;;; mailabbrev.el --- abbrev-expansion of mail aliases.
-;;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+;; Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 87, 92, 93, 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com>
;; Maintainer: Jamie Zawinski <jwz@lucid.com>
;; Created: 19 Oct 90
;; Keywords: mail
-;;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
+;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
-;;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-;;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-;;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
-;;; any later version.
+;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
+;; any later version.
-;;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-;;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-;;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-;;; GNU General Public License for more details.
+;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+;; GNU General Public License for more details.
-;;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-;;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
-;;; the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
+;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
+;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
+;; Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
;;; Commentary:
-;;; This file ensures that, when the point is in a To:, CC:, BCC:, or From:
-;;; field, word-abbrevs are defined for each of your mail aliases. These
-;;; aliases will be defined from your .mailrc file (or the file specified by
-;;; the MAILRC environment variable) if it exists. Your mail aliases will
-;;; expand any time you type a word-delimiter at the end of an abbreviation.
-;;;
-;;; What you see is what you get: no abbreviations will be expanded after you
-;;; have sent the mail, unlike the old system. This means you don't suffer
-;;; the annoyance of having the system do things behind your back -- if an
-;;; address you typed is going to be rewritten, you know it immediately,
-;;; instead of after the mail has been sent and it's too late to do anything
-;;; about it. You will never again be screwed because you forgot to delete an
-;;; old alias from your .mailrc when a new local user arrives and is given a
-;;; userid which conflicts with one of your aliases, for example.
-;;;
-;;; Your mail alias abbrevs will be in effect only when the point is in an
-;;; appropriate header field. When in the body of the message, or other
-;;; header fields, the mail aliases will not expand. Rather, the normal
-;;; mode-specific abbrev table (mail-mode-abbrev-table) will be used if
-;;; defined. So if you use mail-mode specific abbrevs, this code will not
-;;; adversely affect you. You can control which header fields the abbrevs
-;;; are used in by changing the variable mail-abbrev-mode-regexp.
-;;;
-;;; If auto-fill mode is on, abbrevs will wrap at commas instead of at word
-;;; boundaries; also, header continuation-lines will be properly indented.
-;;;
-;;; You can also insert a mail alias with mail-interactive-insert-alias
-;;; (bound to C-c C-a), which prompts you for an alias (with completion)
-;;; and inserts its expansion at point.
-;;;
-;;; This file fixes a bug in the old system which prohibited your .mailrc
-;;; file from having lines like
-;;;
-;;; alias someone "John Doe <doe@quux.com>"
-;;;
-;;; That is, if you want an address to have embedded spaces, simply surround it
-;;; with double-quotes. This is necessary because the format of the .mailrc
-;;; file bogusly uses spaces as address delimiters. The following line defines
-;;; an alias which expands to three addresses:
-;;;
-;;; alias foobar addr-1 addr-2 "address three <addr-3>"
-;;;
-;;; (This is bogus because mail-delivery programs want commas, not spaces,
-;;; but that's what the file format is, so we have to live with it.)
-;;;
-;;; If you like, you can call the function define-mail-abbrev to define your
-;;; mail aliases instead of using a .mailrc file. When you call it in this
-;;; way, addresses are separated by commas.
-;;;
-;;; CAVEAT: This works on most Sun systems; I have been told that some versions
-;;; of /bin/mail do not understand double-quotes in the .mailrc file. So you
-;;; should make sure your version does before including verbose addresses like
-;;; this. One solution to this, if you are on a system whose /bin/mail doesn't
-;;; work that way, (and you still want to be able to /bin/mail to send mail in
-;;; addition to emacs) is to define minimal aliases (without full names) in
-;;; your .mailrc file, and use define-mail-abbrev to redefine them when sending
-;;; mail from emacs; this way, mail sent from /bin/mail will work, and mail
-;;; sent from emacs will be pretty.
-;;;
-;;; Aliases in the mailrc file may be nested. If you define aliases like
-;;; alias group1 fred ethel
-;;; alias group2 larry curly moe
-;;; alias everybody group1 group2
-;;; Then when you type "everybody" on the To: line, it will be expanded to
-;;; fred, ethyl, larry, curly, moe
-;;;
-;;; Aliases may also contain forward references; the alias of "everybody" can
-;;; precede the aliases of "group1" and "group2".
-;;;
-;;; This code also understands the "source" .mailrc command, for reading
-;;; aliases from some other file as well.
-;;;
-;;; Aliases may contain hyphens, as in "alias foo-bar foo@bar"; word-abbrevs
-;;; normally cannot contain hyphens, but this code works around that for the
-;;; specific case of mail-alias word-abbrevs.
-;;;
-;;; To read in the contents of another .mailrc-type file from emacs, use the
-;;; command Meta-X merge-mail-abbrevs. The rebuild-mail-abbrevs command is
-;;; similar, but will delete existing aliases first.
-;;;
-;;; If you would like your aliases to be expanded when you type M-> or ^N to
-;;; move out of the mail-header into the message body (instead of having to
-;;; type SPC at the end of the abbrev before moving away) then you can do
-;;;
-;;; (define-key mail-mode-map "\C-n" 'mail-abbrev-next-line)
-;;; (define-key mail-mode-map "\M->" 'mail-abbrev-end-of-buffer)
-;;;
-;;; If you want multiple addresses separated by a string other than ", " then
-;;; you can set the variable mail-alias-separator-string to it. This has to
-;;; be a comma bracketed by whitespace if you want any kind of reasonable
-;;; behaviour.
-;;;
-;;; Thanks to Harald Hanche-Olsen, Michael Ernst, David Loeffler, and
-;;; Noah Friedman for suggestions and bug reports.
-
-;;; To use this package, do (add-hook 'mail-setup-hook 'mail-abbrevs-setup).
+;; This file ensures that, when the point is in a To:, CC:, BCC:, or From:
+;; field, word-abbrevs are defined for each of your mail aliases. These
+;; aliases will be defined from your .mailrc file (or the file specified by
+;; the MAILRC environment variable) if it exists. Your mail aliases will
+;; expand any time you type a word-delimiter at the end of an abbreviation.
+;;
+;; What you see is what you get: if mailabbrev is in use when you type
+;; a name, and the name does not expand, you know it is not an abbreviation.
+;; However, if you yank abbreviations into the headers
+;; in a way that bypasses the check for abbreviations,
+;; they are expanded (but not visibly) when you send the message.
+;;
+;; Your mail alias abbrevs will be in effect only when the point is in an
+;; appropriate header field. When in the body of the message, or other
+;; header fields, the mail aliases will not expand. Rather, the normal
+;; mode-specific abbrev table (mail-mode-abbrev-table) will be used if
+;; defined. So if you use mail-mode specific abbrevs, this code will not
+;; adversely affect you. You can control which header fields the abbrevs
+;; are used in by changing the variable mail-abbrev-mode-regexp.
+;;
+;; If auto-fill mode is on, abbrevs will wrap at commas instead of at word
+;; boundaries; also, header continuation-lines will be properly indented.
+;;
+;; You can also insert a mail alias with mail-interactive-insert-alias
+;; (bound to C-c C-a), which prompts you for an alias (with completion)
+;; and inserts its expansion at point.
+;;
+;; This file fixes a bug in the old system which prohibited your .mailrc
+;; file from having lines like
+;;
+;; alias someone "John Doe <doe@quux.com>"
+;;
+;; That is, if you want an address to have embedded spaces, simply surround it
+;; with double-quotes. This is necessary because the format of the .mailrc
+;; file bogusly uses spaces as address delimiters. The following line defines
+;; an alias which expands to three addresses:
+;;
+;; alias foobar addr-1 addr-2 "address three <addr-3>"
+;;
+;; (This is bogus because mail-delivery programs want commas, not spaces,
+;; but that's what the file format is, so we have to live with it.)
+;;
+;; If you like, you can call the function define-mail-abbrev to define your
+;; mail aliases instead of using a .mailrc file. When you call it in this
+;; way, addresses are separated by commas.
+;;
+;; CAVEAT: This works on most Sun systems; I have been told that some versions
+;; of /bin/mail do not understand double-quotes in the .mailrc file. So you
+;; should make sure your version does before including verbose addresses like
+;; this. One solution to this, if you are on a system whose /bin/mail doesn't
+;; work that way, (and you still want to be able to /bin/mail to send mail in
+;; addition to emacs) is to define minimal aliases (without full names) in
+;; your .mailrc file, and use define-mail-abbrev to redefine them when sending
+;; mail from emacs; this way, mail sent from /bin/mail will work, and mail
+;; sent from emacs will be pretty.
+;;
+;; Aliases in the mailrc file may be nested. If you define aliases like
+;; alias group1 fred ethel
+;; alias group2 larry curly moe
+;; alias everybody group1 group2
+;; Then when you type "everybody" on the To: line, it will be expanded to
+;; fred, ethyl, larry, curly, moe
+;;
+;; Aliases may also contain forward references; the alias of "everybody" can
+;; precede the aliases of "group1" and "group2".
+;;
+;; This code also understands the "source" .mailrc command, for reading
+;; aliases from some other file as well.
+;;
+;; Aliases may contain hyphens, as in "alias foo-bar foo@bar"; word-abbrevs
+;; normally cannot contain hyphens, but this code works around that for the
+;; specific case of mail-alias word-abbrevs.
+;;
+;; To read in the contents of another .mailrc-type file from emacs, use the
+;; command Meta-X merge-mail-abbrevs. The rebuild-mail-abbrevs command is
+;; similar, but will delete existing aliases first.
+;;
+;; If you would like your aliases to be expanded when you type M-> or ^N to
+;; move out of the mail-header into the message body (instead of having to
+;; type SPC at the end of the abbrev before moving away) then you can do
+;;
+;; (add-hook
+;; 'mail-setup-hook
+;; '(lambda ()
+;; (substitute-key-definition 'next-line 'mail-abbrev-next-line
+;; mail-mode-map global-map)
+;; (substitute-key-definition 'end-of-buffer 'mail-abbrev-end-of-buffer
+;; mail-mode-map global-map)))
+;;
+;; If you want multiple addresses separated by a string other than ", " then
+;; you can set the variable mail-alias-separator-string to it. This has to
+;; be a comma bracketed by whitespace if you want any kind of reasonable
+;; behaviour.
+;;
+;; Thanks to Harald Hanche-Olsen, Michael Ernst, David Loeffler, and
+;; Noah Friedman for suggestions and bug reports.
+
+;; To use this package, do (add-hook 'mail-setup-hook 'mail-abbrevs-setup).
;;; Code:
should be read from the .mailrc file. (This is distinct from there being
no aliases, which is represented by this being a table with no entries.)")
+(defvar mail-abbrev-modtime nil
+ "The modification time of your mail alias file when it was last examined.")
+
+(defun mail-abbrevs-sync-aliases ()
+ (if (file-exists-p mail-personal-alias-file)
+ (let ((modtime (nth 5 (file-attributes mail-personal-alias-file))))
+ (if (not (equal mail-abbrev-modtime modtime))
+ (progn
+ (setq mail-abbrev-modtime modtime)
+ (build-mail-abbrevs))))))
+
;;;###autoload
(defun mail-abbrevs-setup ()
+ "Initialize use of the `mailabbrev' package."
(if (and (not (vectorp mail-abbrevs))
(file-exists-p mail-personal-alias-file))
- (build-mail-abbrevs))
+ (progn
+ (setq mail-abbrev-modtime
+ (nth 5 (file-attributes mail-personal-alias-file)))
+ (build-mail-abbrevs)))
+ (mail-abbrevs-sync-aliases)
(make-local-hook 'pre-abbrev-expand-hook)
(add-hook 'pre-abbrev-expand-hook 'sendmail-pre-abbrev-expand-hook
nil t)
(defvar mail-alias-separator-string ", "
"*A string inserted between addresses in multi-address mail aliases.
-This has to contain a comma, so \", \" is a reasonable value. You might
+This has to contain a comma, so \", \" is a reasonable value. You might
also want something like \",\\n \" to get each address on its own line.")
;; define-mail-abbrev sets this flag, which causes mail-resolve-all-aliases
(setq definition
(mapconcat (function (lambda (x)
(or (mail-resolve-all-aliases-1
- (intern-soft x mail-abbrevs)
+ (intern-soft (downcase x) mail-abbrevs)
(cons sym so-far))
x)))
(nreverse result)
"For use as the fourth arg to `define-abbrev'.
After expanding a mail-abbrev, if Auto Fill mode is on and we're past the
fill-column, break the line at the previous comma, and indent the next line."
- (save-excursion
- (let ((p (point))
- bol comma fp)
- (beginning-of-line)
- (setq bol (point))
- (goto-char p)
- (while (and auto-fill-function
- (>= (current-column) fill-column)
- (search-backward "," bol t))
- (setq comma (point))
- (forward-char 1) ; Now we are just past the comma.
- (insert "\n")
- (delete-horizontal-space)
- (setq p (point))
- (indent-relative)
- (setq fp (buffer-substring p (point)))
- ;; Go to the end of the new line.
- (end-of-line)
- (if (> (current-column) fill-column)
- ;; It's still too long; do normal auto-fill.
- (let ((fill-prefix (or fp "\t")))
- (do-auto-fill)))
- ;; Resume the search.
- (goto-char comma)
- ))))
+ ;; Disable abbrev mode to avoid recursion in indent-relative expanding
+ ;; part of the abbrev expansion as an abbrev itself.
+ (let ((abbrev-mode nil))
+ (save-excursion
+ (let ((p (point))
+ bol comma fp)
+ (beginning-of-line)
+ (setq bol (point))
+ (goto-char p)
+ (while (and auto-fill-function
+ (>= (current-column) fill-column)
+ (search-backward "," bol t))
+ (setq comma (point))
+ (forward-char 1) ; Now we are just past the comma.
+ (insert "\n")
+ (delete-horizontal-space)
+ (setq p (point))
+ (indent-relative)
+ (setq fp (buffer-substring p (point)))
+ ;; Go to the end of the new line.
+ (end-of-line)
+ (if (> (current-column) fill-column)
+ ;; It's still too long; do normal auto-fill.
+ (let ((fill-prefix (or fp "\t")))
+ (do-auto-fill)))
+ ;; Resume the search.
+ (goto-char comma)
+ )))))
\f
;;; Syntax tables and abbrev-expansion
-(defvar mail-abbrev-mode-regexp
+(defvar mail-abbrev-mode-regexp
"^\\(Resent-\\)?\\(To\\|From\\|CC\\|BCC\\|Reply-to\\):"
"*Regexp to select mail-headers in which mail abbrevs should be expanded.
This string will be handed to `looking-at' with point at the beginning
This should be set to match those mail fields in which you want abbreviations
turned on.")
-(defvar mail-mode-syntax-table (copy-syntax-table text-mode-syntax-table)
- "The syntax table which is used in send-mail mode message bodies.")
-
(defvar mail-mode-header-syntax-table
(let ((tab (copy-syntax-table text-mode-syntax-table)))
;; This makes the characters "@%!._-" be considered symbol-constituents
(defvar mail-abbrev-syntax-table
(let* ((tab (copy-syntax-table mail-mode-header-syntax-table))
- (i (1- (length tab)))
(_ (aref (standard-syntax-table) ?_))
(w (aref (standard-syntax-table) ?w)))
- (while (>= i 0)
- (if (= (aref tab i) _) (aset tab i w))
- (setq i (1- i)))
+ (map-char-table
+ (function (lambda (key value)
+ (if (equal value _)
+ (set-char-table-range tab key w))))
+ tab)
tab)
- "The syntax-table used for abbrev-expansion purposes; this is not actually
-made the current syntax table of the buffer, but simply controls the set of
-characters which may be a part of the name of a mail alias.")
+ "The syntax-table used for abbrev-expansion purposes.
+This is not actually made the current syntax table of the buffer, but
+simply controls the set of characters which may be a part of the name
+of a mail alias.")
(defun mail-abbrev-in-expansion-header-p ()
(expand-abbrev)
;; Now set it back to what it was before.
(set-syntax-table mail-mode-header-syntax-table)))
- (setq abbrev-start-location (point) ; This is the trick.
+ (setq abbrev-start-location (point-max) ; This is the trick.
abbrev-start-location-buffer (current-buffer)))
;; We're not in a mail header where mail aliases should
t))))
(build-mail-abbrevs file))
-(defun rebuild-mail-abbrevs (file)
+(defun rebuild-mail-abbrevs (&optional file)
"Rebuild all the mail aliases from the given file."
(interactive (list
(let ((insert-default-directory t)
default-directory
(expand-file-name def default-directory)
t))))
+ (if (null file)
+ (setq file buffer-file-name))
(setq mail-abbrevs nil)
(build-mail-abbrevs file))
(if (not (vectorp mail-abbrevs)) (mail-abbrevs-setup))
(list (completing-read "Expand alias: " mail-abbrevs nil t))))
(if (not (vectorp mail-abbrevs)) (mail-abbrevs-setup))
- (insert (or (and alias (symbol-value (intern-soft alias mail-abbrevs))) "")))
+ (insert (or (and alias (symbol-value (intern-soft alias mail-abbrevs))) ""))
+ (mail-abbrev-expand-hook))
(defun mail-abbrev-next-line (&optional arg)
"Expand any mail abbrev, then move cursor vertically down ARG lines.
;;(define-key mail-mode-map "\M->" 'mail-abbrev-end-of-buffer)
(provide 'mailabbrev)
+
+;;; mailabbrev.el ends here.