(},@code{@{},@code{[},@code{=}). For
856 lines without any non-comment characters on the line with the opening
857 punctuation, the continued line(s) are aligned just past the
858 punctuation. An example:
859
860 @example
861 function foo, a, b, $
862 c, d
863 bar = sin( a + b + $
864 c + d)
865 end
866 @end example
867 @noindent
868
869 The only drawback to this special continued statement indentation is
870 that it consumes more space, e.g., for long function names or left hand
871 sides of an assignment:
872
873 @example
874 function thisfunctionnameisverylongsoitwillleavelittleroom, a, b, $
875 c, d
876 @end example
877
878 You can instruct IDLWAVE when to avoid using this special continuation
879 indentation by setting the variable
880 @code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent}, which specifies the
881 maximum additional indentation beyond the basic indent to be
882 tolerated, otherwise defaulting to a fixed-offset from the enclosing
883 indent (the size of which offset is set in
884 @code{idlwave-continuation-indent}). As a special case, continuations
885 of routine calls without any arguments or keywords will @emph{not}
886 align the continued line, under the assumption that you continued
887 because you needed the space.
888
889 Also, since the indentation level can be somewhat dynamic in continued
890 statements with special continuation indentation, especially if
891 @code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent} is small, the key
892 @kbd{C-u @key{TAB}} will re-indent all lines in the current statement.
893 Note that @code{idlwave-indent-to-open-paren}, if non-@code{nil},
894 overrides the @code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent} limit, for
895 parentheses only, forcing them always to line up.
896
897
898 @defopt idlwave-continuation-indent (@code{2})
899 Extra indentation applied to normal continuation lines.
900 @end defopt
901
902 @defopt idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent (@code{20})
903 The maximum additional indentation (over the basic continuation-indent)
904 that will be permitted for special continues. To effectively disable
905 special continuation indentation, set to @code{0}. To enable it
906 constantly, set to a large number (like @code{100}). Note that the
907 indentation in a long continued statement never decreases from line to
908 line, outside of nested parentheses statements.
909 @end defopt
910
911 @defopt idlwave-indent-to-open-paren (@code{t})
912 Non-@code{nil} means indent continuation lines to innermost open
913 parenthesis, regardless of whether the
914 @code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent} limit is satisfied.
915 @end defopt
916
917 @node Comment Indentation, Continuation Lines, Continued Statement Indentation, Code Formatting
918 @subsection Comment Indentation
919 @cindex Comment indentation
920 @cindex Hanging paragraphs
921 @cindex Paragraphs, filling
922 @cindex Paragraphs, hanging
923
924 In IDL, lines starting with a @samp{;} are called @emph{comment lines}.
925 Comment lines are indented as follows:
926
927 @multitable @columnfractions .1 .90
928 @item @code{;;;}
929 @tab The indentation of lines starting with three semicolons remains
930 unchanged.
931 @item @code{;;}
932 @tab Lines starting with two semicolons are indented like the surrounding code.
933 @item @code{;}
934 @tab Lines starting with a single semicolon are indented to a minimum column.
935 @end multitable
936
937 @noindent
938 The indentation of comments starting in column 0 is never changed.
939
940 @defopt idlwave-no-change-comment
941 The indentation of a comment starting with this regexp will not be
942 changed.
943 @end defopt
944
945 @defopt idlwave-begin-line-comment
946 A comment anchored at the beginning of line.
947 @end defopt
948
949 @defopt idlwave-code-comment
950 A comment that starts with this regexp is indented as if it is a part of
951 IDL code.
952 @end defopt
953
954 @node Continuation Lines, Syntax Highlighting, Comment Indentation, Code Formatting
955 @subsection Continuation Lines and Filling
956 @cindex Continuation lines
957 @cindex Line splitting
958 @cindex String splitting
959 @cindex Splitting, of lines
960
961 @kindex M-@key{RET}
962 In IDL, a newline character terminates a statement unless preceded by a
963 @samp{$}. If you would like to start a continuation line, use
964 @kbd{M-@key{RET}}, which calls the command @code{idlwave-split-line}.
965 It inserts the continuation character @samp{$}, terminates the line and
966 indents the new line. The command @kbd{M-@key{RET}} can also be invoked
967 inside a string to split it at that point, in which case the @samp{+}
968 concatenation operator is used.
969
970 @cindex Filling
971 @cindex @code{auto-fill-mode}
972 @cindex Hanging paragraphs
973 When filling comment paragraphs, IDLWAVE overloads the normal filling
974 functions and uses a function which creates the hanging paragraphs
975 customary in IDL routine headers. When @code{auto-fill-mode} is turned
976 on (toggle with @kbd{C-c C-a}), comments will be auto-filled. If the
977 first line of a paragraph contains a match for
978 @code{idlwave-hang-indent-regexp} (a dash-space by default), subsequent
979 lines are positioned to line up after it, as in the following example.
980
981 @example
982 @group
983 ;=================================
984 ; x - an array containing
985 ; lots of interesting numbers.
986 ;
987 ; y - another variable where
988 ; a hanging paragraph is used
989 ; to describe it.
990 ;=================================
991 @end group
992 @end example
993
994 @kindex M-q
995 You can also refill a comment at any time paragraph with @kbd{M-q}.
996 Comment delimiting lines as in the above example, consisting of one or
997 more @samp{;} followed by one or more of the characters @samp{+=-_*},
998 are kept in place, as is.
999
1000 @defopt idlwave-fill-comment-line-only (@code{t})
1001 Non-@code{nil} means auto fill will only operate on comment lines.
1002 @end defopt
1003
1004 @defopt idlwave-auto-fill-split-string (@code{t})
1005 Non-@code{nil} means auto fill will split strings with the IDL @samp{+}
1006 operator.
1007 @end defopt
1008
1009 @defopt idlwave-split-line-string (@code{t})
1010 Non-@code{nil} means @code{idlwave-split-line} will split strings with
1011 @samp{+}.
1012 @end defopt
1013
1014 @defopt idlwave-hanging-indent (@code{t})
1015 Non-@code{nil} means comment paragraphs are indented under the hanging
1016 indent given by @code{idlwave-hang-indent-regexp} match in the first
1017 line of the paragraph.
1018 @end defopt
1019
1020 @defopt idlwave-hang-indent-regexp (@code{"- "})
1021 Regular expression matching the position of the hanging indent
1022 in the first line of a comment paragraph.
1023 @end defopt
1024
1025 @defopt idlwave-use-last-hang-indent (@code{nil})
1026 Non-@code{nil} means use last match on line for
1027 @code{idlwave-indent-regexp}.
1028 @end defopt
1029
1030 @node Syntax Highlighting, Octals and Highlighting, Continuation Lines, Code Formatting
1031 @subsection Syntax Highlighting
1032 @cindex Syntax highlighting
1033 @cindex Highlighting of syntax
1034 @cindex Font lock
1035
1036 Highlighting of keywords, comments, strings etc. can be accomplished
1037 with @code{font-lock}. If you are using @code{global-font-lock-mode}
1038 (in Emacs), or have @code{font-lock} turned on in any other buffer in
1039 XEmacs, it should also automatically work in IDLWAVE buffers. If you'd
1040 prefer invoking font-lock individually by mode, you can enforce it in
1041 @code{idlwave-mode} with the following line in your @file{.emacs}:
1042
1043 @lisp
1044 (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock)
1045 @end lisp
1046
1047 @noindent IDLWAVE supports 3 increasing levels of syntax highlighting.
1048 The variable @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} determines which level
1049 is selected. Individual categories of special tokens can be selected
1050 for highlighting using the variable
1051 @code{idlwave-default-font-lock-items}.
1052
1053 @defopt idlwave-default-font-lock-items
1054 Items which should be fontified on the default fontification level
1055 2.
1056 @end defopt
1057
1058 @node Octals and Highlighting, , Syntax Highlighting, Code Formatting
1059 @subsection Octals and Highlighting
1060 @cindex Syntax highlighting, Octals
1061 @cindex Highlighting of syntax, Octals
1062
1063 A rare syntax highlighting problem results from an extremely unfortunate
1064 notation for octal numbers in IDL: @code{"123}. This unpaired quotation
1065 mark is very difficult to parse, given that it can be mixed on a single
1066 line with any number of strings. Emacs will incorrectly identify this
1067 as a string, and the highlighting of following lines of code can be
1068 distorted, since the string is never terminated.
1069
1070 One solution to this involves terminating the mistakenly identified
1071 string yourself by providing a closing quotation mark in a comment:
1072
1073 @example
1074 string("305B) + $ ;" <--- for font-lock
1075 ' is an Angstrom.'
1076 @end example
1077
1078 @noindent A far better solution is to abandon this notation for octals
1079 altogether, and use the more sensible alternative IDL provides:
1080
1081 @example
1082 string('305'OB) + ' is an Angstrom.'
1083 @end example
1084
1085 @noindent This simultaneously solves the font-lock problem and is more
1086 consistent with the notation for hexadecimal numbers, e.g. @code{'C5'XB}.
1087
1088 @node Routine Info, Online Help, Code Formatting, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
1089 @section Routine Info
1090 @cindex Routine info
1091 @cindex Updating routine info
1092 @cindex Scanning buffers for routine info
1093 @cindex Buffers, scanning for routine info
1094 @cindex Shell, querying for routine info
1095
1096 @kindex C-c C-i
1097 IDL comes bundled with more than one thousand procedures, functions
1098 and object methods, and large libraries typically contain hundreds or
1099 even thousands more (each with a few to tens of keywords and
1100 arguments). This large command set can make it difficult to remember
1101 the calling sequence and keywords for the routines you use, but
1102 IDLWAVE can help. It builds up routine information from a wide
1103 variety of sources; IDLWAVE in fact knows far more about the
1104 @samp{.pro} routines on your system than IDL itself! It maintains a
1105 list of all built-in routines, with calling sequences and
1106 keywords@footnote{This list is created by scanning the IDL manuals and
1107 might contain (very few) errors. Please report any errors to the
1108 maintainer, so that they can be fixed.}. It also scans Emacs buffers
1109 for routine definitions, queries the IDLWAVE-Shell for information
1110 about routines currently compiled there, and automatically locates
1111 library and user-created catalogs. This information is updated
1112 automatically, and so should usually be current. To force a global
1113 update and refresh the routine information, use @kbd{C-c C-i}
1114 (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}).
1115
1116 @kindex C-c ?
1117 To display the information about a routine, press @kbd{C-c ?}, which
1118 calls the command @code{idlwave-routine-info}. When the current cursor
1119 position is on the name or in the argument list of a procedure or
1120 function, information will be displayed about the routine. For example,
1121 consider the indicated cursor positions in the following line:
1122
1123 @example
1124 plot,x,alog(x+5*sin(x) + 2),
1125 | | | | | | | |
1126 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1127 @end example
1128
1129 @cindex Default routine, for info and help
1130 On positions 1,2 and 8, information about the @samp{plot} procedure will
1131 be shown. On positions 3,4, and 7, the @samp{alog} function will be
1132 described, while positions 5 and 6 will investigate the @samp{sin}
1133 function.
1134
1135 When you ask for routine information about an object method, and the
1136 method exists in several classes, IDLWAVE queries for the class of the
1137 object, unless the class is already known through a text property on the
1138 @samp{->} operator (@pxref{Object Method Completion and Class
1139 Ambiguity}), or by having been explicitly included in the call
1140 (e.g. @code{a->myclass::Foo}).
1141
1142 @cindex Calling sequences
1143 @cindex Keywords of a routine
1144 @cindex Routine source information
1145 The description displayed contains the calling sequence, the list of
1146 keywords and the source location of this routine. It looks like this:
1147
1148 @example
1149 Usage: XMANAGER, NAME, ID
1150 Keywords: BACKGROUND CATCH CLEANUP EVENT_HANDLER GROUP_LEADER
1151 JUST_REG MODAL NO_BLOCK
1152 Source: SystemLib [LCSB] /soft1/idl53/lib/xmanager.pro
1153 @end example
1154
1155 @cindex Categories, of routines
1156 @cindex Load-path shadows
1157 @cindex Shadows, load-path
1158 @cindex IDL variable @code{!PATH}
1159 @cindex @code{!PATH}, IDL variable
1160 @cindex IDL variable @code{!DIR}
1161 @cindex @code{!DIR}, IDL variable
1162
1163 If a definition of this routine exists in several files accessible to
1164 IDLWAVE, several @samp{Source} lines will point to the different
1165 files. This may indicate that your routine is shadowing a system
1166 library routine, which may or may not be what you want
1167 (@pxref{Load-Path Shadows}). The information about the calling
1168 sequence and keywords is derived from the first source listed.
1169 Library routines are available only if you have scanned your local IDL
1170 directories or are using pre-scanned libraries (@pxref{Catalogs}).
1171 The source entry consists of a @emph{source category}, a set of
1172 @emph{flags} and the path to the @emph{source file}. The following
1173 default categories exist:
1174
1175 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
1176 @item @i{System}
1177 @tab A system routine of unknown origin. When the system library has
1178 been scanned as part of a catalog (@pxref{Catalogs}), this category
1179 will automatically split into the next two.
1180 @item @i{Builtin}
1181 @tab A builtin system routine with no source code available.
1182 @item @i{SystemLib}
1183 @tab A library system routine in the official lib directory @file{!DIR/lib}.
1184 @item @i{Obsolete}
1185 @tab A library routine in the official lib directory @file{!DIR/lib/obsolete}.
1186 @item @i{Library}
1187 @tab A routine in a file on IDL's search path @code{!PATH}.
1188 @item @i{Other}
1189 @tab Any other routine with a file not known to be on the search path.
1190 @item @i{Unresolved}
1191 @tab An otherwise unknown routine the shell lists as unresolved
1192 (referenced, but not compiled).
1193 @end multitable
1194
1195 Any routines discovered in library catalogs (@pxref{Library
1196 Catalogs}), will display the category assigned during creation,
1197 e.g. @samp{NasaLib}. For routines not discovered in this way, you can
1198 create additional categories based on the routine's filename using the
1199 variable @code{idlwave-special-lib-alist}.
1200
1201 @cindex Flags, in routine info
1202 @cindex Duplicate routines
1203 @cindex Multiply defined routines
1204 @cindex Routine definitions, multiple
1205 The flags @code{[LCSB]} indicate the source of the information IDLWAVE
1206 has regarding the file: from a library catalog (@w{@code{[L---]}}),
1207 from a user catalog (@w{@code{[-C--]}}, from the IDL Shell
1208 (@w{@code{[--S-]}}) or from an Emacs buffer (@w{@code{[---B]}}).
1209 Combinations are possible (a compiled library routine visited in a
1210 buffer might read @w{@code{[L-SB]}}). If a file contains multiple
1211 definitions of the same routine, the file name will be prefixed with
1212 @samp{(Nx)} where @samp{N} is the number of definitions.
1213
1214 @cindex Online Help from the routine info buffer
1215 @cindex Active text, in routine info
1216 @cindex Inserting keywords, from routine info
1217 @cindex Source file, access from routine info
1218 Some of the text in the @file{*Help*} routine info buffer will be active
1219 (it is highlighted when the mouse moves over it). Typically, clicking
1220 with the right mouse button invokes online help lookup, and clicking
1221 with the middle mouse button inserts keywords or visits files:
1222
1223 @multitable @columnfractions 0.15 0.85
1224 @item @i{Usage}
1225 @tab If online help is installed, a click with the @emph{right} mouse
1226 button on the @i{Usage:} line will access the help for the
1227 routine (@pxref{Online Help}).
1228 @item @i{Keyword}
1229 @tab Online help about keywords is also available with the
1230 @emph{right} mouse button. Clicking on a keyword with the @emph{middle}
1231 mouse button will insert this keyword in the buffer from where
1232 @code{idlwave-routine-info} was called. Holding down @key{SHIFT} while
1233 clicking also adds the initial @samp{/}.
1234 @item @i{Source}
1235 @tab Clicking with the @emph{middle} mouse button on a @samp{Source} line
1236 finds the source file of the routine and visits it in another window.
1237 Another click on the same line switches back to the buffer from which
1238 @kbd{C-c ?} was called. If you use the @emph{right} mouse button, the
1239 source will not be visited by a buffer, but displayed in the online help
1240 window.
1241 @item @i{Classes}
1242 @tab The @i{Classes} line is only included in the routine info window if
1243 the current class inherits from other classes. You can click with the
1244 @emph{middle} mouse button to display routine info about the current
1245 method in other classes on the inheritance chain, if such a method
1246 exists there.
1247 @end multitable
1248
1249 @defopt idlwave-resize-routine-help-window (@code{t})
1250 Non-@code{nil} means resize the Routine-info @file{*Help*} window to
1251 fit the content.
1252 @end defopt
1253
1254 @defopt idlwave-special-lib-alist
1255 Alist of regular expressions matching special library directories.
1256 @end defopt
1257
1258 @defopt idlwave-rinfo-max-source-lines (@code{5})
1259 Maximum number of source files displayed in the Routine Info window.
1260 @end defopt
1261
1262
1263 @html
1264 <A NAME="ONLINE_HELP"></A>
1265 @end html
1266 @node Online Help, Completion, Routine Info, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
1267 @section Online Help
1268
1269 @cindex Online Help
1270 @cindex @file{idlw-help.txt}
1271 @cindex @file{idlw-help.el}
1272 @cindex Installing online help
1273 @cindex Online Help, Installation
1274 @cindex Speed, of online help
1275 @cindex XML Help Catalog
1276
1277 For IDL system routines, extensive documentation is supplied with IDL.
1278 IDLWAVE can access the HTML version of this documentation very quickly
1279 and accurately, based on the local context. This can be @emph{much}
1280 faster than using the IDL online help application, because IDLWAVE
1281 usually gets you to the right place in the documentation directly ---
1282 e.g. a specific keyword of a routine --- without any additional browsing
1283 and scrolling.
1284
1285 For this online help to work, an HTML version of the IDL documentation
1286 is required. Beginning with IDL 6.2, HTML documentation is distributed
1287 directly with IDL, along with an XML-based catalog of routine
1288 information. By default, IDLWAVE automatically attempts to convert this
1289 XML catalog into a format Emacs can more easily understand, and caches
1290 this information in your @code{idlwave_config_directory}
1291 (@file{~/.idlwave/}, by default). It also re-scans the XML catalog if
1292 it is newer than the current cached version. You can force rescan with
1293 the menu entry @code{IDLWAVE->Routine Info->Rescan XML Help Catalog}.
1294
1295 Before IDL 6.2, the HTML help was not distributed with IDL, and was not
1296 part of the standalone IDLWAVE distribution, but had to be downloaded
1297 separately. This is no longer necessary: all help and routine
1298 information is supplied with IDL versions 6.2 and later.
1299
1300 There are a variety of options for displaying the HTML help: see below.
1301 Help for routines without HTML documentation is also available, by using
1302 the routine documentation header and/or routine source.
1303
1304 @kindex M-?
1305 In any IDL program (or, as with most IDLWAVE commands, in the IDL
1306 Shell), press @kbd{M-?} (@code{idlwave-context-help}), or click with
1307 @kbd{S-Mouse-3} to access context sensitive online help. The following
1308 locations are recognized context for help:
1309
1310 @cindex Context, for online help
1311 @multitable @columnfractions .25 .75
1312 @item @i{Routine names}
1313 @tab The name of a routine (function, procedure, method).
1314 @item @i{Keyword Parameters}
1315 @tab A keyword parameter of a routine.
1316 @item @i{System Variables}
1317 @tab System variables like @code{!DPI}.
1318 @item @i{System Variable Tags}
1319 @tab System variables tags like @code{!D.X_SIZE}.
1320 @item @i{IDL Statements}
1321 @tab Statements like @code{PRO}, @code{REPEAT}, @code{COMPILE_OPT}, etc.
1322 @item @i{IDL Controls}
1323 @tab Control structures like @code{FOR}, @code{SWITCH}, etc.
1324 @item @i{Class names}
1325 @tab A class name in an @code{OBJ_NEW} call.
1326 @item @i{Class Init Keywords}
1327 @tab Beyond the class name in an @code{OBJ_NEW} call.
1328 @item @i{Executive Command}
1329 @tab An executive command like @code{.RUN}. Mostly useful in the shell.
1330 @item @i{Structure Tags}
1331 @tab Structure tags like @code{state.xsize}
1332 @item @i{Class Tags}
1333 @tab Class tags like @code{self.value}.
1334 @item @i{Default}
1335 @tab The routine that would be selected for routine info display.
1336 @end multitable
1337
1338 @cindex @code{OBJ_NEW}, special online help
1339 Note that the @code{OBJ_NEW} function is special in that the help
1340 displayed depends on the cursor position. If the cursor is on the
1341 @samp{OBJ_NEW}, this function is described. If it is on the class
1342 name inside the quotes, the documentation for the class is pulled up.
1343 If the cursor is @emph{after} the class name, anywhere in the argument
1344 list, the documentation for the corresponding @code{Init} method and
1345 its keywords is targeted.
1346
1347 Apart from an IDLWAVE buffer or shell, there are two more places from
1348 which online help can be accessed.
1349
1350 @itemize @bullet
1351 @item
1352 Online help for routines and keywords can be accessed through the
1353 Routine Info display. Click with @kbd{Mouse-3} on an item to see the
1354 corresponding help (@pxref{Routine Info}).
1355 @item
1356 When using completion and Emacs pops up a @file{*Completions*} buffer
1357 with possible completions, clicking with @kbd{Mouse-3} on a completion
1358 item invokes help on that item (@pxref{Completion}). Items for which
1359 help is available in the online system documentation (vs. just the
1360 program source itself) will be emphasized (e.g. colored blue).
1361 @end itemize
1362 @noindent
1363 In both cases, a blue face indicates that the item is documented in
1364 the IDL manual, but an attempt will be made to visit non-blue items
1365 directly in the originating source file.
1366
1367
1368 @menu
1369 * Help with HTML Documentation::
1370 * Help with Source::
1371 @end menu
1372
1373 @node Help with HTML Documentation, Help with Source, Online Help, Online Help
1374 @subsection Help with HTML Documentation
1375 @cindex HTML Help
1376 @cindex Help using HTML manuals
1377 @cindex IDL manual, HTML version
1378 @cindex IDL Assistant
1379
1380 Help using the HTML documentation is invoked with the built-in Emacs
1381 command @code{browse-url}, which displays the relevant help topic in a
1382 browser of your choosing. Beginning with version 6.2, IDL comes with
1383 the help browser @emph{IDL Assistant}, which it uses by default for
1384 displaying online help on all supported platforms. This browser
1385 offers topical searches, an index, and is also now the default and
1386 recommended IDLWAVE help browser. The variable
1387 @code{idlwave-help-use-assistant} controls whether this browser is
1388 used. Note that, due to limitations in the Assistant, invoking help
1389 within IDLWAVE and @code{? topic} within IDL will result in two
1390 running copies of Assistant.
1391
1392 Aside from the IDL Assistant, there are many possible browsers to choose
1393 among, with differing advantages and disadvantages. The variable
1394 @code{idlwave-help-browser-function} controls which browser help is sent
1395 to (as long as @code{idlwave-help-use-assistant} is not set). This
1396 function is used to set the variable @code{browse-url-browser-function}
1397 locally for IDLWAVE help only. Customize the latter variable to see
1398 what choices of browsers your system offers. Certain browsers like
1399 @code{w3} (bundled with many versions of Emacs) and @code{w3m}
1400 (@uref{http://emacs-w3m.namazu.org/}) are run within Emacs, and use
1401 Emacs buffers to display the HTML help. This can be convenient,
1402 especially on small displays, and images can even be displayed in-line
1403 on newer Emacs versions. However, better formatting results are often
1404 achieved with external browsers, like Mozilla. IDLWAVE assumes any
1405 browser function containing "w3" is displayed in a local buffer. If you
1406 are using another Emacs-local browser for which this is not true, set
1407 the variable @code{idlwave-help-browser-is-local}.
1408
1409 With IDL 6.2 or later, it is important to ensure that the variable
1410 @code{idlwave-system-directory} is set (@pxref{Catalogs}). One easy way
1411 to ensure this is to run the IDL Shell (@kbd{C-c C-s}). It will be
1412 queried for this directory, and the results will be cached to file for
1413 subsequent use.
1414
1415 @xref{HTML Help Browser Tips}, for more information on selecting and
1416 configuring a browser for use with IDL's HTML help system.
1417
1418 @defopt idlwave-html-system-help-location @file{help/online_help}
1419 Relative directory of the system-supplied HTML help directory,
1420 considered with respect to @code{idlwave-system-directory}. Relevant
1421 for IDL 6.2 and greater. Should not change.
1422 @end defopt
1423
1424 @defopt idlwave-html-help-location @file{/usr/local/etc/}
1425 The directory where the @file{idl_html_help} HTML directory live.
1426 Obsolete and ignored for IDL 6.2 and greater
1427 (@code{idlwave-html-system-help-location} is used instead).
1428 @end defopt
1429
1430 @defopt idlwave-help-use-assistant @code{t}
1431 If set, use the IDL Assistant if possible for online HTML help,
1432 otherwise use the browser function specified in
1433 @code{idlwave-help-browser-function}.
1434 @end defopt
1435
1436 @defopt idlwave-help-browser-function
1437 The browser function to use to display IDLWAVE HTML help. Should be
1438 one of the functions available for setting
1439 @code{browse-url-browser-function}, which see.
1440 @end defopt
1441
1442 @defopt idlwave-help-browser-is-local
1443 Is the browser selected in @code{idlwave-help-browser-function} run in a
1444 local Emacs buffer or window? Defaults to @code{t} if the function
1445 contains "-w3".
1446 @end defopt
1447
1448 @defopt idlwave-help-link-face
1449 The face for links to IDLWAVE online help.
1450 @end defopt
1451
1452 @node Help with Source, , Help with HTML Documentation, Online Help
1453 @subsection Help with Source
1454 @cindex Help using routine source
1455
1456 @cindex Source code, as online help
1457 @cindex DocLib header, as online help
1458 For routines which are not documented in an HTML manual (for example
1459 personal or library routines), the source code itself is used as help
1460 text. If the requested information can be found in a (more or less)
1461 standard DocLib file header, IDLWAVE shows the header (scrolling down to
1462 a keyword, if appropriate). Otherwise the routine definition statement
1463 (@code{pro}/@code{function}) is shown. The doclib header sections which
1464 are searched for include @samp{NAME} and @samp{KEYWORDS}. Localization
1465 support can be added by customizing the @code{idlwave-help-doclib-name}
1466 and @code{idlwave-help-doclib-keyword} variables.
1467
1468 @cindex Structure tags, in online help
1469 @cindex Class tags, in online help
1470 Help is also available for class structure tags (@code{self.TAG}), and
1471 generic structure tags, if structure tag completion is enabled
1472 (@pxref{Structure Tag Completion}). This is implemented by visiting the
1473 tag within the class or structure definition source itself. Help is not
1474 available on built-in system class tags.
1475
1476 The help window is normally displayed in the same frame, but can be
1477 popped-up in a separate frame. The following commands can be used to
1478 navigate inside the help system for source files:
1479
1480 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
1481 @item @kbd{@key{SPACE}}
1482 @tab Scroll forward one page.
1483 @item @kbd{@key{RET}}
1484 @tab Scroll forward one line.
1485 @item @kbd{@key{DEL}}
1486 @tab Scroll back one page.
1487 @item @kbd{h}
1488 @tab Jump to DocLib Header of the routine whose source is displayed
1489 as help.
1490 @item @kbd{H}
1491 @tab Jump to the first DocLib Header in the file.
1492 @item @kbd{.} @r{(Dot)}
1493 @tab Jump back and forth between the routine definition (the
1494 @code{pro}/@code{function} statement) and the description of the help
1495 item in the DocLib header.
1496 @item @kbd{F}
1497 @tab Fontify the buffer like source code. See the variable @code{idlwave-help-fontify-source-code}.
1498 @item @kbd{q}
1499 @tab Kill the help window.
1500 @end multitable
1501
1502
1503 @defopt idlwave-help-use-dedicated-frame (@code{nil})
1504 Non-@code{nil} means use a separate frame for Online Help if possible.
1505 @end defopt
1506
1507 @defopt idlwave-help-frame-parameters
1508 The frame parameters for the special Online Help frame.
1509 @end defopt
1510
1511 @defopt idlwave-max-popup-menu-items (@code{20})
1512 Maximum number of items per pane in pop-up menus.
1513 @end defopt
1514
1515 @defopt idlwave-extra-help-function
1516 Function to call for help if the normal help fails.
1517 @end defopt
1518
1519 @defopt idlwave-help-fontify-source-code (@code{nil})
1520 Non-@code{nil} means fontify source code displayed as help.
1521 @end defopt
1522
1523 @defopt idlwave-help-source-try-header (@code{t})
1524 Non-@code{nil} means try to find help in routine header when
1525 displaying source file.
1526 @end defopt
1527
1528 @defopt idlwave-help-doclib-name (@code{"name"})
1529 The case-insensitive heading word in doclib headers to locate the
1530 @emph{name} section. Can be a regexp, e.g. @code{"\\(name\\|nom\\)"}.
1531 @end defopt
1532
1533 @defopt idlwave-help-doclib-keyword (@code{"KEYWORD"})
1534 The case-insensitive heading word in doclib headers to locate the
1535 @emph{keywords} section. Can be a regexp.
1536 @end defopt
1537
1538
1539 @node Completion, Routine Source, Online Help, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
1540 @section Completion
1541 @cindex Completion
1542 @cindex Keyword completion
1543 @cindex Method completion
1544 @cindex Object method completion
1545 @cindex Class name completion
1546 @cindex Function name completion
1547 @cindex Procedure name completion
1548
1549 @kindex M-@key{TAB}
1550 @kindex C-c C-i
1551 IDLWAVE offers completion for class names, routine names, keywords,
1552 system variables, system variable tags, class structure tags, regular
1553 structure tags and file names. As in many programming modes, completion
1554 is bound to @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} (or simply @kbd{@key{TAB}} in the IDLWAVE
1555 Shell --- @pxref{Using the Shell}). Completion uses exactly the same
1556 internal information as routine info, so when necessary (rarely) it can
1557 be updated with @kbd{C-c C-i} (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}).
1558
1559 The completion function is context sensitive and figures out what to
1560 complete based on the location of the point. Here are example lines and
1561 what @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} would try to complete when the cursor is on the
1562 position marked with a @samp{_}:
1563
1564 @example
1565 plo_ @r{Procedure}
1566 x = a_ @r{Function}
1567 plot,xra_ @r{Keyword of @code{plot} procedure}
1568 plot,x,y,/x_ @r{Keyword of @code{plot} procedure}
1569 plot,min(_ @r{Keyword of @code{min} function}
1570 obj -> a_ @r{Object method (procedure)}
1571 a[2,3] = obj -> a_ @r{Object method (function)}
1572 x = obj_new('IDL_ @r{Class name}
1573 x = obj_new('MyCl',a_ @r{Keyword to @code{Init} method in class @code{MyCl}}
1574 pro A_ @r{Class name}
1575 pro _ @r{Fill in @code{Class::} of first method in this file}
1576 !v_ @r{System variable}
1577 !version.t_ @r{Structure tag of system variable}
1578 self.g_ @r{Class structure tag in methods}
1579 state.w_ @r{Structure tag, if tag completion enabled}
1580 name = 'a_ @r{File name (default inside quotes)}
1581 @end example
1582
1583 @cindex Completion, ambiguity
1584 @cindex Completion, forcing function name
1585 The only place where completion is ambiguous is procedure/function
1586 @emph{keywords} versus @emph{functions}. After @samp{plot,x,_}, IDLWAVE
1587 will always assume a keyword to @samp{plot}. However, a function is
1588 also a possible completion here. You can force completion of a function
1589 name at such a location by using a prefix arg: @kbd{C-u M-@key{TAB}}.
1590
1591 Giving two prefix arguments (@kbd{C-u C-u M-@key{TAB}}) prompts for a
1592 regular expression to search among the commands to be completed. As
1593 an example, completing a blank line in this way will allow you to
1594 search for a procedure matching a regexp.
1595
1596 @cindex Scrolling the @file{*Completions*} window
1597 @cindex Completion, scrolling
1598 @cindex Completion, Online Help
1599 @cindex Online Help in @file{*Completions*} buffer
1600 If the list of completions is too long to fit in the
1601 @file{*Completions*} window, the window can be scrolled by pressing
1602 @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} repeatedly. Online help (if installed) for each
1603 possible completion is available by clicking with @kbd{Mouse-3} on the
1604 item. Items for which system online help (from the IDL manual) is
1605 available will be emphasized (e.g. colored blue). For other items, the
1606 corresponding source code or DocLib header will be used as the help
1607 text.
1608
1609 @cindex Completion, cancelling
1610 @cindex Cancelling completion
1611 Completion is not a blocking operation --- you are free to continue
1612 editing, enter commands, or simply ignore the @file{*Completions*}
1613 buffer during a completion operation. If, however, the most recent
1614 command was a completion, @kbd{C-g} will remove the buffer and restore
1615 the window configuration. You can also remove the buffer at any time
1616 with no negative consequences.
1617
1618 @defopt idlwave-keyword-completion-adds-equal (@code{t})
1619 Non-@code{nil} means completion automatically adds @samp{=} after
1620 completed keywords.
1621 @end defopt
1622
1623 @defopt idlwave-function-completion-adds-paren (@code{t})
1624 Non-@code{nil} means completion automatically adds @samp{(} after
1625 completed function. A value of `2' means also add the closing
1626 parenthesis and position the cursor between the two.
1627 @end defopt
1628
1629 @defopt idlwave-completion-restore-window-configuration (@code{t})
1630 Non-@code{nil} means restore window configuration after successful
1631 completion.
1632 @end defopt
1633
1634 @defopt idlwave-highlight-help-links-in-completion (@code{t})
1635 Non-@code{nil} means highlight completions for which system help is
1636 available.
1637 @end defopt
1638
1639 @menu
1640 * Case of Completed Words:: CaseOFcomPletedWords
1641 * Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity:: obj->Method, what?
1642 * Object Method Completion in the Shell::
1643 * Class and Keyword Inheritance:: obj->Method, _EXTRA=e
1644 * Structure Tag Completion:: Completing state.Tag
1645 @end menu
1646
1647 @node Case of Completed Words, Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity, Completion, Completion
1648 @subsection Case of Completed Words
1649 @cindex Case of completed words
1650 @cindex Mixed case completion
1651 IDL is a case-insensitive language, so casing is a matter of style
1652 only. IDLWAVE helps maintain a consistent casing style for completed
1653 items. The case of the completed words is determined by what is
1654 already in the buffer. As an exception, when the partial word being
1655 completed is all lower case, the completion will be lower case as
1656 well. If at least one character is upper case, the string will be
1657 completed in upper case or mixed case, depending on the value of the
1658 variable @code{idlwave-completion-case}. The default is to use upper
1659 case for procedures, functions and keywords, and mixed case for object
1660 class names and methods, similar to the conventions in the IDL
1661 manuals. For instance, to enable mixed-case completion for routines
1662 in addition to classes and methods, you need an entry such as
1663 @code{(routine . preserve)} in that variable. To enable total control
1664 over the case of completed items, independent of buffer context, set
1665 @code{idlwave-completion-force-default-case} to non-@code{nil}.
1666
1667 @defopt idlwave-completion-case
1668 Association list setting the case (UPPER/lower/Capitalized/MixedCase...)
1669 of completed words.
1670 @end defopt
1671
1672 @defopt idlwave-completion-force-default-case (@code{nil})
1673 Non-@code{nil} means completion will always honor the settings in
1674 @code{idlwave-completion-case}. When nil (the default), entirely lower
1675 case strings will always be completed to lower case, no matter what the
1676 settings in @code{idlwave-completion-case}.
1677 @end defopt
1678
1679 @defopt idlwave-complete-empty-string-as-lower-case (@code{nil})
1680 Non-@code{nil} means the empty string is considered lower case for
1681 completion.
1682 @end defopt
1683
1684 @node Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity, Object Method Completion in the Shell, Case of Completed Words, Completion
1685 @subsection Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity
1686 @cindex Object methods
1687 @cindex Class ambiguity
1688 @cindex @code{self} object, default class
1689 An object method is not uniquely determined without the object's class.
1690 Since the class is almost always omitted in the calling source (as
1691 required to obtain the true benefits of object-based programming),
1692 IDLWAVE considers all available methods in all classes as possible
1693 method name completions. The combined list of keywords of the current
1694 method in @emph{all} known classes which contain that method will be
1695 considered for keyword completion. In the @file{*Completions*} buffer,
1696 the matching classes will be shown next to each item (see option
1697 @code{idlwave-completion-show-classes}). As a special case, the class
1698 of an object called @samp{self} is always taken to be the class of the
1699 current routine, when in an IDLWAVE buffer. All inherits classes are
1700 considered as well.
1701
1702 @cindex Forcing class query.
1703 @cindex Class query, forcing
1704 You can also call @code{idlwave-complete} with a prefix arg: @kbd{C-u
1705 M-@key{TAB}}. IDLWAVE will then prompt you for the class in order to
1706 narrow down the number of possible completions. The variable
1707 @code{idlwave-query-class} can be configured to make such prompting the
1708 default for all methods (not recommended), or selectively for very
1709 common methods for which the number of completing keywords would be too
1710 large (e.g. @code{Init,SetProperty,GetProperty}).
1711
1712 @cindex Saving object class on @code{->}
1713 @cindex @code{->}
1714 After you have specified the class for a particular statement (e.g. when
1715 completing the method), IDLWAVE can remember it for the rest of the
1716 editing session. Subsequent completions in the same statement
1717 (e.g. keywords) can then reuse this class information. This works by
1718 placing a text property on the method invocation operator @samp{->},
1719 after which the operator will be shown in a different face (bold by
1720 default). The variable @code{idlwave-store-inquired-class} can be used
1721 to turn it off or on.
1722
1723 @defopt idlwave-completion-show-classes (@code{1})
1724 Non-@code{nil} means show up to that many classes in
1725 @file{*Completions*} buffer when completing object methods and
1726 keywords.
1727 @end defopt
1728
1729 @defopt idlwave-completion-fontify-classes (@code{t})
1730 Non-@code{nil} means fontify the classes in completions buffer.
1731 @end defopt
1732
1733 @defopt idlwave-query-class (@code{nil})
1734 Association list governing query for object classes during completion.
1735 @end defopt
1736
1737 @defopt idlwave-store-inquired-class (@code{t})
1738 Non-@code{nil} means store class of a method call as text property on
1739 @samp{->}.
1740 @end defopt
1741
1742 @defopt idlwave-class-arrow-face
1743 Face to highlight object operator arrows @samp{->} which carry a saved
1744 class text property.
1745 @end defopt
1746
1747 @node Object Method Completion in the Shell, Class and Keyword Inheritance, Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity, Completion
1748 @subsection Object Method Completion in the Shell
1749 @cindex Method Completion in Shell
1750 In the IDLWAVE Shell (@pxref{The IDLWAVE Shell}), objects on which
1751 methods are being invoked have a special property: they must exist as
1752 variables, and so their class can be determined (for instance, using the
1753 @code{obj_class()} function). In the Shell, when attempting completion,
1754 routine info, or online help within a method routine, a query is sent to
1755 determine the class of the object. If this query is successful, the
1756 class found will be used to select appropriate completions, routine
1757 info, or help. If unsuccessful, information from all known classes will
1758 be used (as in the buffer).
1759
1760 @node Class and Keyword Inheritance, Structure Tag Completion, Object Method Completion in the Shell, Completion
1761 @subsection Class and Keyword Inheritance
1762 @cindex Inheritance, class
1763 @cindex Keyword inheritance
1764 @cindex Inheritance, keyword
1765
1766 Class inheritance affects which methods are called in IDL. An object of
1767 a class which inherits methods from one or more superclasses can
1768 override that method by defining its own method of the same name, extend
1769 the method by calling the method(s) of its superclass(es) in its
1770 version, or inherit the method directly by making no modifications.
1771 IDLWAVE examines class definitions during completion and routine
1772 information display, and records all inheritance information it finds.
1773 This information is displayed if appropriate with the calling sequence
1774 for methods (@pxref{Routine Info}), as long as variable
1775 @code{idlwave-support-inheritance} is non-@code{nil}.
1776
1777 In many class methods, @emph{keyword} inheritance (@code{_EXTRA} and
1778 @code{_REF_EXTRA}) is used hand-in-hand with class inheritance and
1779 method overriding. E.g., in a @code{SetProperty} method, this technique
1780 allows a single call @code{obj->SetProperty} to set properties up the
1781 entire class inheritance chain. This is often referred to as
1782 @emph{chaining}, and is characterized by chained method calls like
1783 @w{@code{self->MySuperClass::SetProperty,_EXTRA=e}}.
1784
1785 IDLWAVE can accommodate this special synergy between class and keyword
1786 inheritance: if @code{_EXTRA} or @code{_REF_EXTRA} is detected among a
1787 method's keyword parameters, all keywords of superclass versions of
1788 the method being considered can be included in completion. There is
1789 of course no guarantee that this type of keyword chaining actually
1790 occurs, but for some methods it's a very convenient assumption. The
1791 variable @code{idlwave-keyword-class-inheritance} can be used to
1792 configure which methods have keyword inheritance treated in this
1793 simple, class-driven way. By default, only @code{Init} and
1794 @code{(Get|Set)Property} are. The completion buffer will label
1795 keywords based on their originating class.
1796
1797 @defopt idlwave-support-inheritance (@code{t})
1798 Non-@code{nil} means consider inheritance during completion, online help etc.
1799 @end defopt
1800
1801 @defopt idlwave-keyword-class-inheritance
1802 A list of regular expressions to match methods for which simple
1803 class-driven keyword inheritance will be used for Completion.
1804 @end defopt
1805
1806 @node Structure Tag Completion, , Class and Keyword Inheritance, Completion
1807 @subsection Structure Tag Completion
1808 @cindex Completion, structure tag
1809 @cindex Structure tag completion
1810
1811 In many programs, especially those involving widgets, large structures
1812 (e.g. the @samp{state} structure) are used to communicate among
1813 routines. It is very convenient to be able to complete structure tags,
1814 in the same way as for instance variables (tags) of the @samp{self}
1815 object (@pxref{Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity}). Add-in
1816 code for structure tag completion is available in the form of a loadable
1817 completion module: @file{idlw-complete-structtag.el}. Tag completion in
1818 structures is highly ambiguous (much more so than @samp{self}
1819 completion), so @code{idlw-complete-structtag} makes an unusual and very
1820 specific assumption: the exact same variable name is used to refer to
1821 the structure in all parts of the program. This is entirely unenforced
1822 by the IDL language, but is a typical convention. If you consistently
1823 refer to the same structure with the same variable name
1824 (e.g. @samp{state}), structure tags which are read from its definition
1825 in the same file can be used for completion.
1826
1827 Structure tag completion is not enabled by default. To enable it,
1828 simply add the following to your @file{.emacs}:
1829
1830 @lisp
1831 (add-hook 'idlwave-load-hook
1832 (lambda () (require 'idlw-complete-structtag)))
1833 @end lisp
1834
1835 Once enabled, you'll also be able to access online help on the structure
1836 tags, using the usual methods (@pxref{Online Help}). In addition,
1837 structure variables in the shell will be queried for tag names, similar
1838 to the way object variables in the shell are queried for method names.
1839 So, e.g.:
1840
1841 @example
1842 IDL> st.[Tab]
1843 @end example
1844
1845 @noindent will complete with all structure fields of the structure
1846 @code{st}.
1847
1848 @node Routine Source, Resolving Routines, Completion, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
1849 @section Routine Source
1850 @cindex Routine source file
1851 @cindex Module source file
1852 @cindex Source file, of a routine
1853 @kindex C-c C-v
1854 In addition to clicking on a @i{Source:} line in the routine info
1855 window, there is another way to quickly visit the source file of a
1856 routine. The command @kbd{C-c C-v} (@code{idlwave-find-module}) asks
1857 for a module name, offering the same default as
1858 @code{idlwave-routine-info} would have used, taken from nearby buffer
1859 contents. In the minibuffer, specify a complete routine name (including
1860 any class part). IDLWAVE will display the source file in another
1861 window, positioned at the routine in question. You can also limit this
1862 to a routine in the current buffer only, with completion, and a
1863 context-sensitive default, by using a single prefix (@kbd{C-u C-c C-v})
1864 or the convenience binding @kbd{C-c C-t}.
1865
1866 @cindex Buffers, killing
1867 @cindex Killing autoloaded buffers
1868 Since getting the source of a routine into a buffer is so easy with
1869 IDLWAVE, too many buffers visiting different IDL source files are
1870 sometimes created. The special command @kbd{C-c C-k}
1871 (@code{idlwave-kill-autoloaded-buffers}) can be used to easily remove
1872 these buffers.
1873
1874 @node Resolving Routines, Code Templates, Routine Source, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
1875 @section Resolving Routines
1876 @cindex @code{RESOLVE_ROUTINE}
1877 @cindex Compiling library modules
1878 @cindex Routines, resolving
1879
1880 The key sequence @kbd{C-c =} calls the command @code{idlwave-resolve}
1881 and sends the line @samp{RESOLVE_ROUTINE, '@var{routine_name}'} to IDL
1882 in order to resolve (compile) it. The default routine to be resolved is
1883 taken from context, but you get a chance to edit it. Usually this is
1884 not necessary, since IDL automatically discovers routines on its path.
1885
1886 @code{idlwave-resolve} is one way to get a library module within reach
1887 of IDLWAVE's routine info collecting functions. A better way is to
1888 keep routine information available in catalogs (@pxref{Catalogs}).
1889 Routine info on modules will then be available without the need to
1890 compile the modules first, and even without a running shell.
1891
1892 @xref{Sources of Routine Info}, for more information on the ways IDLWAVE
1893 collects data about routines, and how to update this information.
1894
1895 @node Code Templates, Abbreviations, Resolving Routines, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
1896 @section Code Templates
1897 @cindex Code templates
1898 @cindex Templates
1899
1900 IDLWAVE can insert IDL code templates into the buffer. For a few
1901 templates, this is done with direct key bindings:
1902
1903 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
1904 @item @kbd{C-c C-c}
1905 @tab @code{CASE} statement template
1906 @item @kbd{C-c C-f}
1907 @tab @code{FOR} loop template
1908 @item @kbd{C-c C-r}
1909 @tab @code{REPEAT} loop template
1910 @item @kbd{C-c C-w}
1911 @tab @code{WHILE} loop template
1912 @end multitable
1913
1914 All code templates are also available as abbreviations
1915 (@pxref{Abbreviations}).
1916
1917 @node Abbreviations, Actions, Code Templates, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
1918 @section Abbreviations
1919 @cindex Abbreviations
1920
1921 Special abbreviations exist to enable rapid entry of commonly used
1922 commands. Emacs abbreviations are expanded by typing text into the
1923 buffer and pressing @key{SPC} or @key{RET}. The special abbreviations
1924 used to insert code templates all start with a @samp{\} (the backslash),
1925 or, optionally, any other character set in
1926 @code{idlwave-abbrev-start-char}. IDLWAVE ensures that abbreviations are
1927 only expanded where they should be (i.e., not in a string or comment),
1928 and permits the point to be moved after an abbreviation expansion ---
1929 very useful for positioning the mark inside of parentheses, etc.
1930
1931 Special abbreviations are pre-defined for code templates and other
1932 useful items. To visit the full list of abbreviations, use @kbd{M-x
1933 idlwave-list-abbrevs}.
1934
1935 Template abbreviations:
1936
1937 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
1938 @item @code{\pr}
1939 @tab @code{PROCEDURE} template
1940 @item @code{\fu}
1941 @tab @code{FUNCTION} template
1942 @item @code{\c}
1943 @tab @code{CASE} statement template
1944 @item @code{\f}
1945 @tab @code{FOR} loop template
1946 @item @code{\r}
1947 @tab @code{REPEAT} loop template
1948 @item @code{\w}
1949 @tab @code{WHILE} loop template
1950 @item @code{\i}
1951 @tab @code{IF} statement template
1952 @item @code{\elif}
1953 @tab @code{IF-ELSE} statement template
1954 @end multitable
1955
1956 String abbreviations:
1957
1958 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
1959 @item @code{\ap}
1960 @tab @code{arg_present()}
1961 @item @code{\b}
1962 @tab @code{begin}
1963 @item @code{\cb}
1964 @tab @code{byte()}
1965 @item @code{\cc}
1966 @tab @code{complex()}
1967 @item @code{\cd}
1968 @tab @code{double()}
1969 @item @code{\cf}
1970 @tab @code{float()}
1971 @item @code{\cl}
1972 @tab @code{long()}
1973 @item @code{\co}
1974 @tab @code{common}
1975 @item @code{\cs}
1976 @tab @code{string()}
1977 @item @code{\cx}
1978 @tab @code{fix()}
1979 @item @code{\e}
1980 @tab @code{else}
1981 @item @code{\ec}
1982 @tab @code{endcase}
1983 @item @code{\ee}
1984 @tab @code{endelse}
1985 @item @code{\ef}
1986 @tab @code{endfor}
1987 @item @code{\ei}
1988 @tab @code{endif else if}
1989 @item @code{\el}
1990 @tab @code{endif else}
1991 @item @code{\en}
1992 @tab @code{endif}
1993 @item @code{\er}
1994 @tab @code{endrep}
1995 @item @code{\es}
1996 @tab @code{endswitch}
1997 @item @code{\ew}
1998 @tab @code{endwhile}
1999 @item @code{\g}
2000 @tab @code{goto,}
2001 @item @code{\h}
2002 @tab @code{help,}
2003 @item @code{\ik}
2004 @tab @code{if keyword_set() then}
2005 @item @code{\iap}
2006 @tab @code{if arg_present() then}
2007 @item @code{\ine}
2008 @tab @code{if n_elements() eq 0 then}
2009 @item @code{\inn}
2010 @tab @code{if n_elements() ne 0 then}
2011 @item @code{\k}
2012 @tab @code{keyword_set()}
2013 @item @code{\n}
2014 @tab @code{n_elements()}
2015 @item @code{\np}
2016 @tab @code{n_params()}
2017 @item @code{\oi}
2018 @tab @code{on_ioerror,}
2019 @item @code{\or}
2020 @tab @code{openr,}
2021 @item @code{\ou}
2022 @tab @code{openu,}
2023 @item @code{\ow}
2024 @tab @code{openw,}
2025 @item @code{\p}
2026 @tab @code{print,}
2027 @item @code{\pt}
2028 @tab @code{plot,}
2029 @item @code{\pv}
2030 @tab @code{ptr_valid()}
2031 @item @code{\re}
2032 @tab @code{read,}
2033 @item @code{\rf}
2034 @tab @code{readf,}
2035 @item @code{\rt}
2036 @tab @code{return}
2037 @item @code{\ru}
2038 @tab @code{readu,}
2039 @item @code{\s}
2040 @tab @code{size()}
2041 @item @code{\sc}
2042 @tab @code{strcompress()}
2043 @item @code{\sl}
2044 @tab @code{strlowcase()}
2045 @item @code{\sm}
2046 @tab @code{strmid()}
2047 @item @code{\sn}
2048 @tab @code{strlen()}
2049 @item @code{\sp}
2050 @tab @code{strpos()}
2051 @item @code{\sr}
2052 @tab @code{strtrim()}
2053 @item @code{\st}
2054 @tab @code{strput()}
2055 @item @code{\su}
2056 @tab @code{strupcase()}
2057 @item @code{\t}
2058 @tab @code{then}
2059 @item @code{\u}
2060 @tab @code{until}
2061 @item @code{\wc}
2062 @tab @code{widget_control,}
2063 @item @code{\wi}
2064 @tab @code{widget_info()}
2065 @item @code{\wu}
2066 @tab @code{writeu,}
2067 @end multitable
2068
2069 @noindent You can easily add your own abbreviations or override existing
2070 abbrevs with @code{define-abbrev} in your mode hook, using the
2071 convenience function @code{idlwave-define-abbrev}:
2072
2073 @lisp
2074 (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook
2075 (lambda ()
2076 (idlwave-define-abbrev "wb" "widget_base()"
2077 (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 1))
2078 (idlwave-define-abbrev "ine" "IF N_Elements() EQ 0 THEN"
2079 (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 11))))
2080 @end lisp
2081
2082 Notice how the abbreviation (here @emph{wb}) and its expansion
2083 (@emph{widget_base()}) are given as arguments, and the single argument to
2084 @code{idlwave-keyword-abbrev} (here @emph{1}) specifies how far back to
2085 move the point upon expansion (in this example, to put it between the
2086 parentheses).
2087
2088 The abbreviations are expanded in upper or lower case, depending upon
2089 the variables @code{idlwave-abbrev-change-case} and, for reserved word
2090 templates, @code{idlwave-reserved-word-upcase} (@pxref{Case Changes}).
2091
2092 @defopt idlwave-abbrev-start-char (@code{"\"})
2093 A single character string used to start abbreviations in abbrev mode.
2094 Beware of common characters which might naturally occur in sequence with
2095 abbreviation strings.
2096 @end defopt
2097
2098 @defopt idlwave-abbrev-move (@code{t})
2099 Non-@code{nil} means the abbrev hook can move point, e.g. to end up
2100 between the parentheses of a function call.
2101 @end defopt
2102
2103 @node Actions, Doc Header, Abbreviations, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
2104 @section Actions
2105 @cindex Actions
2106 @cindex Coding standards, enforcing
2107
2108 @emph{Actions} are special formatting commands which are executed
2109 automatically while you write code in order to check the structure of
2110 the program or to enforce coding standards. Most actions which have
2111 been implemented in IDLWAVE are turned off by default, assuming that the
2112 average user wants her code the way she writes it. But if you are a
2113 lazy typist and want your code to adhere to certain standards, actions
2114 can be helpful.
2115
2116 Actions can be applied in three ways:
2117
2118 @itemize @bullet
2119 @item
2120 Some actions are applied directly while typing. For example, pressing
2121 @samp{=} can run a check to make sure that this operator is surrounded
2122 by spaces and insert these spaces if necessary. Pressing @key{SPC}
2123 after a reserved word can call a command to change the word to upper
2124 case.
2125 @item
2126 When a line is re-indented with @key{TAB}, actions can be applied to the
2127 entire line. To enable this, the variable @code{idlwave-do-actions}
2128 must be non-@code{nil}.
2129 @item
2130 @cindex Foreign code, adapting
2131 @cindex Actions, applied to foreign code
2132 Actions can also be applied to a larger piece of code, e.g. to convert
2133 foreign code to your own style. To do this, mark the relevant part of
2134 the code and execute @kbd{M-x expand-region-abbrevs}. Useful marking
2135 commands are @kbd{C-x h} (the entire file) or @kbd{C-M-h} (the current
2136 subprogram). @xref{Code Indentation}, for information how to adjust the
2137 indentation of the code.
2138 @end itemize
2139
2140 @defopt idlwave-do-actions (@code{nil})
2141 Non-@code{nil} means performs actions when indenting. Individual action
2142 settings are described below and set separately.
2143 @end defopt
2144
2145 @menu
2146 * Block Boundary Check:: Is the END statement correct?
2147 * Padding Operators:: Enforcing space around `=' etc
2148 * Case Changes:: Enforcing upper case keywords
2149 @end menu
2150
2151 @node Block Boundary Check, Padding Operators, Actions, Actions
2152 @subsection Block Boundary Check
2153 @cindex Block boundary check
2154 @cindex @code{END} type checking
2155 @cindex @code{END}, automatic insertion
2156 @cindex @code{END}, expanding
2157 @cindex Block, closing
2158 @cindex Closing a block
2159
2160 Whenever you type an @code{END} statement, IDLWAVE finds the
2161 corresponding start of the block and the cursor blinks back to that
2162 location for a second. If you have typed a specific @code{END}, like
2163 @code{ENDIF} or @code{ENDCASE}, you get a warning if that terminator
2164 does not match the type of block it terminates.
2165
2166 Set the variable @code{idlwave-expand-generic-end} in order to have all
2167 generic @code{END} statements automatically expanded to the appropriate
2168 type. You can also type @kbd{C-c ]} to close the current block by
2169 inserting the appropriate @code{END} statement.
2170
2171 @defopt idlwave-show-block (@code{t})
2172 Non-@code{nil} means point blinks to block beginning for
2173 @code{idlwave-show-begin}.
2174 @end defopt
2175
2176 @defopt idlwave-expand-generic-end (@code{t})
2177 Non-@code{nil} means expand generic END to ENDIF/ENDELSE/ENDWHILE etc.
2178 @end defopt
2179
2180 @defopt idlwave-reindent-end (@code{t})
2181 Non-@code{nil} means re-indent line after END was typed.
2182 @end defopt
2183
2184 @node Padding Operators, Case Changes, Block Boundary Check, Actions
2185 @subsection Padding Operators
2186 @cindex Padding operators with spaces
2187 @cindex Operators, padding with spaces
2188 @cindex Space, around operators
2189
2190 Some operators can be automatically surrounded by spaces. This can
2191 happen when the operator is typed, or later when the line is indented.
2192 IDLWAVE can pad the operators @samp{<}, @samp{>}, @samp{,}, @samp{=},
2193 and @samp{->}, as well as the modified assignment operators
2194 (@samp{AND=}, @samp{OR=}, etc.). This feature is turned off by default.
2195 If you want to turn it on, customize the variables
2196 @code{idlwave-surround-by-blank} and @code{idlwave-do-actions} and turn
2197 both on. You can also define similar actions for other operators by
2198 using the function @code{idlwave-action-and-binding} in the mode hook.
2199 For example, to enforce space padding of the @samp{+} and @samp{*}
2200 operators (outside of strings and comments, of course), try this in
2201 @file{.emacs}
2202
2203 @lisp
2204 (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook
2205 (lambda ()
2206 (setq idlwave-surround-by-blank t) ; Turn this type of actions on
2207 (idlwave-action-and-binding "*" '(idlwave-surround 1 1))
2208 (idlwave-action-and-binding "+" '(idlwave-surround 1 1))))
2209 @end lisp
2210
2211 Note that the modified assignment operators which begin with a word
2212 (@samp{AND=}, @samp{OR=}, @samp{NOT=}, etc.) require a leading space to
2213 be recognized (e.g @code{vAND=4} would be interpreted as a variable
2214 @code{vAND}). Also note that, since e.g., @code{>} and @code{>=} are
2215 both valid operators, it is impossible to surround both by blanks while
2216 they are being typed. Similarly with @code{&} and @code{&&}. For
2217 these, a compromise is made: the padding is placed on the left, and if
2218 the longer operator is keyed in, on the right as well (otherwise you
2219 must insert spaces to pad right yourself, or press simply press Tab to
2220 repad everything if @code{idlwave-do-actions} is on).
2221
2222 @defopt idlwave-surround-by-blank (@code{nil})
2223 Non-@code{nil} means enable @code{idlwave-surround}. If non-@code{nil},
2224 @samp{=}, @samp{<}, @samp{>}, @samp{&}, @samp{,}, @samp{->}, and the
2225 modified assignment operators (@samp{AND=}, @samp{OR=}, etc.) are
2226 surrounded with spaces by @code{idlwave-surround}.
2227 @end defopt
2228
2229 @defopt idlwave-pad-keyword (@code{t})
2230 Non-@code{nil} means space-pad the @samp{=} in keyword assignments.
2231 @end defopt
2232
2233 @node Case Changes, , Padding Operators, Actions
2234 @subsection Case Changes
2235 @cindex Case changes
2236 @cindex Upcase, enforcing for reserved words
2237 @cindex Downcase, enforcing for reserved words
2238
2239 Actions can be used to change the case of reserved words or expanded
2240 abbreviations by customizing the variables
2241 @code{idlwave-abbrev-change-case} and
2242 @code{idlwave-reserved-word-upcase}. If you want to change the case of
2243 additional words automatically, put something like the following into
2244 your @file{.emacs} file:
2245
2246 @lisp
2247 (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook
2248 (lambda ()
2249 ;; Capitalize system vars
2250 (idlwave-action-and-binding idlwave-sysvar '(capitalize-word 1) t)
2251 ;; Capitalize procedure name
2252 (idlwave-action-and-binding "\\<\\(pro\\|function\\)\\>[ \t]*\\<"
2253 '(capitalize-word 1) t)
2254 ;; Capitalize common block name
2255 (idlwave-action-and-binding "\\<common\\>[ \t]+\\<"
2256 '(capitalize-word 1) t)))
2257 @end lisp
2258
2259 For more information, see the documentation string for the function
2260 @code{idlwave-action-and-binding}. For information on controlling the
2261 case of routines, keywords, classes, and methods as they are completed, see
2262 @ref{Completion}.
2263
2264 @defopt idlwave-abbrev-change-case (@code{nil})
2265 Non-@code{nil} means all abbrevs will be forced to either upper or lower
2266 case. Valid values are @code{nil}, @code{t}, and @code{down}.
2267 @end defopt
2268
2269 @defopt idlwave-reserved-word-upcase (@code{nil})
2270 Non-@code{nil} means reserved words will be made upper case via abbrev
2271 expansion.
2272 @end defopt
2273
2274
2275 @node Doc Header, Motion Commands, Actions, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
2276 @section Documentation Header
2277 @cindex Documentation header
2278 @cindex DocLib header
2279 @cindex Modification timestamp
2280 @cindex Header, for file documentation
2281 @cindex Timestamp, in doc header.
2282 @cindex Changelog, in doc header.
2283
2284 @kindex C-c C-h
2285 @kindex C-c C-m
2286 The command @kbd{C-c C-h} inserts a standard routine header into the
2287 buffer, with the usual fields for documentation (a different header can
2288 be specified with @code{idlwave-file-header}). One of the keywords is
2289 @samp{MODIFICATION HISTORY} under which the changes to a routine can be
2290 recorded. The command @kbd{C-c C-m} jumps to the @samp{MODIFICATION
2291 HISTORY} of the current routine or file and inserts the user name with a
2292 timestamp.
2293
2294 @defopt idlwave-file-header
2295 The doc-header template or a path to a file containing it.
2296 @end defopt
2297
2298 @defopt idlwave-header-to-beginning-of-file (@code{nil})
2299 Non-@code{nil} means the documentation header will always be at start
2300 of file.
2301 @end defopt
2302
2303 @defopt idlwave-timestamp-hook
2304 The hook function used to update the timestamp of a function.
2305 @end defopt
2306
2307 @defopt idlwave-doc-modifications-keyword
2308 The modifications keyword to use with the log documentation commands.
2309 @end defopt
2310
2311 @defopt idlwave-doclib-start
2312 Regexp matching the start of a document library header.
2313 @end defopt
2314
2315 @defopt idlwave-doclib-end
2316 Regexp matching the start of a document library header.
2317 @end defopt
2318
2319 @node Motion Commands, Misc Options, Doc Header, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
2320 @section Motion Commands
2321 @cindex Motion commands
2322 @cindex Program structure, moving through
2323 @cindex Code structure, moving through
2324 @cindex @file{Func-menu}, XEmacs package
2325 @cindex @file{Imenu}, Emacs package
2326 @cindex Function definitions, jumping to
2327 @cindex Procedure definitions, jumping to
2328
2329 IDLWAVE supports both @file{Imenu} and @file{Func-menu}, two packages
2330 which make it easy to jump to the definitions of functions and
2331 procedures in the current file with a pop-up selection. To bind
2332 @file{Imenu} to a mouse-press, use in your @file{.emacs}:
2333
2334 @lisp
2335 (define-key global-map [S-down-mouse-3] 'imenu)
2336 @end lisp
2337
2338 @cindex @file{Speedbar}, Emacs package
2339
2340 In addition, @file{Speedbar} support allows convenient navigation of a
2341 source tree of IDL routine files, quickly stepping to routine
2342 definitions. See @code{Tools->Display Speedbar}.
2343
2344 Several commands allow you to move quickly through the structure of an
2345 IDL program:
2346
2347 @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85
2348 @item @kbd{C-M-a}
2349 @tab Beginning of subprogram
2350 @item @kbd{C-M-e}
2351 @tab End of subprogram
2352 @item @kbd{C-c @{}
2353 @tab Beginning of block (stay inside the block)
2354 @item @kbd{C-c @}}
2355 @tab End of block (stay inside the block)
2356 @item @kbd{C-M-n}
2357 @tab Forward block (on same level)
2358 @item @kbd{C-M-p}
2359 @tab Backward block (on same level)
2360 @item @kbd{C-M-d}
2361 @tab Down block (enters a block)
2362 @item @kbd{C-M-u}
2363 @tab Backward up block (leaves a block)
2364 @item @kbd{C-c C-n}
2365 @tab Next Statement
2366 @end multitable
2367
2368
2369 @node Misc Options, , Motion Commands, The IDLWAVE Major Mode
2370 @section Miscellaneous Options
2371 @cindex Hooks
2372
2373 @defopt idlwave-help-application
2374 The external application providing reference help for programming.
2375 @end defopt
2376
2377 @defopt idlwave-startup-message (@code{t})
2378 Non-@code{nil} means display a startup message when @code{idlwave-mode}'
2379 is first called.
2380 @end defopt
2381
2382 @defopt idlwave-mode-hook
2383 Normal hook. Executed when a buffer is put into @code{idlwave-mode}.
2384 @end defopt
2385
2386 @defopt idlwave-load-hook
2387 Normal hook. Executed when @file{idlwave.el} is loaded.
2388 @end defopt
2389
2390 @node The IDLWAVE Shell, Acknowledgements, The IDLWAVE Major Mode, Top
2391 @chapter The IDLWAVE Shell
2392 @cindex IDLWAVE shell
2393 @cindex Major mode, @code{idlwave-shell-mode}
2394 @cindex IDL, as Emacs subprocess
2395 @cindex Subprocess of Emacs, IDL
2396 @cindex Comint, Emacs package
2397 @cindex Windows
2398 @cindex MacOS
2399
2400 The IDLWAVE shell is an Emacs major mode which permits running the IDL
2401 program as an inferior process of Emacs, and works closely with the
2402 IDLWAVE major mode in buffers. It can be used to work with IDL
2403 interactively, to compile and run IDL programs in Emacs buffers and to
2404 debug these programs. The IDLWAVE shell is built on @file{comint}, an
2405 Emacs packages which handles the communication with the IDL program.
2406 Unfortunately, IDL for Windows does not have command-prompt versions and
2407 thus do not allow the interaction with Emacs --- so the IDLWAVE shell
2408 currently only works under Unix and MacOSX.
2409
2410 @menu
2411 * Starting the Shell:: How to launch IDL as a subprocess
2412 * Using the Shell:: Interactively working with the Shell
2413 * Commands Sent to the Shell::
2414 * Debugging IDL Programs::
2415 * Examining Variables::
2416 * Custom Expression Examination::
2417 @end menu
2418
2419 @node Starting the Shell, Using the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell
2420 @section Starting the Shell
2421 @cindex Starting the shell
2422 @cindex Shell, starting
2423 @cindex Dedicated frame, for shell buffer
2424 @cindex Frame, for shell buffer
2425 @cindex Subprocess of Emacs, IDL
2426
2427 @kindex C-c C-s
2428 The IDLWAVE shell can be started with the command @kbd{M-x
2429 idlwave-shell}. In @code{idlwave-mode} the function is bound to
2430 @kbd{C-c C-s}. It creates a buffer @file{*idl*} which is used to
2431 interact with the shell. If the shell is already running, @kbd{C-c
2432 C-s} will simply switch to the shell buffer. The command @kbd{C-c
2433 C-l} (@code{idlwave-shell-recenter-shell-window}) displays the shell
2434 window without selecting it. The shell can also be started
2435 automatically when another command tries to send a command to it. To
2436 enable auto start, set the variable
2437 @code{idlwave-shell-automatic-start} to @code{t}.
2438
2439 In order to create a separate frame for the IDLWAVE shell buffer, call
2440 @code{idlwave-shell} with a prefix argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-s} or
2441 @kbd{C-u C-c C-l}. If you always want a dedicated frame for the shell
2442 window, configure the variable
2443 @code{idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame}.
2444
2445 To launch a quick IDLWAVE shell directly from a shell prompt without
2446 an IDLWAVE buffer (e.g., as a replacement for running inside an
2447 xterm), define a system alias with the following content:
2448
2449 @example
2450 emacs -geometry 80x32 -eval "(idlwave-shell 'quick)"
2451 @end example
2452
2453 Replace the @samp{-geometry 80x32} option with @samp{-nw} if you prefer
2454 the Emacs process to run directly inside the terminal window.
2455
2456 @cindex ENVI
2457 @cindex IDL> Prompt
2458
2459 To use IDLWAVE with ENVI or other custom packages which change the
2460 @samp{IDL> } prompt, you must change the
2461 @code{idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern}, which defaults to @samp{"^ ?IDL>
2462 "}. Normally, you can just replace the @samp{IDL} in this expression
2463 with the prompt you see. A suitable pattern which matches the prompt
2464 for both ENVI and IDL simultaneously is @samp{"^ ?\\(ENVI\\|IDL\\)> "}.
2465
2466 @defopt idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name (@file{idl})
2467 This is the command to run IDL.
2468 @end defopt
2469
2470 @defopt idlwave-shell-command-line-options
2471 A list of command line options for calling the IDL program.
2472 @end defopt
2473
2474 @defopt idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern
2475 Regexp to match IDL prompt at beginning of a line.
2476 @end defopt
2477
2478 @defopt idlwave-shell-process-name
2479 Name to be associated with the IDL process.
2480 @end defopt
2481
2482 @defopt idlwave-shell-automatic-start (@code{nil})
2483 Non-@code{nil} means attempt to invoke idlwave-shell if not already
2484 running.
2485 @end defopt
2486
2487 @defopt idlwave-shell-initial-commands
2488 Initial commands, separated by newlines, to send to IDL.
2489 @end defopt
2490
2491 @defopt idlwave-shell-save-command-history (@code{t})
2492 Non-@code{nil} means preserve command history between sessions.
2493 @end defopt
2494
2495 @defopt idlwave-shell-command-history-file (@file{~/.idlwave/.idlwhist})
2496 The file in which the command history of the idlwave shell is saved.
2497 Unless it's an absolute path, it goes in
2498 @code{idlwave-config-directory}.
2499 @end defopt
2500
2501 @defopt idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame (@code{nil})
2502 Non-@code{nil} means IDLWAVE should use a special frame to display the
2503 shell buffer.
2504 @end defopt
2505
2506 @defopt idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-window (@code{nil})
2507 Non-@code{nil} means use a dedicated window for the shell, taking care
2508 not it replace it with other buffers.
2509 @end defopt
2510
2511 @defopt idlwave-shell-frame-parameters
2512 The frame parameters for a dedicated idlwave-shell frame.
2513 @end defopt
2514
2515 @defopt idlwave-shell-raise-frame (@code{t})
2516 Non-@code{nil} means `idlwave-shell' raises the frame showing the shell
2517 window.
2518 @end defopt
2519
2520 @defopt idlwave-shell-temp-pro-prefix
2521 The prefix for temporary IDL files used when compiling regions.
2522 @end defopt
2523
2524 @cindex Hooks
2525 @defopt idlwave-shell-mode-hook
2526 Hook for customizing @code{idlwave-shell-mode}.
2527 @end defopt
2528
2529 @node Using the Shell, Commands Sent to the Shell, Starting the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell
2530 @section Using the Shell
2531 @cindex Comint
2532 @cindex Shell, basic commands
2533
2534 The IDLWAVE shell works in the same fashion as other shell modes in
2535 Emacs. It provides command history, command line editing and job
2536 control. The @key{UP} and @key{DOWN} arrows cycle through the input
2537 history just like in an X terminal@footnote{This is different from
2538 normal Emacs/Comint behavior, but more like an xterm. If you prefer the
2539 default comint functionality, check the variable
2540 @code{idlwave-shell-arrows-do-history}.}. The history is preserved
2541 between emacs and IDL sessions. Here is a list of commonly used
2542 commands:
2543
2544 @multitable @columnfractions .12 .88
2545 @item @key{UP}, @key{M-p}
2546 @tab Cycle backwards in input history
2547 @item @key{DOWN}, @key{M-n}
2548 @tab Cycle forwards in input history
2549 @item @kbd{M-r}
2550 @tab Previous input matching a regexp
2551 @item @kbd{M-s}
2552 @tab Next input matching a regexp
2553 @item @kbd{return}
2554 @tab Send input or copy line to current prompt
2555 @item @kbd{C-c C-a}
2556 @tab Beginning of line; skip prompt
2557 @item @kbd{C-c C-u}
2558 @tab Kill input to beginning of line
2559 @item @kbd{C-c C-w}
2560 @tab Kill word before cursor
2561 @item @kbd{C-c C-c}
2562 @tab Send ^C
2563 @item @kbd{C-c C-z}
2564 @tab Send ^Z
2565 @item @kbd{C-c C-\}
2566 @tab Send ^\
2567 @item @kbd{C-c C-o}
2568 @tab Delete last batch of process output
2569 @item @kbd{C-c C-r}
2570 @tab Show last batch of process output
2571 @item @kbd{C-c C-l}
2572 @tab List input history
2573 @end multitable
2574
2575 In addition to these standard @file{comint} commands,
2576 @code{idlwave-shell-mode} provides many of the same commands which
2577 simplify writing IDL code available in IDLWAVE buffers. This includes
2578 abbreviations, online help, and completion. See @ref{Routine Info} and
2579 @ref{Online Help} and @ref{Completion} for more information on these
2580 commands.
2581
2582 @cindex Completion, in the shell
2583 @cindex Routine info, in the shell
2584 @cindex Online Help, in the shell
2585 @multitable @columnfractions .12 .88
2586 @item @kbd{@key{TAB}}
2587 @tab Completion of file names (between quotes and after executive
2588 commands @samp{.run} and @samp{.compile}), routine names, class names,
2589 keywords, system variables, system variable tags etc.
2590 (@code{idlwave-shell-complete}).
2591 @item @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}
2592 @tab Same as @key{TAB}
2593 @item @kbd{C-c ?}
2594 @tab Routine Info display (@code{idlwave-routine-info})
2595 @item @kbd{M-?}
2596 @tab IDL online help on routine (@code{idlwave-routine-info-from-idlhelp})
2597 @item @kbd{C-c C-i}
2598 @tab Update routine info from buffers and shell
2599 (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info})
2600 @item @kbd{C-c C-v}
2601 @tab Find the source file of a routine (@code{idlwave-find-module})
2602 @item @kbd{C-c C-t}
2603 @tab Find the source file of a routine in the currently visited file
2604 (@code{idlwave-find-module-this-file}).
2605 @item @kbd{C-c =}
2606 @tab Compile a library routine (@code{idlwave-resolve})
2607 @end multitable
2608
2609 @defopt idlwave-shell-arrows-do-history (@code{t})
2610 Non-@code{nil} means @key{UP} and @key{DOWN} arrows move through command
2611 history like xterm.
2612 @end defopt
2613
2614 @defopt idlwave-shell-comint-settings
2615 Alist of special settings for the comint variables in the IDLWAVE Shell.
2616 @end defopt
2617
2618 @defopt idlwave-shell-file-name-chars
2619 The characters allowed in file names, as a string. Used for file name
2620 completion.
2621 @end defopt
2622
2623 @defopt idlwave-shell-graphics-window-size
2624 Size of IDL graphics windows popped up by special IDLWAVE command.
2625 @end defopt
2626
2627 @cindex Input mode
2628 @cindex Character input mode (Shell)
2629 @cindex Line input mode (Shell)
2630 @cindex Magic spells, for input mode
2631 @cindex Spells, magic
2632 IDLWAVE works in line input mode: You compose a full command line, using
2633 all the power Emacs gives you to do this. When you press @key{RET}, the
2634 whole line is sent to IDL. Sometimes it is necessary to send single
2635 characters (without a newline), for example when an IDL program is
2636 waiting for single character input with the @code{GET_KBRD} function.
2637 You can send a single character to IDL with the command @kbd{C-c C-x}
2638 (@code{idlwave-shell-send-char}). When you press @kbd{C-c C-y}
2639 (@code{idlwave-shell-char-mode-loop}), IDLWAVE runs a blocking loop
2640 which accepts characters and immediately sends them to IDL. The loop
2641 can be exited with @kbd{C-g}. It terminates also automatically when the
2642 current IDL command is finished. Check the documentation of the two
2643 variables described below for a way to make IDL programs trigger
2644 automatic switches of the input mode.
2645
2646 @defopt idlwave-shell-use-input-mode-magic (@code{nil})
2647 Non-@code{nil} means IDLWAVE should check for input mode spells in
2648 output.
2649 @end defopt
2650
2651 @defopt idlwave-shell-input-mode-spells
2652 The three regular expressions which match the magic spells for input
2653 modes.
2654 @end defopt
2655
2656 @node Commands Sent to the Shell, Debugging IDL Programs, Using the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell
2657 @section Commands Sent to the Shell
2658 @cindex Commands in shell, showing
2659 @cindex Showing commands in shell
2660
2661 The IDLWAVE buffers and shell interact very closely. In addition to the
2662 normal commands you enter at the @code{IDL>} prompt, many other special
2663 commands are sent to the shell, sometimes as a direct result of invoking
2664 a key command, menu item, or toolbar button, but also automatically, as
2665 part of the normal flow of information updates between the buffer and
2666 shell.
2667
2668 The commands sent include @code{breakpoint}, @code{.step} and other
2669 debug commands (@pxref{Debugging IDL Programs}), @code{.run} and other
2670 compilation statements (@pxref{Compiling Programs}), examination
2671 commands like @code{print} and @code{help} (@pxref{Examining
2672 Variables}), and other special purpose commands designed to keep
2673 information on the running shell current.
2674
2675 By default, much of this background shell input and output is hidden
2676 from the user, but this is configurable. The custom variable
2677 @code{idlwave-abbrev-show-commands} allows you to configure which
2678 commands sent to the shell are shown there. For a related customization
2679 for separating the output of @emph{examine} commands, see @ref{Examining
2680 Variables}.
2681
2682 @defopt idlwave-shell-show-commands (@code{'(run misc breakpoint)})
2683 A list of command types to echo in the shell when sent. Possible values
2684 are @code{run} for @code{.run}, @code{.compile} and other run commands,
2685 @code{misc} for lesser used commands like @code{window},
2686 @code{retall},@code{close}, etc., @code{breakpoint} for breakpoint
2687 setting and clearing commands, and @code{debug} for other debug,
2688 stepping, and continue commands. In addition, if the variable is set to
2689 the single symbol @code{'everything}, all the copious shell input is
2690 displayed (which is probably only useful for debugging purposes).
2691 N.B. For hidden commands which produce output by side-effect, that
2692 output remains hidden (e.g., stepping through a @code{print} command).
2693 As a special case, any error message in the output will be displayed
2694 (e.g., stepping to an error).
2695 @end defopt
2696
2697 @node Debugging IDL Programs, Examining Variables, Commands Sent to the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell
2698 @section Debugging IDL Programs
2699 @cindex Debugging
2700 @cindex Keybindings for debugging
2701 @cindex Toolbar
2702
2703 Programs can be compiled, run, and debugged directly from the source
2704 buffer in Emacs, walking through arbitrarily deeply nested code,
2705 printing expressions and skipping up and down the calling stack along
2706 the way. IDLWAVE makes compiling and debugging IDL programs far less
2707 cumbersome by providing a full-featured, key/menu/toolbar-driven
2708 interface to commands like @code{breakpoint}, @code{.step},
2709 @code{.run}, etc. It can even perform complex debug operations not
2710 natively supported by IDL (like continuing to the line at the cursor).
2711
2712 The IDLWAVE shell installs key bindings both in the shell buffer and
2713 in all IDL code buffers of the current Emacs session, so debug
2714 commands work in both places (in the shell, commands operate on the
2715 last file compiled). On Emacs versions which support it, a debugging
2716 toolbar is also installed. The toolbar display can be toggled with
2717 @kbd{C-c C-d C-t} (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-toolbar}).
2718
2719
2720 @defopt idlwave-shell-use-toolbar (@code{t})
2721 Non-@code{nil} means use the debugging toolbar in all IDL related
2722 buffers.
2723 @end defopt
2724
2725 @menu
2726 * A Tale of Two Modes::
2727 * Debug Key Bindings::
2728 * Breakpoints and Stepping::
2729 * Compiling Programs::
2730 * Walking the Calling Stack::
2731 * Electric Debug Mode::
2732 @end menu
2733
2734
2735 @node A Tale of Two Modes, Debug Key Bindings, Debugging IDL Programs, Debugging IDL Programs
2736 @subsection A Tale of Two Modes
2737 @cindex Electric Debug Mode
2738 @cindex Debugging Interface
2739
2740 The many debugging, compiling, and examination commands provided in
2741 IDLWAVE are available simultaneously through two different interfaces:
2742 the original, multi-key command interface, and the new Electric Debug
2743 Mode. The functionality they offer is similar, but the way you interact
2744 with them is quite different. The main difference is that, in Electric
2745 Debug Mode, the source buffers are made read-only, and single
2746 key-strokes are used to step through, examine expressions, set and
2747 remove breakpoints, etc. The same variables, prefix arguments, and
2748 settings apply to both versions, and both can be used interchangeably.
2749 By default, when breakpoints are hit, Electric Debug Mode is enabled.
2750 The traditional interface is described first. @xref{Electric Debug
2751 Mode}, for more on that mode. Note that electric debug mode can be
2752 prevented from activating automatically by customizing the variable
2753 @code{idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug}.
2754
2755 @node Debug Key Bindings, Breakpoints and Stepping, A Tale of Two Modes, Debugging IDL Programs
2756 @subsection Debug Key Bindings
2757 @kindex C-c C-d
2758 @cindex Key bindings
2759
2760 The standard debugging key bindings are always available by default on
2761 the prefix key @kbd{C-c C-d}, so, for example, setting a breakpoint is
2762 done with @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}, and compiling a source file with @kbd{C-c
2763 C-d C-c}. You can also easily configure IDLWAVE to use one or more
2764 modifier keys not in use by other commands, in lieu of the prefix
2765 @kbd{C-c C-d} (though these bindings will typically also be available
2766 --- see @code{idlwave-shell-activate-prefix-keybindings}). For
2767 example, if you include in @file{.emacs}:
2768
2769 @lisp
2770 (setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(control shift))
2771 @end lisp
2772
2773 @noindent a breakpoint can then be set by pressing @kbd{b} while holding down
2774 @kbd{shift} and @kbd{control} keys, i.e. @kbd{C-S-b}. Compiling a
2775 source file will be on @kbd{C-S-c}, deleting a breakpoint @kbd{C-S-d},
2776 etc. In the remainder of this chapter we will assume that the
2777 @kbd{C-c C-d} bindings are active, but each of these bindings will
2778 have an equivalent shortcut if modifiers are given in the
2779 @code{idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers} variable (@pxref{Lesson II --
2780 Customization}). A much simpler and faster form of debugging for
2781 running code is also available by default --- see @ref{Electric Debug
2782 Mode}.
2783
2784 @defopt idlwave-shell-prefix-key (@kbd{C-c C-d})
2785 The prefix key for the debugging map
2786 @code{idlwave-shell-mode-prefix-map}.
2787 @end defopt
2788
2789 @defopt idlwave-shell-activate-prefix-keybindings (@code{t})
2790 Non-@code{nil} means debug commands will be bound to the prefix
2791 key, like @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}.
2792 @end defopt
2793
2794 @defopt idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers (@code{nil})
2795 List of modifier keys to use for additional, alternative binding of
2796 debugging commands in the shell and source buffers. Can be one or
2797 more of @code{control}, @code{meta}, @code{super}, @code{hyper},
2798 @code{alt}, and @code{shift}.
2799 @end defopt
2800
2801 @node Breakpoints and Stepping, Compiling Programs, Debug Key Bindings, Debugging IDL Programs
2802 @subsection Breakpoints and Stepping
2803 @cindex Breakpoints
2804 @cindex Stepping
2805 @cindex Execution, controlled
2806
2807 @kindex C-c C-d C-b
2808 @kindex C-c C-d C-b
2809 IDLWAVE helps you set breakpoints and step through code. Setting a
2810 breakpoint in the current line of the source buffer is accomplished
2811 with @kbd{C-c C-d C-b} (@code{idlwave-shell-break-here}). With a
2812 prefix arg of 1 (i.e. @kbd{C-1 C-c C-d C-b}), the breakpoint gets a
2813 @code{/ONCE} keyword, meaning that it will be deleted after first use.
2814 With a numeric prefix greater than one (e.g. @kbd{C-4 C-c C-d C-b}),
2815 the breakpoint will only be active the @code{nth} time it is hit.
2816 With a single non-numeric prefix (i.e. @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-b}), prompt
2817 for a condition --- an IDL expression to be evaluated and trigger the
2818 breakpoint only if true. To clear the breakpoint in the current line,
2819 use @kbd{C-c C-d C-d} (@code{idlwave-clear-current-bp}). When
2820 executed from the shell window, the breakpoint where IDL is currently
2821 stopped will be deleted. To clear all breakpoints, use @kbd{C-c C-d
2822 C-a} (@code{idlwave-clear-all-bp}). Breakpoints can also be disabled
2823 and re-enabled: @kbd{C-c C-d C-\}
2824 (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-enable-current-bp}).
2825
2826 Breakpoint lines are highlighted or indicated with an icon in the source
2827 code (different icons for conditional, after, and other break types).
2828 Disabled breakpoints are @emph{grayed out} by default. Note that IDL
2829 places breakpoints as close as possible on or after the line you
2830 specify. IDLWAVE queries the shell for the actual breakpoint location
2831 which was set, so the exact line you specify may not be marked. You can
2832 re-sync the breakpoint list and update the display at any time (e.g., if
2833 you add or remove some on the command line) using @kbd{C-c C-d C-l}.
2834
2835 In recent IDLWAVE versions, the breakpoint line is highlighted when the
2836 mouse is moved over it, and a tooltip pops up describing the break
2837 details. @kbd{Mouse-3} on the breakpoint line pops up a menu of
2838 breakpoint actions, including clearing, disabling, and adding or
2839 changing break conditions or ``after'' break count.
2840
2841 Once the program has stopped somewhere, you can step through it. The
2842 most important stepping commands are @kbd{C-c C-d C-s} to execute one
2843 line of IDL code ("step into"); @kbd{C-c C-d C-n} to step a single line,
2844 treating procedure and function calls as a single step ("step over");
2845 @kbd{C-c C-d C-h} to continue execution to the line at the cursor and
2846 @kbd{C-c C-d C-r} to continue execution. @xref{Commands Sent to the
2847 Shell}, for information on displaying or hiding the breakpoint and
2848 stepping commands the shell receives. Here is a summary of the
2849 breakpoint and stepping commands:
2850
2851 @multitable @columnfractions .23 .77
2852 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}
2853 @tab Set breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-break-here})
2854 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-i}
2855 @tab Set breakpoint in module named here (@code{idlwave-shell-break-in})
2856 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-d}
2857 @tab Clear current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp})
2858 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-a}
2859 @tab Clear all breakpoints (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp})
2860 @item @kbd{C-c C-d [}
2861 @tab Go to the previous breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-goto-previous-bp})
2862 @item @kbd{C-c C-d ]}
2863 @tab Go to the next breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-goto-next-bp})
2864 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-\}
2865 @tab Disable/Enable current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-enable-current-bp})
2866 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-j}
2867 @tab Set a breakpoint at the beginning of the enclosing routine.
2868 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-s}
2869 @tab Step, into function calls (@code{idlwave-shell-step})
2870 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-n}
2871 @tab Step, over function calls (@code{idlwave-shell-stepover})
2872 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-k}
2873 @tab Skip one statement (@code{idlwave-shell-skip})
2874 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-u}
2875 @tab Continue to end of block (@code{idlwave-shell-up})
2876 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-m}
2877 @tab Continue to end of function (@code{idlwave-shell-return})
2878 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-o}
2879 @tab Continue past end of function (@code{idlwave-shell-out})
2880 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-h}
2881 @tab Continue to line at cursor position (@code{idlwave-shell-to-here})
2882 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-r}
2883 @tab Continue execution to next breakpoint, if any (@code{idlwave-shell-cont})
2884 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-up}
2885 @tab Show higher level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-up})
2886 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-down}
2887 @tab Show lower level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-down})
2888 @end multitable
2889
2890 All of these commands have equivalents in Electric Debug Mode, which
2891 provides faster single-key access (@pxref{Electric Debug Mode}).
2892
2893 The line where IDL is currently stopped, at breakpoints, halts, and
2894 errors, etc., is marked with a color overlay or arrow, depending on the
2895 setting in @code{idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line}. If an overlay face is
2896 used to mark the stop line (as it is by default), when stepping through
2897 code, the face color is temporarily changed to gray, until IDL completes
2898 the next command and moves to the new line.
2899
2900 @defopt idlwave-shell-mark-breakpoints (@code{t})
2901 Non-@code{nil} means mark breakpoints in the source file buffers. The
2902 value indicates the preferred method. Valid values are @code{nil},
2903 @code{t}, @code{face}, and @code{glyph}.
2904 @end defopt
2905
2906 @defopt idlwave-shell-breakpoint-face
2907 The face for breakpoint lines in the source code if
2908 @code{idlwave-shell-mark-breakpoints} has the value @code{face}.
2909 @end defopt
2910
2911 @defopt idlwave-shell-breakpoint-popup-menu (@code{t})
2912 Whether to pop-up a menu and present a tooltip description on
2913 breakpoint lines.
2914 @end defopt
2915
2916 @defopt idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line (@code{t})
2917 Non-@code{nil} means mark the source code line where IDL is currently
2918 stopped. The value specifies the preferred method. Valid values are
2919 @code{nil}, @code{t}, @code{arrow}, and @code{face}.
2920 @end defopt
2921
2922 @defopt idlwave-shell-overlay-arrow (@code{">"})
2923 The overlay arrow to display at source lines where execution halts, if
2924 configured in @code{idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line}.
2925 @end defopt
2926
2927 @defopt idlwave-shell-stop-line-face
2928 The face which highlights the source line where IDL is stopped, if
2929 configured in @code{idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line}.
2930 @end defopt
2931
2932
2933 @node Compiling Programs, Walking the Calling Stack, Breakpoints and Stepping, Debugging IDL Programs
2934 @subsection Compiling Programs
2935 @cindex Compiling programs
2936 @cindex Programs, compiling
2937 @cindex Default command line, executing
2938 @cindex Executing a default command line
2939
2940 @kindex C-c C-d C-c
2941 In order to compile the current buffer under the IDLWAVE shell, press
2942 @kbd{C-c C-d C-c} (@code{idlwave-save-and-run}). This first saves the
2943 current buffer and then sends the command @samp{.run path/to/file} to the
2944 shell. You can also execute @kbd{C-c C-d C-c} from the shell buffer, in
2945 which case the most recently compiled buffer will be saved and
2946 re-compiled.
2947
2948 When developing or debugging a program, it is often necessary to execute
2949 the same command line many times. A convenient way to do this is
2950 @kbd{C-c C-d C-y} (@code{idlwave-shell-execute-default-command-line}).
2951 This command first resets IDL from a state of interrupted execution by
2952 closing all files and returning to the main interpreter level. Then a
2953 default command line is send to the shell. To edit the default command
2954 line, call @code{idlwave-shell-execute-default-command-line} with a
2955 prefix argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-y}. If no default command line has
2956 been set (or you give two prefix arguments), the last command on the
2957 @code{comint} input history is sent.
2958
2959 @kindex C-c C-d C-e
2960 @cindex Compiling regions
2961 For quickly compiling and running the currently marked region as a main
2962 level program @kbd{C-c C-d C-e} (@code{idlwave-shell-run-region}) is
2963 very useful. A temporary file is created holding the contents of the
2964 current region (with @code{END} appended), and run from the shell.
2965
2966 @node Walking the Calling Stack, Electric Debug Mode, Compiling Programs, Debugging IDL Programs
2967 @subsection Walking the Calling Stack
2968 @cindex Calling stack, walking
2969
2970 While debugging a program, it can be very useful to check the context in
2971 which the current routine was called, for instance to help understand
2972 the value of the arguments passed. To do so conveniently you need to
2973 examine the calling stack. If execution is stopped somewhere deep in a
2974 program, you can use the commands @kbd{C-c C-d C-@key{UP}}
2975 (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-up}) and @kbd{C-c C-d C-@key{DOWN}}
2976 (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-down}), or the corresponding toolbar buttons,
2977 to move up or down through the calling stack. The mode line of the
2978 shell window will indicate the position within the stack with a label
2979 like @samp{[-3:MYPRO]}. The line of IDL code at that stack position
2980 will be highlighted. If you continue execution, IDLWAVE will
2981 automatically return to the current level. @xref{Examining Variables},
2982 for information how to examine the value of variables and expressions on
2983 higher calling stack levels.
2984
2985 @html
2986 <A NAME="EDEBUG"></A>
2987 @end html
2988 @node Electric Debug Mode, , Walking the Calling Stack, Debugging IDL Programs
2989 @subsection Electric Debug Mode
2990 @cindex Electric Debug Mode
2991 @cindex @samp{*Debugging*}
2992
2993 Even with a convenient debug key prefix enabled, repetitive stepping,
2994 variable examination (@pxref{Examining Variables}), and other debugging
2995 activities can be awkward and slow using commands which require multiple
2996 keystrokes. Luckily, there's a better way, inspired by the lisp e-debug
2997 mode, and available through the @emph{Electric Debug Mode}. By default,
2998 as soon as a breakpoint is hit, this minor mode is enabled. The buffer
2999 showing the line where execution has halted is switched to Electric
3000 Debug Mode. This mode is visible as @samp{*Debugging*} in the mode
3001 line, and a different face (violet by default, if color is available)
3002 for the line stopped at point. The buffer is made read-only and
3003 single-character bindings for the most commonly used debugging commands
3004 are enabled. These character commands (a list of which is available
3005 with @kbd{C-?}) are:
3006
3007 @multitable @columnfractions .2 .8
3008 @item @kbd{a}
3009 @tab Clear all breakpoints (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp})
3010 @item @kbd{b}
3011 @tab Set breakpoint, @kbd{C-u b} for a conditional break, @kbd{C-n b} for nth hit (@code{idlwave-shell-break-here})
3012 @item @kbd{d}
3013 @tab Clear current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp})
3014 @item @kbd{e}
3015 @tab Prompt for expression to print (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp}).
3016 @item @kbd{h}
3017 @tab Continue to the line at cursor position (@code{idlwave-shell-to-here})
3018 @item @kbd{i}
3019 @tab Set breakpoint in module named here (@code{idlwave-shell-break-in})
3020 @item @kbd{[}
3021 @tab Go to the previous breakpoint in the file (@code{idlwave-shell-goto-previous-bp})
3022 @item @kbd{]}
3023 @tab Go to the next breakpoint in the file
3024 (@code{idlwave-shell-goto-next-bp})
3025 @item @kbd{\}
3026 @tab Disable/Enable current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-enable-current-bp})
3027 @item @kbd{j}
3028 @tab Set breakpoint at beginning of enclosing routine (@code{idlwave-shell-break-this-module})
3029 @item @kbd{k}
3030 @tab Skip one statement (@code{idlwave-shell-skip})
3031 @item @kbd{m}
3032 @tab Continue to end of function (@code{idlwave-shell-return})
3033 @item @kbd{n}
3034 @tab Step, over function calls (@code{idlwave-shell-stepover})
3035 @item @kbd{o}
3036 @tab Continue past end of function (@code{idlwave-shell-out})
3037 @item @kbd{p}
3038 @tab Print expression near point or in region with @kbd{C-u p} (@code{idlwave-shell-print})
3039 @item @kbd{q}
3040 @tab End the debugging session and return to the Shell's main level
3041 (@code{idlwave-shell-retall})
3042 @item @kbd{r}
3043 @tab Continue execution to next breakpoint, if any (@code{idlwave-shell-cont})
3044 @item @kbd{s} or @kbd{@key{SPACE}}
3045 @tab Step, into function calls (@code{idlwave-shell-step})
3046 @item @kbd{t}
3047 @tab Print a calling-level traceback in the shell
3048 @item @kbd{u}
3049 @tab Continue to end of block (@code{idlwave-shell-up})
3050 @item @kbd{v}
3051 @tab Turn Electric Debug Mode off
3052 (@code{idlwave-shell-electric-debug-mode})
3053 @item @kbd{x}
3054 @tab Examine expression near point (or in region with @kbd{C-u x})
3055 with shortcut of examine type.
3056 @item @kbd{z}
3057 @tab Reset IDL (@code{idlwave-shell-reset})
3058 @item @kbd{+} or @kbd{=}
3059 @tab Show higher level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-up})
3060 @item @kbd{-} or @kbd{_}
3061 @tab Show lower level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-down})
3062 @item @kbd{?}
3063 @tab Help on expression near point or in region with @kbd{C-u ?}
3064 (@code{idlwave-shell-help-expression})
3065 @item @kbd{C-?}
3066 @tab Show help on the commands available.
3067 @end multitable
3068
3069 Most single-character electric debug bindings use the final keystroke
3070 of the equivalent multiple key commands (which are of course also
3071 still available), but some differ (e.g. @kbd{e},@kbd{t},@kbd{q},@kbd{x}).
3072 Some have additional convenience bindings (like @kbd{@key{SPACE}} for
3073 stepping). All prefix and other argument options described in this
3074 section for the commands invoked by electric debug bindings are still
3075 valid. For example, @kbd{C-u b} sets a conditional breakpoint, just
3076 as it did with @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-b}.
3077
3078 You can toggle the electric debug mode at any time in a buffer using
3079 @kbd{C-c C-d C-v} (@kbd{v} to turn it off while in the mode), or from
3080 the Debug menu. Normally the mode will be enabled and disabled at the
3081 appropriate times, but occasionally you might want to edit a file
3082 while still debugging it, or switch to the mode for conveniently
3083 setting lots of breakpoints.
3084
3085 To quickly abandon a debugging session and return to normal editing at
3086 the Shell's main level, use @kbd{q} (@code{idlwave-shell-retall}).
3087 This disables electric debug mode in all IDLWAVE buffers@footnote{Note
3088 that this binding is not symmetric: @kbd{C-c C-d C-q} is bound to
3089 @code{idlwave-shell-quit}, which quits your IDL session.}. Help is
3090 available for the command shortcuts with @kbd{C-?}. If you find this
3091 mode gets in your way, you can keep it from automatically activating
3092 by setting the variable @code{idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug}
3093 to @code{nil}, or @code{'breakpoint}. If you'd like the convenient
3094 electric debug shortcuts available also when run-time errors are
3095 encountered, set to @code{t}.
3096
3097 @defopt idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug (@code{'breakpoint})
3098 Whether to enter electric debug mode automatically when a breakpoint
3099 or run-time error is encountered, and then disable it in all buffers
3100 when the $MAIN$ level is reached (either through normal program
3101 execution, or retall). In addition to @code{nil} for never, and
3102 @code{t} for both breakpoints and errors, this can be
3103 @code{'breakpoint} (the default) to enable it only at breakpoint
3104 halts.
3105 @end defopt
3106
3107 @defopt idlwave-shell-electric-stop-color (Violet)
3108 Default color of the stopped line overlay when in electric debug mode.
3109 @end defopt
3110
3111 @defopt idlwave-shell-electric-stop-line-face
3112 The face to use for the stopped line. Defaults to a face similar to the
3113 modeline, with color @code{idlwave-shell-electric-stop-color}.
3114 @end defopt
3115
3116 @defopt idlwave-shell-electric-zap-to-file (@code{t})
3117 If set, when entering electric debug mode, select the window displaying
3118 the file where point is stopped. This takes point away from the shell
3119 window, but is useful for immediate stepping, etc.
3120 @end defopt
3121
3122 @html
3123 <A NAME="EXAMINE"></A>
3124 @end html
3125 @node Examining Variables, Custom Expression Examination, Debugging IDL Programs, The IDLWAVE Shell
3126 @section Examining Variables
3127 @cindex @code{PRINT} expressions
3128 @cindex @code{HELP}, on expressions
3129 @cindex Expressions, printing & help
3130 @cindex Examining expressions
3131 @cindex Printing expressions
3132 @cindex Mouse binding to print expressions
3133
3134 @kindex C-c C-d C-p
3135 Do you find yourself repeatedly typing, e.g. @code{print,n_elements(x)},
3136 and similar statements to remind yourself of the
3137 type/size/structure/value/etc. of variables and expressions in your code
3138 or at the command line? IDLWAVE has a suite of special commands to
3139 automate these types of variable or expression examinations. They work
3140 by sending statements to the shell formatted to include the indicated
3141 expression, and can be accessed in several ways.
3142
3143 These @emph{examine} commands can be used in the shell or buffer at any
3144 time (as long as the shell is running), and are very useful when
3145 execution is stopped in a buffer due to a triggered breakpoint or error,
3146 or while composing a long command in the IDLWAVE shell. In the latter
3147 case, the command is sent to the shell and its output is visible, but
3148 point remains unmoved in the command being composed --- you can inspect
3149 the constituents of a command you're building without interrupting the
3150 process of building it! You can even print arbitrary expressions from
3151 older input or output further up in the shell window --- any expression,
3152 variable, number, or function you see can be examined.
3153
3154 If the variable @code{idlwave-shell-separate-examine-output} is
3155 non-@code{nil} (the default), all examine output will be sent to a
3156 special @file{*Examine*} buffer, rather than the shell. The output of
3157 prior examine commands is saved in this buffer. In this buffer @key{c}
3158 clears the contents, and @key{q} hides the buffer.
3159
3160 The two most basic examine commands are bound to @kbd{C-c C-d C-p}, to
3161 print the expression at point, and @kbd{C-c C-d ?}, to invoke help on
3162 this expression@footnote{Available as @kbd{p} and @kbd{?} in Electric
3163 Debug Mode (@pxref{Electric Debug Mode})}. The expression at point is
3164 either an array expression or a function call, or the contents of a pair
3165 of parentheses. The chosen expression is highlighted, and
3166 simultaneously the resulting output is highlighted in the shell or
3167 separate output buffer. Calling the above commands with a prefix
3168 argument will use the current region as expression instead of using the
3169 one at point. which can be useful for examining complicated, multi-line
3170 expressions. Two prefix arguments (@kbd{C-u C-u C-c C-d C-p}) will
3171 prompt for an expression to print directly. By default, when invoking
3172 print, only an initial portion of long arrays will be printed, up to
3173 @code{idlwave-shell-max-print-length}.
3174
3175 For added speed and convenience, there are mouse bindings which allow
3176 you to click on expressions and examine their values. Use
3177 @kbd{S-Mouse-2} to print an expression and @kbd{C-M-Mouse-2} to invoke
3178 help (i.e. you need to hold down @key{META} and @key{CONTROL} while
3179 clicking with the middle mouse button). If you simply click, the
3180 nearest expression will be selected in the same manner as described
3181 above. You can also @emph{drag} the mouse in order to highlight
3182 exactly the specific expression or sub-expression you want to examine.
3183 For custom expression examination, and the powerful customizable
3184 pop-up examine selection, @xref{Custom Expression Examination}.
3185
3186 @cindex Printing expressions, on calling stack
3187 @cindex Restrictions for expression printing
3188 The same variable inspection commands work both in the IDL Shell and
3189 IDLWAVE buffers, and even for variables at higher levels of the calling
3190 stack. For instance, if you're stopped at a breakpoint in a routine,
3191 you can examine the values of variables and expressions inside its
3192 calling routine, and so on, all the way up through the calling stack.
3193 Simply step up the stack, and print variables as you see them
3194 (@pxref{Walking the Calling Stack}, for information on stepping back
3195 through the calling stack). The following restrictions apply for all
3196 levels except the current:
3197
3198 @itemize @bullet
3199 @item
3200 Array expressions must use the @samp{[ ]} index delimiters. Identifiers
3201 with a @samp{( )} will be interpreted as function calls.
3202 @item
3203 @cindex ROUTINE_NAMES, IDL procedure
3204 N.B.: printing values of expressions on higher levels of the calling
3205 stack uses the @emph{unsupported} IDL routine @code{ROUTINE_NAMES},
3206 which may or may not be available in future versions of IDL. Caveat
3207 Examinor.
3208 @end itemize
3209
3210 @defopt idlwave-shell-expression-face
3211 The face for @code{idlwave-shell-expression-overlay}.
3212 Allows you to choose the font, color and other properties for
3213 the expression printed by IDL.
3214 @end defopt
3215
3216 @defopt idlwave-shell-output-face
3217 The face for @code{idlwave-shell-output-overlay}.
3218 Allows to choose the font, color and other properties for the most
3219 recent output of IDL when examining an expression."
3220 @end defopt
3221
3222 @defopt idlwave-shell-separate-examine-output (@code{t})
3223 If non-@code{nil}, re-direct the output of examine commands to a special
3224 @file{*Examine*} buffer, instead of in the shell itself.
3225 @end defopt
3226
3227 @defopt idlwave-shell-max-print-length (200)
3228 The maximum number of leading array entries to print, when examining
3229 array expressions.
3230 @end defopt
3231
3232 @node Custom Expression Examination, , Examining Variables, The IDLWAVE Shell
3233 @section Custom Expression Examination
3234 @cindex Expressions, custom examination
3235 @cindex Custom expression examination
3236
3237 The variety of possible variable and expression examination commands is
3238 endless (just look, for instance, at the keyword list to
3239 @code{widget_info()}). Rather than attempt to include them all, IDLWAVE
3240 provides two easy methods to customize your own commands, with a special
3241 mouse examine command, and two macros for generating your own examine
3242 key and mouse bindings.
3243
3244 The most powerful and flexible mouse examine command of all is
3245 available on @kbd{C-S-Mouse-2}. Just as for all the other mouse
3246 examine commands, it permits click or drag expression selection, but
3247 instead of sending hard-coded commands to the shell, it pops-up a
3248 customizable selection list of examine functions to choose among,
3249 configured with the @code{idlwave-shell-examine-alist}
3250 variable@footnote{In Electric Debug Mode (@pxref{Electric Debug
3251 Mode}), the key @kbd{x} provides a single-character shortcut interface
3252 to the same examine functions for the expression at point or marked by
3253 the region.}. This variable is a list of key-value pairs (an
3254 @emph{alist} in Emacs parlance), where the key gives a name to be
3255 shown for the examine command, and the value is the command strings
3256 itself, in which the text @code{___} (three underscores) will be
3257 replaced by the selected expression before being sent to the shell.
3258 An example might be key @code{Structure Help} with value
3259 @code{help,___,/STRUCTURE}. In that case, you'd be prompted with
3260 @emph{Structure Help}, which might send something like
3261 @code{help,var,/STRUCTURE} to the shell for output.
3262 @code{idlwave-shell-examine-alist} comes configured by default with a
3263 large list of examine commands, but you can easily customize it to add
3264 your own.
3265
3266 In addition to configuring the functions available to the pop-up mouse
3267 command, you can easily create your own customized bindings to inspect
3268 expressions using the two convenience macros
3269 @code{idlwave-shell-examine} and @code{idlwave-shell-mouse-examine}.
3270 These create keyboard or mouse-based custom inspections of variables,
3271 sharing all the same properties of the built-in examine commands.
3272 Both functions take a single string argument sharing the syntax of the
3273 @code{idlwave-shell-examine-alist} values, e.g.:
3274
3275 @lisp
3276 (add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook
3277 (lambda ()
3278 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [s-down-mouse-2]
3279 (idlwave-shell-mouse-examine
3280 "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)"))
3281 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f9] (idlwave-shell-examine
3282 "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)"))
3283 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f10] (idlwave-shell-examine
3284 "print,size(___,/TNAME)"))
3285 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f11] (idlwave-shell-examine
3286 "help,___,/STRUCTURE"))))
3287 @end lisp
3288
3289 @noindent Now pressing @key{f9}, or middle-mouse dragging with the
3290 @key{SUPER} key depressed, will print the dimensions of the nearby or
3291 highlighted expression. Pressing @key{f10} will give the type string,
3292 and @key{f11} will show the contents of a nearby structure. As you can
3293 see, the possibilities are only marginally finite.
3294
3295 @defopt idlwave-shell-examine-alist
3296 An alist of examine commands in which the keys name the command and
3297 are displayed in the selection pop-up, and the values are custom IDL
3298 examine command strings to send, after all instances of @code{___}
3299 (three underscores) are replaced by the indicated expression.
3300 @end defopt
3301
3302 @node Acknowledgements, Sources of Routine Info, The IDLWAVE Shell, Top
3303 @chapter Acknowledgements
3304 @cindex Acknowledgements
3305 @cindex Maintainer, of IDLWAVE
3306 @cindex Authors, of IDLWAVE
3307 @cindex Contributors, to IDLWAVE
3308 @cindex Email address, of Maintainer
3309 @cindex Thanks
3310
3311 @noindent
3312 The main contributors to the IDLWAVE package have been:
3313
3314 @itemize @minus
3315 @item
3316 @uref{mailto:chase@@att.com, @b{Chris Chase}}, the original author.
3317 Chris wrote @file{idl.el} and @file{idl-shell.el} and maintained them
3318 for several years.
3319
3320 @item
3321 @uref{mailto:dominik@@astro.uva.nl, @b{Carsten Dominik}} was in charge
3322 of the package from version 3.0, during which time he overhauled almost
3323 everything, modernized IDLWAVE with many new features, and developed the
3324 manual.
3325
3326 @item
3327 @uref{mailto:jdsmith@@as.arizona.edu, @b{J.D. Smith}}, the current
3328 maintainer, as of version 4.10, helped shape object method completion
3329 and most new features introduced in versions 4.x, and introduced many
3330 new features for IDLWAVE versions 5.x and 6.x.
3331 @end itemize
3332
3333 @noindent
3334 The following people have also contributed to the development of IDLWAVE
3335 with patches, ideas, bug reports and suggestions.
3336
3337 @itemize @minus
3338 @item
3339 Ulrik Dickow <dickow__at__nbi.dk>
3340 @item
3341 Eric E. Dors <edors__at__lanl.gov>
3342 @item
3343 Stein Vidar H. Haugan <s.v.h.haugan__at__astro.uio.no>
3344 @item
3345 David Huenemoerder <dph__at__space.mit.edu>
3346 @item
3347 Kevin Ivory <Kevin.Ivory__at__linmpi.mpg.de>
3348 @item
3349 Dick Jackson <dick__at__d-jackson.com>
3350 @item
3351 Xuyong Liu <liu__at__stsci.edu>
3352 @item
3353 Simon Marshall <Simon.Marshall__at__esrin.esa.it>
3354 @item
3355 Craig Markwardt <craigm__at__cow.physics.wisc.edu>
3356 @item
3357 Laurent Mugnier <mugnier__at__onera.fr>
3358 @item
3359 Lubos Pochman <lubos__at__rsinc.com>
3360 @item
3361 Bob Portmann <portmann__at__al.noaa.gov>
3362 @item
3363 Patrick M. Ryan <pat__at__jaameri.gsfc.nasa.gov>
3364 @item
3365 Marty Ryba <ryba__at__ll.mit.edu>
3366 @item
3367 Phil Williams <williams__at__irc.chmcc.org>
3368 @item
3369 Phil Sterne <sterne__at__dublin.llnl.gov>
3370 @item
3371 Paul Sorenson <aardvark62__at__msn.com>
3372 @end itemize
3373
3374 Doug Dirks was instrumental in providing the crucial IDL XML catalog to
3375 support HTML help with IDL v6.2 and later, and Ali Bahrami provided
3376 scripts and documentation to interface with the IDL Assistant.
3377
3378 @noindent
3379 Thanks to everyone!
3380
3381 @node Sources of Routine Info, HTML Help Browser Tips, Acknowledgements, Top
3382 @appendix Sources of Routine Info
3383
3384 @cindex Sources of routine information
3385 In @ref{Routine Info} and @ref{Completion} we showed how IDLWAVE
3386 displays the calling sequence and keywords of routines, and completes
3387 routine names and keywords. For these features to work, IDLWAVE must
3388 know about the accessible routines.
3389
3390 @menu
3391 * Routine Definitions:: Where IDL Routines are defined.
3392 * Routine Information Sources:: So how does IDLWAVE know about...
3393 * Catalogs::
3394 * Load-Path Shadows:: Routines defined in several places
3395 * Documentation Scan:: Scanning the IDL Manuals
3396 @end menu
3397
3398 @node Routine Definitions, Routine Information Sources, Sources of Routine Info, Sources of Routine Info
3399 @appendixsec Routine Definitions
3400 @cindex Routine definitions
3401 @cindex IDL variable @code{!PATH}
3402 @cindex @code{!PATH}, IDL variable
3403 @cindex @code{CALL_EXTERNAL}, IDL routine
3404 @cindex @code{LINKIMAGE}, IDL routine
3405 @cindex External routines
3406
3407 @noindent Routines which can be used in an IDL program can be defined in
3408 several places:
3409
3410 @enumerate
3411 @item
3412 @emph{Builtin routines} are defined inside IDL itself. The source code
3413 of such routines is not available, but instead are learned about through
3414 the IDL documentation.
3415 @item
3416 Routines which are @emph{part of the current program}, are defined in a
3417 file explicitly compiled by the user. This file may or may not be
3418 located on the IDL search path.
3419 @item
3420 @emph{Library routines} are defined in files located on IDL's search
3421 path. When a library routine is called for the first time, IDL will
3422 find the source file and compile it dynamically. A special sub-category
3423 of library routines are the @emph{system routines} distributed with IDL,
3424 and usually available in the @file{lib} subdirectory of the IDL
3425 distribution.
3426 @item
3427 External routines written in other languages (like Fortran or C) can be
3428 called with @code{CALL_EXTERNAL}, linked into IDL via @code{LINKIMAGE},
3429 or included as dynamically loaded modules (DLMs). Currently IDLWAVE
3430 cannot provide routine info and completion for such external routines,
3431 except by querying the Shell for calling information (DLMs only).
3432 @end enumerate
3433
3434 @node Routine Information Sources, Catalogs, Routine Definitions, Sources of Routine Info
3435 @appendixsec Routine Information Sources
3436 @cindex Routine info sources
3437 @cindex Builtin list of routines
3438 @cindex Updating routine info
3439 @cindex Scanning buffers for routine info
3440 @cindex Buffers, scanning for routine info
3441 @cindex Shell, querying for routine info
3442
3443 @noindent To maintain the most comprehensive information about all IDL
3444 routines on a system, IDLWAVE collects data from many sources:
3445
3446 @enumerate
3447
3448 @item
3449 It has a @emph{builtin list} with information about the routines IDL
3450 ships with. IDLWAVE @value{VERSION} is distributed with a list of
3451 @value{NSYSROUTINES} routines and object methods, reflecting IDL version
3452 @value{IDLVERSION}. As of IDL v6.2, the routine info is distributed
3453 directly with IDL in the form of an XML catalog which IDLWAVE scans.
3454 Formerly, this list was created by scanning the IDL manuals to produce
3455 the file @file{idlw-rinfo.el}.
3456
3457 @item
3458 IDLWAVE @emph{scans} all its @emph{buffers} in the current Emacs session
3459 for routine definitions. This is done automatically when routine
3460 information or completion is first requested by the user. Each new
3461 buffer and each buffer saved after making changes is also scanned. The
3462 command @kbd{C-c C-i} (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}) can be used
3463 at any time to rescan all buffers.
3464
3465 @item
3466 If you have an IDLWAVE-Shell running in the Emacs session, IDLWAVE will
3467 @emph{query the shell} for compiled routines and their arguments. This
3468 happens automatically when routine information or completion is first
3469 requested by the user. Each time an Emacs buffer is compiled with
3470 @kbd{C-c C-d C-c}, the routine info for that file is queried. Though
3471 rarely necessary, the command @kbd{C-c C-i}
3472 (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}) can be used to explicitly update
3473 the shell routine data.
3474
3475 @item
3476 Many popular libraries are distributed with routine information already
3477 scanned into @emph{library catalogs} (@pxref{Library Catalogs}). These
3478 per-directory catalog files can also be built by the user with the
3479 supplied @file{idlwave_catalog} tool. They are automatically discovered
3480 by IDLWAVE.
3481
3482 @item
3483 IDLWAVE can scan selected directories of source files and store the
3484 result in a single @emph{user catalog} file which will be
3485 automatically loaded just like @file{idlw-rinfo.el}. @xref{User
3486 Catalog}, for information on how to scan files in this way.
3487 @end enumerate
3488
3489 Loading all the routine and catalog information can be a time consuming
3490 process, especially over slow networks. Depending on the system and
3491 network configuration it could take up to 30 seconds (though locally on
3492 fast systems is usually only a few seconds). In order to minimize the
3493 wait time upon your first completion or routine info command in a
3494 session, IDLWAVE uses Emacs idle time to do the initialization in six
3495 steps, yielding to user input in between. If this gets into your way,
3496 set the variable @code{idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after} to 0 (zero).
3497 The more routines documented in library and user catalogs, the slower
3498 the loading will be, so reducing this number can help alleviate any long
3499 load times.
3500
3501 @defopt idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after (@code{10})
3502 Seconds of idle time before routine info is automatically initialized.
3503 @end defopt
3504
3505 @defopt idlwave-scan-all-buffers-for-routine-info (@code{t})
3506 Non-@code{nil} means scan all buffers for IDL programs when updating
3507 info.
3508 @end defopt
3509
3510 @defopt idlwave-query-shell-for-routine-info (@code{t})
3511 Non-@code{nil} means query the shell for info about compiled routines.
3512 @end defopt
3513
3514 @defopt idlwave-auto-routine-info-updates
3515 Controls under what circumstances routine info is updated automatically.
3516 @end defopt
3517
3518 @html
3519 <A NAME="CATALOGS"></A>
3520 @end html
3521 @node Catalogs, Load-Path Shadows, Routine Information Sources, Sources of Routine Info
3522 @appendixsec Catalogs
3523 @cindex Catalogs
3524
3525 @emph{Catalogs} are files containing scanned information on individual
3526 routines, including arguments and keywords, calling sequence, file path,
3527 class and procedure vs. function type, etc. They represent a way of
3528 extending the internal built-in information available for IDL system
3529 routines (@pxref{Routine Info}) to other source collections.
3530
3531 Starting with version 5.0, there are two types of catalogs available
3532 with IDLWAVE. The traditional @emph{user catalog} and the newer
3533 @emph{library catalogs}. Although they can be used interchangeably, the
3534 library catalogs are more flexible, and preferred. There are few
3535 occasions when a user catalog might be preferred --- read below. Both
3536 types of catalogs can coexist without causing problems.
3537
3538 To facilitate the catalog systems, IDLWAVE stores information it gathers
3539 from the shell about the IDL search paths, and can write this
3540 information out automatically, or on-demand (menu @code{Debug->Save Path
3541 Info}). On systems with no shell from which to discover the path
3542 information (e.g. Windows), a library path must be specified in
3543 @code{idlwave-library-path} to allow library catalogs to be located, and
3544 to setup directories for user catalog scan (@pxref{User Catalog} for
3545 more on this variable). Note that, before the shell is running, IDLWAVE
3546 can only know about the IDL search path by consulting the file pointed
3547 to by @code{idlwave-path-file} (@file{~/.idlwave/idlpath.el}, by
3548 default). If @code{idlwave-auto-write-path} is enabled (which is the
3549 default), the paths are written out whenever the IDLWAVE shell is
3550 started.
3551
3552 @defopt idlwave-auto-write-path (@code{t})
3553 Write out information on the !PATH and !DIR paths from IDL automatically
3554 when they change and when the Shell is closed. These paths are needed
3555 to locate library catalogs.
3556 @end defopt
3557
3558 @defopt idlwave-library-path
3559 IDL library path for Windows and MacOS. Under Unix/MacOSX, will be
3560 obtained from the Shell when run.
3561 @end defopt
3562
3563 @defopt idlwave-system-directory
3564 The IDL system directory for Windows and MacOS. Also needed for
3565 locating HTML help and the IDL Assistant for IDL v6.2 and later. Under
3566 Unix/MacOSX, will be obtained from the Shell and recorded, if run.
3567 @end defopt
3568
3569 @defopt idlwave-config-directory (@file{~/.idlwave})
3570 Default path where IDLWAVE saves configuration information, a user
3571 catalog (if any), and a cached scan of the XML catalog (IDL v6.2 and
3572 later).
3573 @end defopt
3574
3575 @menu
3576 * Library Catalogs::
3577 * User Catalog::
3578 @end menu
3579
3580 @html
3581 <A NAME="LIBRARY_CATALOGS"></A>
3582 @end html
3583 @node Library Catalogs, User Catalog, Catalogs, Catalogs
3584 @appendixsubsec Library Catalogs
3585 @cindex @file{.idlwave_catalog}
3586 @cindex Library catalogs
3587 @cindex @code{idlwave_catalog}
3588
3589 Library catalogs consist of files named @file{.idlwave_catalog} stored
3590 in directories containing @code{.pro} routine files. They are
3591 discovered on the IDL search path and loaded automatically when routine
3592 information is read. Each catalog file documents the routines found in
3593 that directory --- one catalog per directory. Every catalog has a
3594 library name associated with it (e.g. @emph{AstroLib}). This name will
3595 be shown briefly when the catalog is found, and in the routine info of
3596 routines it documents.
3597
3598 Many popular libraries of routines are shipped with IDLWAVE catalog
3599 files by default, and so will be automatically discovered. Library
3600 catalogs are scanned externally to Emacs using a tool provided with
3601 IDLWAVE. Each catalog can be re-scanned independently of any other.
3602 Catalogs can easily be made available system-wide with a common source
3603 repository, providing uniform routine information, and lifting the
3604 burden of scanning from the user (who may not even know they're using a
3605 scanned catalog). Since all catalogs are independent, they can be
3606 re-scanned automatically to gather updates, e.g. in a @file{cron} job.
3607 Scanning is much faster than with the built-in user catalog method. One
3608 minor disadvantage: the entire IDL search path is scanned for catalog
3609 files every time IDLWAVE starts up, which might be slow if accessing IDL
3610 routines over a slow network.
3611
3612 A Perl tool to create library catalogs is distributed with IDLWAVE:
3613 @code{idlwave_catalog}. It can be called quite simply:
3614 @example
3615 idlwave_catalog MyLib
3616 @end example
3617
3618 @noindent This will scan all directories recursively beneath the current and
3619 populate them with @file{.idlwave_catalog} files, tagging the routines
3620 found there with the name library ``MyLib''. The full usage
3621 information:
3622
3623 @example
3624 Usage: idlwave_catalog [-l] [-v] [-d] [-s] [-f] [-h] libname
3625 libname - Unique name of the catalog (4 or more alphanumeric
3626 characters).
3627 -l - Scan local directory only, otherwise recursively
3628 catalog all directories at or beneath this one.
3629 -v - Print verbose information.
3630 -d - Instead of scanning, delete all .idlwave_catalog files
3631 here or below.
3632 -s - Be silent.
3633 -f - Force overwriting any catalogs found with a different
3634 library name.
3635 -h - Print this usage.
3636 @end example
3637
3638 To re-load the library catalogs on the IDL path, force a system routine
3639 info update using a single prefix to @code{idlwave-update-routine-info}:
3640 @kbd{C-u C-c C-i}.
3641
3642 @defopt idlwave-use-library-catalogs (@code{t})
3643 Whether to search for and load library catalogs. Disable if load
3644 performance is a problem and/or the catalogs are not needed.
3645 @end defopt
3646
3647 @node User Catalog, , Library Catalogs, Catalogs
3648 @appendixsubsec User Catalog
3649 @cindex User catalog
3650 @cindex IDL library routine info
3651 @cindex Windows
3652 @cindex MacOS
3653 @cindex IDL variable @code{!DIR}
3654 @cindex @code{!DIR}, IDL variable
3655
3656 The user catalog is the old routine catalog system. It is produced
3657 within Emacs, and stored in a single file in the user's home directory
3658 (@file{.idlwave/idlusercat.el} by default). Although library catalogs
3659 are more flexible, there may be reasons to prefer a user catalog
3660 instead, including:
3661
3662 @itemize @bullet
3663 @item The scan is internal to Emacs, so you don't need a working Perl
3664 installation, as you do for library catalogs.
3665 @item Can be used to scan directories for which the user has no write
3666 privileges.
3667 @item Easy widget-based path selection.
3668 @end itemize
3669
3670 However, no routine info is available in the user catalog by default;
3671 the user must actively complete a scan. In addition, this type of
3672 catalog is all or nothing: if a single routine changes, the entire
3673 catalog must be rescanned to update it. Creating the user catalog is
3674 also much slower than scanning library catalogs.
3675
3676 You can scan any of the directories on the currently known path. Under
3677 Windows and MacOS (not OSX), you need to specify the IDL search path in
3678 the variable @code{idlwave-library-path}, and the location of the IDL
3679 directory (the value of the @code{!DIR} system variable) in the variable
3680 @code{idlwave-system-directory}, like this@footnote{The initial @samp{+}
3681 leads to recursive expansion of the path, just like in IDL}:
3682
3683 @lisp
3684 (setq idlwave-library-path
3685 '("+c:/RSI/IDL56/lib/" "+c:/user/me/idllibs"))
3686 (setq idlwave-system-directory "c:/RSI/IDL56/")
3687 @end lisp
3688
3689 @noindent Under GNU/Linux and UNIX, these values will be automatically
3690 gathered from the IDLWAVE shell, if run.
3691
3692 The command @kbd{M-x idlwave-create-user-catalog-file} (or the menu item
3693 @samp{IDLWAVE->Routine Info->Select Catalog Directories}) can then be
3694 used to create a user catalog. It brings up a widget in which you can
3695 select some or all directories on the search path. Directories which
3696 already contain a library catalog are marked with @samp{[LIB]}, and need
3697 not be scanned (although there is no harm if you do so, other than the
3698 additional memory used for the duplication).
3699
3700 After selecting directories, click on the @w{@samp{[Scan & Save]}}
3701 button in the widget to scan all files in the selected directories and
3702 write out the resulting routine information. In order to update the
3703 library information using the directory selection, call the command
3704 @code{idlwave-update-routine-info} with a double prefix argument:
3705 @w{@kbd{C-u C-u C-c C-i}}. This will rescan files in the previously
3706 selected directories, write an updated version of the user catalog file
3707 and rebuild IDLWAVE's internal lists. If you give three prefix
3708 arguments @w{@kbd{C-u C-u C-u C-c C-i}}, updating will be done with a
3709 background job@footnote{Unix systems only, I think.}. You can continue
3710 to work, and the library catalog will be re-read when it is ready. If
3711 you find you need to update the user catalog often, you should consider
3712 building a library catalog for your routines instead (@pxref{Library
3713 Catalogs}).
3714
3715 @defopt idlwave-special-lib-alist
3716 Alist of regular expressions matching special library directories for
3717 labeling in routine-info display.
3718 @end defopt
3719
3720 @node Load-Path Shadows, Documentation Scan, Catalogs, Sources of Routine Info
3721 @appendixsec Load-Path Shadows
3722 @cindex Load-path shadows
3723 @cindex Shadows, load-path
3724 @cindex Duplicate routines
3725 @cindex Multiply defined routines
3726 @cindex Routine definitions, multiple
3727 @cindex Application, testing for shadowing
3728 @cindex Buffer, testing for shadowing
3729
3730 IDLWAVE can compile a list of routines which are (re-)defined in more
3731 than one file. Since one definition will hide (shadow) the others
3732 depending on which file is compiled first, such multiple definitions are
3733 called "load-path shadows". IDLWAVE has several routines to scan for
3734 load path shadows. The output is placed into the special buffer
3735 @file{*Shadows*}. The format of the output is identical to the source
3736 section of the routine info buffer (@pxref{Routine Info}). The
3737 different definitions of a routine are ordered by @emph{likelihood of
3738 use}. So the first entry will be most likely the one you'll get if an
3739 unsuspecting command uses that routine. Before listing shadows, you
3740 should make sure that routine info is up-to-date by pressing @kbd{C-c
3741 C-i}. Here are the different routines (also available in the Menu
3742 @samp{IDLWAVE->Routine Info}):
3743
3744 @table @asis
3745 @item @kbd{M-x idlwave-list-buffer-load-path-shadows}
3746 This commands checks the names of all routines defined in the current
3747 buffer for shadowing conflicts with other routines accessible to
3748 IDLWAVE. The command also has a key binding: @kbd{C-c C-b}
3749 @item @kbd{M-x idlwave-list-shell-load-path-shadows}.
3750 Checks all routines compiled under the shell for shadowing. This is
3751 very useful when you have written a complete application. Just compile
3752 the application, use @code{RESOLVE_ALL} to compile any routines used by
3753 your code, update the routine info inside IDLWAVE with @kbd{C-c C-i} and
3754 then check for shadowing.
3755 @item @kbd{M-x idlwave-list-all-load-path-shadows}
3756 This command checks all routines accessible to IDLWAVE for conflicts.
3757 @end table
3758
3759 For these commands to work fully you need to scan the entire load path
3760 in either a user or library catalog. Also, IDLWAVE should be able to
3761 distinguish between the system library files (normally installed in
3762 @file{/usr/local/rsi/idl/lib}) and any site specific or user specific
3763 files. Therefore, such local files should not be installed inside the
3764 @file{lib} directory of the IDL directory. This is also advisable for
3765 many other reasons.
3766
3767 @cindex Windows
3768 @cindex MacOS
3769 @cindex IDL variable @code{!DIR}
3770 @cindex @code{!DIR}, IDL variable
3771 Users of Windows and MacOS (not X) also must set the variable
3772 @code{idlwave-system-directory} to the value of the @code{!DIR} system
3773 variable in IDL. IDLWAVE appends @file{lib} to the value of this
3774 variable and assumes that all files found on that path are system
3775 routines.
3776
3777 Another way to find out if a specific routine has multiple definitions
3778 on the load path is routine info display (@pxref{Routine Info}).
3779
3780 @node Documentation Scan, , Load-Path Shadows, Sources of Routine Info
3781 @appendixsec Documentation Scan
3782 @cindex @file{get_html_rinfo}
3783 @cindex @file{idlw-rinfo.el}
3784 @cindex Scanning the documentation
3785 @cindex Perl program, to create @file{idlw-rinfo.el}
3786
3787 @strong{Starting with version 6.2, IDL is distributed directly with HTML
3788 online help, and an XML-based catalog of routine information}. This
3789 makes scanning the manuals with the tool @file{get_html_rinfo}, and the
3790 @file{idlw-rinfo.el} file it produced, as described here, entirely
3791 unnecessary. The information is left here for users wishing to produce
3792 a catalog of older IDL versions' help.
3793
3794
3795 IDLWAVE derives its knowledge about system routines from the IDL
3796 manuals. The file @file{idlw-rinfo.el} contains the routine information
3797 for the IDL system routines, and links to relevant sections of the HTML
3798 documentation. The Online Help feature of IDLWAVE requires HTML
3799 versions of the IDL manuals to be available; the HTML documentation is
3800 not distributed with IDLWAVE by default, but must be downloaded
3801 separately.
3802
3803 The HTML files and related images can be produced from the
3804 @file{idl.chm} HTMLHelp file distributed with IDL using the free
3805 Microsoft HTML Help Workshop. If you are lucky, the maintainer of
3806 IDLWAVE will always have access to the newest version of IDL and provide
3807 updates. The IDLWAVE distribution also contains the Perl program
3808 @file{get_html_rinfo} which constructs the @file{idlw-rinfo.el} file by
3809 scanning the HTML documents produced from the IDL documentation.
3810 Instructions on how to use @file{get_html_rinfo} are in the program
3811 itself.
3812
3813 @node HTML Help Browser Tips, Configuration Examples, Sources of Routine Info, Top
3814 @appendix HTML Help Browser Tips
3815 @cindex Browser Tips
3816
3817 There are a wide variety of possible browsers to use for displaying
3818 the online HTML help available with IDLWAVE (starting with version
3819 5.0). Since IDL v6.2, a single cross-platform HTML help browser, the
3820 @emph{IDL Assistant} is distributed with IDL. If this help browser is
3821 available, it is the preferred choice, and the default. The variable
3822 @code{idlwave-help-use-assistant}, enabled by default, controls
3823 whether this help browser is used. If you use the IDL Assistant, the
3824 tips here are not relevant.
3825
3826 Since IDLWAVE runs on a many different system types, a single browser
3827 configuration is not possible, but choices abound. On many systems,
3828 the default browser configured in @code{browse-url-browser-function},
3829 and hence inherited by default by
3830 @code{idlwave-help-browser-function}, is Netscape. Unfortunately, the
3831 HTML manuals decompiled from the original source contain formatting
3832 structures which Netscape 4.x does not handle well, though they are
3833 still readable. A much better choice is Mozilla, or one of the
3834 Mozilla-derived browsers such as
3835 @uref{http://galeon.sourceforge.net/,Galeon} (GNU/Linux),
3836 @uref{http://www.mozilla.org/projects/camino/,Camino} (MacOSX), or
3837 @uref{http://www.mozilla.org/projects/firebird/,Firebird} (all
3838 platforms). Newer versions of Emacs provide a browser-function choice
3839 @code{browse-url-gnome-moz} which uses the Gnome-configured browser.
3840
3841 Note that the HTML files decompiled from the help sources contain
3842 specific references to the @samp{Symbol} font, which by default is not
3843 permitted in normal encodings (it's invalid, technically). Though it
3844 only impacts a few symbols, you can trick Mozilla-based browsers into
3845 recognizing @samp{Symbol} by following the directions
3846 @uref{http://hutchinson.belmont.ma.us/tth/Xfonts.html, here}. With
3847 this fix in place, HTML help pages look almost identical to their PDF
3848 equivalents (yet can be bookmarked, browsed as history, searched,
3849 etc.).
3850
3851 @noindent Individual platform recommendations:
3852
3853 @itemize @bullet
3854 @item Unix/MacOSX: The @uref{http://www.w3m.org,@code{w3m}} browser
3855 and its associated
3856 @uref{http://emacs-w3m.namazu.org/,@code{emacs-w3m}} emacs mode
3857 provide in-buffer browsing with image display, and excellent speed and
3858 formatting. Both the Emacs mode and the browser itself must be
3859 downloaded separately. To use this browser, include
3860
3861 @lisp
3862 (setq idlwave-help-browser-function 'w3m-browse-url)
3863 @end lisp
3864
3865 in your @file{.emacs}. Setting a few other nice @code{w3m} options
3866 cuts down on screen clutter:
3867
3868 @lisp
3869 (setq w3m-use-tab nil
3870 w3m-use-header-line nil
3871 w3m-use-toolbar nil)
3872 @end lisp
3873
3874 If you use a dedicated frame for help, you might want to add the
3875 following, to get consistent behavior with the @kbd{q} key:
3876
3877 @lisp
3878 ;; Close my help window when w3m closes.
3879 (defadvice w3m-close-window (after idlwave-close activate)
3880 (if (boundp 'idlwave-help-frame)
3881 (idlwave-help-quit)))
3882 @end lisp
3883
3884 Note that you can open the file in an external browser from within
3885 @code{w3m} using @kbd{M}.
3886 @end itemize
3887
3888 @node Configuration Examples, Windows and MacOS, HTML Help Browser Tips, Top
3889 @appendix Configuration Examples
3890 @cindex Configuration examples
3891 @cindex Example configuration
3892 @cindex @file{.emacs}
3893 @cindex Default settings, of options
3894 @cindex Interview, with the maintainer
3895
3896 @noindent
3897 @b{Question:} You have all these complicated configuration options in
3898 your package, but which ones do @emph{you} as the maintainer actually
3899 set in your own configuration?
3900
3901 @noindent
3902 @b{Answer:} Not many, beyond custom key bindings. I set most defaults
3903 the way that seems best. However, the default settings do not turn on
3904 features which:
3905
3906 @itemize @minus
3907 @item
3908 are not self-evident (i.e. too magic) when used by an unsuspecting user.
3909 @item
3910 are too intrusive.
3911 @item
3912 will not work properly on all Emacs installations.
3913 @item
3914 break with widely used standards.
3915 @item
3916 use function or other non-standard keys.
3917 @item
3918 are purely personal customizations, like additional key bindings, and
3919 library names.
3920 @end itemize
3921
3922 @noindent To see what I mean, here is the @emph{entire} configuration
3923 the old maintainer had in his @file{.emacs}:
3924
3925 @lisp
3926 (setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(control shift)
3927 idlwave-store-inquired-class t
3928 idlwave-shell-automatic-start t
3929 idlwave-main-block-indent 2
3930 idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after 2
3931 idlwave-help-dir "~/lib/emacs/idlwave"
3932 idlwave-special-lib-alist '(("/idl-astro/" . "AstroLib")
3933 ("/jhuapl/" . "JHUAPL-Lib")
3934 ("/dominik/lib/idl/" . "MyLib")))
3935 @end lisp
3936
3937 However, if you are an Emacs power-user and want IDLWAVE to work
3938 completely differently, you can change almost every aspect of it. Here
3939 is an example of a much more extensive configuration of IDLWAVE. The
3940 user is King!
3941
3942 @example
3943 ;;; Settings for IDLWAVE mode
3944
3945 (setq idlwave-block-indent 3) ; Indentation settings
3946 (setq idlwave-main-block-indent 3)
3947 (setq idlwave-end-offset -3)
3948 (setq idlwave-continuation-indent 1)
3949 (setq idlwave-begin-line-comment "^;[^;]") ; Leave ";" but not ";;"
3950 ; anchored at start of line.
3951 (setq idlwave-surround-by-blank t) ; Turn on padding ops =,<,>
3952 (setq idlwave-pad-keyword nil) ; Remove spaces for keyword '='
3953 (setq idlwave-expand-generic-end t) ; convert END to ENDIF etc...
3954 (setq idlwave-reserved-word-upcase t) ; Make reserved words upper case
3955 ; (with abbrevs only)
3956 (setq idlwave-abbrev-change-case nil) ; Don't force case of expansions
3957 (setq idlwave-hang-indent-regexp ": ") ; Change from "- " for auto-fill
3958 (setq idlwave-show-block nil) ; Turn off blinking to begin
3959 (setq idlwave-abbrev-move t) ; Allow abbrevs to move point
3960 (setq idlwave-query-class '((method-default . nil) ; No query for method
3961 (keyword-default . nil); or keyword completion
3962 ("INIT" . t) ; except for these
3963 ("CLEANUP" . t)
3964 ("SETPROPERTY" .t)
3965 ("GETPROPERTY" .t)))
3966
3967 ;; Using w3m for help (must install w3m and emacs-w3m)
3968 (autoload 'w3m-browse-url "w3m" "Interface for w3m on Emacs." t)
3969 (setq idlwave-help-browser-function 'w3m-browse-url
3970 w3m-use-tab nil ; no tabs, location line, or toolbar
3971 w3m-use-header-line nil
3972 w3m-use-toolbar nil)
3973
3974 ;; Close my help window or frame when w3m closes with `q'
3975 (defadvice w3m-close-window (after idlwave-close activate)
3976 (if (boundp 'idlwave-help-frame)
3977 (idlwave-help-quit)))
3978
3979 ;; Some setting can only be done from a mode hook. Here is an example:
3980 (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook
3981 (lambda ()
3982 (setq case-fold-search nil) ; Make searches case sensitive
3983 ;; Run other functions here
3984 (font-lock-mode 1) ; Turn on font-lock mode
3985 (idlwave-auto-fill-mode 0) ; Turn off auto filling
3986 (setq idlwave-help-browser-function 'browse-url-w3)
3987
3988 ;; Pad with 1 space (if -n is used then make the
3989 ;; padding a minimum of n spaces.) The defaults use -1
3990 ;; instead of 1.
3991 (idlwave-action-and-binding "=" '(idlwave-expand-equal 1 1))
3992 (idlwave-action-and-binding "<" '(idlwave-surround 1 1))
3993 (idlwave-action-and-binding ">" '(idlwave-surround 1 1 '(?-)))
3994 (idlwave-action-and-binding "&" '(idlwave-surround 1 1))
3995
3996 ;; Only pad after comma and with exactly 1 space
3997 (idlwave-action-and-binding "," '(idlwave-surround nil 1))
3998 (idlwave-action-and-binding "&" '(idlwave-surround 1 1))
3999
4000 ;; Pad only after `->', remove any space before the arrow
4001 (idlwave-action-and-binding "->" '(idlwave-surround 0 -1 nil 2))
4002
4003 ;; Set some personal bindings
4004 ;; (In this case, makes `,' have the normal self-insert behavior.)
4005 (local-set-key "," 'self-insert-command)
4006 (local-set-key [f5] 'idlwave-shell-break-here)
4007 (local-set-key [f6] 'idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp)
4008
4009 ;; Create a newline, indenting the original and new line.
4010 ;; A similar function that does _not_ reindent the original
4011 ;; line is on "\C-j" (The default for emacs programming modes).
4012 (local-set-key "\n" 'idlwave-newline)
4013 ;; (local-set-key "\C-j" 'idlwave-newline) ; My preference.
4014
4015 ;; Some personal abbreviations
4016 (define-abbrev idlwave-mode-abbrev-table
4017 (concat idlwave-abbrev-start-char "wb") "widget_base()"
4018 (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 1))
4019 (define-abbrev idlwave-mode-abbrev-table
4020 (concat idlwave-abbrev-start-char "on") "obj_new()"
4021 (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 1))
4022 ))
4023
4024 ;;; Settings for IDLWAVE SHELL mode
4025
4026 (setq idlwave-shell-overlay-arrow "=>") ; default is ">"
4027 (setq idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame t) ; Make a dedicated frame
4028 (setq idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern "^WAVE> ") ; default is "^IDL> "
4029 (setq idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name "wave")
4030 (setq idlwave-shell-process-name "wave")
4031 (setq idlwave-shell-use-toolbar nil) ; No toolbar
4032
4033 ;; Most shell interaction settings can be done from the shell-mode-hook.
4034 (add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook
4035 (lambda ()
4036 ;; Set up some custom key and mouse examine commands
4037 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [s-down-mouse-2]
4038 (idlwave-shell-mouse-examine
4039 "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)"))
4040 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f9] (idlwave-shell-examine
4041 "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)"))
4042 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f10] (idlwave-shell-examine
4043 "print,size(___,/TNAME)"))
4044 (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f11] (idlwave-shell-examine
4045 "help,___,/STRUCTURE"))))
4046 @end example
4047
4048 @html
4049 <A NAME="WIN_MAC"></A>
4050 @end html
4051 @node Windows and MacOS, Troubleshooting, Configuration Examples, Top
4052 @appendix Windows and MacOS
4053 @cindex Windows
4054 @cindex MacOS
4055 @cindex MacOSX
4056
4057 IDLWAVE was developed on a UNIX system. However, thanks to the
4058 portability of Emacs, much of IDLWAVE does also work under different
4059 operating systems like Windows (with NTEmacs or NTXEmacs) or MacOS.
4060
4061 The only real problem is that there is no command-line version of IDL
4062 for Windows or MacOS(<=9) with which IDLWAVE can interact. As a
4063 result, the IDLWAVE Shell does not work and you have to rely on IDLDE
4064 to run and debug your programs. However, editing IDL source files
4065 with Emacs/IDLWAVE works with all bells and whistles, including
4066 routine info, completion and fast online help. Only a small amount of
4067 additional information must be specified in your @file{.emacs} file:
4068 the path names which, on a UNIX system, are automatically gathered by
4069 talking to the IDL program.
4070
4071 Here is an example of the additional configuration needed for a Windows
4072 system. I am assuming that IDLWAVE has been installed in
4073 @w{@samp{C:\Program Files\IDLWAVE}} and that IDL is installed in
4074 @w{@samp{C:\RSI\IDL63}}.
4075
4076 @lisp
4077 ;; location of the lisp files (only needed if IDLWAVE is not part of
4078 ;; your default X/Emacs installation)
4079 (setq load-path (cons "c:/program files/IDLWAVE" load-path))
4080
4081 ;; The location of the IDL library directories, both standard, and your own.
4082 ;; note that the initial "+" expands the path recursively
4083 (setq idlwave-library-path
4084 '("+c:/RSI/IDL63/lib/" "+c:/path/to/my/idllibs" ))
4085
4086 ;; location of the IDL system directory (try "print,!DIR")
4087 (setq idlwave-system-directory "c:/RSI/IDL63/")
4088
4089 @end lisp
4090
4091 @noindent Furthermore, Windows sometimes tries to outsmart you --- make
4092 sure you check the following things:
4093
4094 @itemize @bullet
4095 @item When you download the IDLWAVE distribution, make sure you save the
4096 file under the names @file{idlwave.tar.gz}.
4097 @item M-TAB switches among running programs --- use Esc-TAB
4098 instead.
4099 @item Other issues as yet unnamed...
4100 @end itemize
4101
4102 Windows users who'd like to make use of IDLWAVE's context-aware HTML
4103 help can skip the browser and use the HTMLHelp functionality directly.
4104 @xref{Help with HTML Documentation}.
4105
4106 @html
4107 <A NAME="TROUBLE"></A>
4108 @end html
4109 @node Troubleshooting, GNU Free Documentation License, Windows and MacOS, Top
4110 @appendix Troubleshooting
4111 @cindex Troubleshooting
4112
4113 Although IDLWAVE usually installs and works without difficulty, a few
4114 common problems and their solutions are documented below.
4115
4116 @enumerate
4117
4118 @item @strong{Whenever an IDL error occurs or a breakpoint is hit, I get
4119 errors or strange behavior when I try to type anything into some of my
4120 IDLWAVE buffers.}
4121
4122 This is a @emph{feature}, not an error. You're in @emph{Electric
4123 Debug Mode} (@pxref{Electric Debug Mode}). You should see
4124 @code{*Debugging*} in the mode-line. The buffer is read-only and all
4125 debugging and examination commands are available as single keystrokes;
4126 @kbd{C-?} lists these shortcuts. Use @kbd{q} to quit the mode, and
4127 customize the variable @code{idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug}
4128 if you prefer not to enter electric debug on breakpoints@dots{} but
4129 you really should try it before you disable it! You can also
4130 customize this variable to enter debug mode when errors are
4131 encountered.
4132
4133 @item @strong{I get errors like @samp{Searching for program: no such
4134 file or directory, idl} when attempting to start the IDL shell.}
4135
4136 IDLWAVE needs to know where IDL is in order to run it as a process.
4137 By default, it attempts to invoke it simply as @samp{idl}, which
4138 presumes such an executable is on your search path. You need to
4139 ensure @samp{idl} is on your @samp{$PATH}, or specify the full
4140 pathname to the idl program with the variable
4141 @code{idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name}. Note that you may need to
4142 set your shell search path in two places when running Emacs as an Aqua
4143 application with MacOSX; see the next topic.
4144
4145 @item @strong{IDLWAVE is disregarding my @samp{IDL_PATH} which I set
4146 under MacOSX}
4147
4148 If you run Emacs directly as an Aqua application, rather than from the
4149 console shell, the environment is set not from your usual shell
4150 configuration files (e.g. @file{.cshrc}), but from the file
4151 @file{~/.MacOSX/environment.plist}. Either include your path settings
4152 there, or start Emacs and IDLWAVE from the shell.
4153
4154 @item @strong{I get errors like @samp{Symbol's function is void:
4155 overlayp}}
4156
4157 You don't have the @samp{fsf-compat} package installed, which IDLWAVE
4158 needs to run under XEmacs. Install it, or find an XEmacs distribution
4159 which includes it by default.
4160
4161 @item @strong{I'm getting errors like @samp{Symbol's value as variable is void:
4162 cl-builtin-gethash} on completion or routine info.}
4163
4164 This error arises if you upgraded Emacs from 20.x to 21.x without
4165 re-installing IDLWAVE. Old Emacs and new Emacs are not byte-compatible
4166 in compiled lisp files. Presumably, you kept the original .elc files in
4167 place, and this is the source of the error. If you recompile (or just
4168 "make; make install") from source, it should resolve this problem.
4169 Another option is to recompile the @file{idlw*.el} files by hand using
4170 @kbd{M-x byte-compile-file}.
4171
4172 @item @strong{@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} doesn't complete words, it switches
4173 windows on my desktop.}
4174
4175 Your system is trapping @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} and using it for its own
4176 nefarious purposes: Emacs never sees the keystrokes. On many Unix
4177 systems, you can reconfigure your window manager to use another key
4178 sequence for switching among windows. Another option is to use the
4179 equivalent sequence @kbd{@key{ESC}-@key{TAB}}.
4180
4181 @item @strong{When stopping at breakpoints or errors, IDLWAVE does not
4182 seem to highlight the relevant line in the source.}
4183
4184 IDLWAVE scans for error and halt messages and highlights the stop
4185 location in the correct file. However, if you've changed the system
4186 variable @samp{!ERROR_STATE.MSG_PREFIX}, it is unable to parse these
4187 message correctly. Don't do that.
4188
4189 @item @strong{IDLWAVE doesn't work correctly when using ENVI.}
4190
4191 Though IDLWAVE was not written with ENVI in mind, it works just fine
4192 with it, as long as you update the prompt it's looking for (@samp{IDL>
4193 } by default). You can do this with the variable
4194 @code{idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern} (@pxref{Starting the Shell}), e.g.,
4195 in your @file{.emacs}:
4196
4197 @lisp
4198 (setq idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern "^\r? ?\\(ENVI\\|IDL\\)> ")
4199 @end lisp
4200
4201 @item @strong{Attempts to set breakpoints fail: no breakpoint is
4202 indicated in the IDLWAVE buffer.}
4203
4204 IDL changed its breakpoint reporting format starting with IDLv5.5. The
4205 first version of IDLWAVE to support the new format is IDLWAVE v4.10. If
4206 you have an older version and are using IDL >v5.5, you need to upgrade,
4207 and/or make sure your recent version of IDLWAVE is being found on the
4208 Emacs load-path (see the next entry). You can list the version being
4209 used with @kbd{C-h v idlwave-mode-version @key{RET}}.
4210
4211 @item @strong{I installed a new version of IDLWAVE, but the old
4212 version is still being used} or @strong{IDLWAVE works, but when I
4213 tried to install the optional modules @file{idlw-roprompt.el} or
4214 @file{idlw-complete-structtag}, I get errors like @samp{Cannot open
4215 load file}}.
4216
4217 The problem is that your Emacs is not finding the version of IDLWAVE you
4218 installed. Many Emacsen come with an older bundled copy of IDLWAVE
4219 (e.g. v4.7 for Emacs 21.x), which is likely what's being used instead.
4220 You need to make sure your Emacs @emph{load-path} contains the directory
4221 where IDLWAVE is installed (@file{/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp}, by
4222 default), @emph{before} Emacs' default search directories. You can
4223 accomplish this by putting the following in your @file{.emacs}:
4224
4225 @lisp
4226 (setq load-path (cons "/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp" load-path))
4227 @end lisp
4228
4229 @noindent You can check on your load-path value using @kbd{C-h v
4230 load-path @key{RET}}, and @kbd{C-h m} in an IDLWAVE buffer should show
4231 you the version Emacs is using.
4232
4233 @item @strong{IDLWAVE is screwing up the formatting of my @file{.idl} files.}
4234
4235 Actually, this isn't IDLWAVE at all, but @samp{idl-mode}, an unrelated
4236 programming mode for CORBA's Interface Definition Language (you should
4237 see @samp{(IDL)}, not @samp{(IDLWAVE)} in the mode-line). One
4238 solution: don't name your file @file{.idl}, but rather @file{.pro}.
4239 Another solution: make sure @file{.idl} files load IDLWAVE instead of
4240 @samp{idl-mode} by adding the following to your @file{.emacs}:
4241
4242 @lisp
4243 (setcdr (rassoc 'idl-mode auto-mode-alist) 'idlwave-mode)
4244 @end lisp
4245
4246 @item @strong{The routine info for my local routines is out of date!}
4247
4248 IDLWAVE collects routine info from various locations (@pxref{Routine
4249 Information Sources}). Routines in files visited in a buffer or
4250 compiled in the shell should be up to date. For other routines, the
4251 information is only as current as the most recent scan. If you have a
4252 rapidly changing set of routines, and you'd like the latest routine
4253 information to be available for it, one powerful technique is to make
4254 use of the library catalog tool, @samp{idlwave_catalog}. Simply add a
4255 line to your @samp{cron} file (@samp{crontab -e} will let you edit this
4256 on some systems), like this
4257
4258 @example
4259 45 3 * * 1-5 (cd /path/to/myidllib; /path/to/idlwave_catalog MyLib)
4260 @end example
4261
4262 @noindent where @samp{MyLib} is the name of your library. This will
4263 rescan all @file{.pro} files at or below @file{/path/to/myidllib} every
4264 week night at 3:45am. You can even scan site-wide libraries with this
4265 method, and the most recent information will be available to all users.
4266 Since the scanning is very fast, there is very little impact.
4267
4268 @item @strong{All the Greek-font characters in the HTML help are
4269 displayed as Latin characters!}
4270
4271 Unfortunately, the HTMLHelp files RSI provides attempt to switch to
4272 @samp{Symbol} font to display Greek characters, which is not really an
4273 permitted method for doing this in HTML. There is a "workaround" for
4274 some browsers: @xref{HTML Help Browser Tips}.
4275
4276 @item @strong{In the shell, my long commands are truncated at 256 characters!}
4277
4278 This actually happens when running IDL in an XTerm as well. There are
4279 a couple of workarounds: @code{define_key,/control,'^d'} (e.g. in
4280 your @file{$IDL_STARTUP} file) will disable the @samp{EOF} character
4281 and give you a 512 character limit. You won't be able to use
4282 @key{C-d} to quit the shell, however. Another possibility is
4283 @code{!EDIT_INPUT=0}, which gives you an @emph{infinite} limit (OK, a
4284 memory-bounded limit), but disables the processing of background
4285 widget events (those with @code{/NO_BLOCK} passed to @code{XManager}).
4286
4287 @item @strong{When I invoke IDL HTML help on a routine, the page which
4288 is loaded is one page off, e.g. for @code{CONVERT_COORD}, I get
4289 @code{CONTOUR}.}
4290
4291 You have a mismatch between your help index and the HTML help package
4292 you downloaded. You need to ensure you download a ``downgrade kit'' if
4293 you are using anything older than the latest HTML help package. A new
4294 help package appears with each IDL release (assuming the documentation
4295 is updated).
4296 Starting with IDL 6.2, the HTML help and its catalog are
4297 distributed with IDL, and so should never be inconsistent.
4298
4299 @item @strong{I get errors such as @samp{void-variable
4300 browse-url-browser-function} or similar when attempting to load IDLWAVE
4301 under XEmacs.}
4302
4303 You don't have the @samp{browse-url} (or other required) XEmacs package.
4304 Unlike GNU Emacs, XEmacs distributes many packages separately from the
4305 main program. IDLWAVE is actually among these, but is not always the
4306 most up to date. When installing IDLWAVE as an XEmacs package, it
4307 should prompt you for required additional packages. When installing it
4308 from source, it won't and you'll get this error. The easiest solution
4309 is to install all the packages when you install XEmacs (the so-called
4310 @samp{sumo} bundle). The minimum set of XEmacs packages required by
4311 IDLWAVE is @samp{fsf-compat, xemacs-base, mail-lib}.
4312
4313 @end enumerate
4314
4315 @node GNU Free Documentation License, Index, Troubleshooting, Top
4316 @appendix GNU Free Documentation License
4317 @include doclicense.texi
4318
4319 @node Index, , GNU Free Documentation License, Top
4320 @unnumbered Index
4321 @printindex cp
4322
4323 @bye
4324
4325 @ignore
4326 arch-tag: f1d73958-1423-4127-b8aa-f7b953d64492
4327 @end ignore