X-Git-Url: https://code.delx.au/gnu-emacs/blobdiff_plain/c142ce81fc9f5cd852d843fd5cd994155c1051e8..b6c735af3fd1b762b75ceb101b5ff50b4e9a6179:/man/idlwave.texi diff --git a/man/idlwave.texi b/man/idlwave.texi index a3c59cff85..42b3bea403 100644 --- a/man/idlwave.texi +++ b/man/idlwave.texi @@ -2,125 +2,133 @@ @c %**start of header @setfilename ../info/idlwave @settitle IDLWAVE User Manual -@dircategory Editors +@dircategory Emacs @direntry -* IDLWAVE: (idlwave). Major mode and shell for IDL and WAVE/CL files. +* IDLWAVE: (idlwave). Major mode and shell for IDL files. @end direntry @synindex ky cp @syncodeindex vr cp @syncodeindex fn cp -@set VERSION 3.12 -@set EDITION 1.8 -@set IDLVERSION 5.3 -@set NSYSROUTINES 1226 -@set NSYSKEYWORDS 5230 -@set DATE December 1999 -@set AUTHOR Carsten Dominik -@set AUTHOR-EMAIL dominik@@astro.uva.nl -@set MAINTAINER Carsten Dominik -@set MAINTAINER-EMAIL dominik@@astro.uva.nl +@set VERSION 5.5 +@set EDITION 5.5 +@set IDLVERSION 6.1 +@set NSYSROUTINES 1850 +@set NSYSKEYWORDS 7685 +@set DATE November, 2004 +@set AUTHOR J.D. Smith & Carsten Dominik +@set AUTHOR-EMAIL jdsmith@@as.arizona.edu +@set MAINTAINER J.D. Smith +@set MAINTAINER-EMAIL jdsmith@@as.arizona.edu +@set IDLWAVE-HOMEPAGE http://idlwave.org/ @c %**end of header @finalout @ifinfo -This file documents IDLWAVE, a major mode for editing IDL and -WAVE/CL files with Emacs. It also implements a shell for running IDL as -a subprocess.@refill - -This is edition @value{EDITION} of the IDLWAVE User Manual for -IDLWAVE @value{VERSION}@refill - -Copyright (c) 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - -Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim -copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and -this permission notice are preserved on all copies. - -@ignore -Permission is granted to process this file through TeX -and print the results, provided the printed document -carries a copying permission notice identical to this -one except for the removal of this paragraph (this -paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual). - -@end ignore -Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified -versions of this manual under the conditions for -verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting -derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission -notice identical to this one. - -Permission is granted to copy and distribute -translations of this manual into another language, -under the above conditions for modified versions, -except that this permission notice may be stated in a -translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. +This file documents IDLWAVE, a major mode for editing IDL files with +Emacs, and interacting with an IDL shell run as a subprocess. + +This is edition @value{EDITION} of the IDLWAVE User Manual for IDLWAVE +@value{VERSION} + +Copyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free Software +Foundation, Inc. + +Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document +under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or +any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no +Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU +Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the +license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation +License'' in the Emacs manual. + +(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify +this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free +Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.'' + +This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free +Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document +separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the +license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license. @end ifinfo @titlepage @title IDLWAVE User Manual -@subtitle Major Emacs mode and shell for IDL and WAVE/CL files +@subtitle Emacs major mode and shell for IDL @subtitle Edition @value{EDITION}, @value{DATE} -@author by Carsten Dominik +@author by J.D. Smith & Carsten Dominik @page -Copyright @copyright{} 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - -@sp 2 This is edition @value{EDITION} of the @cite{IDLWAVE User Manual} for -IDLWAVE version @value{VERSION}, @value{DATE}.@refill - +IDLWAVE version @value{VERSION}, @value{DATE}. @sp 2 - -Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim -copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and -this permission notice are preserved on all copies. - -Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified -versions of this manual under the conditions for -verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting -derive work is distributed under the terms of a permission -notice identical to this one. - -Permission is granted to copy and distribute -translations of this manual into another language, -under the above conditions for modified versions, -except that this permission notice may be stated in a -translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. - +Copyright @copyright{} 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free Software +Foundation, Inc. +@sp 2 +@cindex Copyright, of IDLWAVE +Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document +under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or +any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no +Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU +Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the +license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation +License'' in the Emacs manual. + +(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify +this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free +Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.'' + +This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free +Documentation License. If you want to distribute this document +separately from the collection, you can do so by adding a copy of the +license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license. @end titlepage +@contents + @page -@ifinfo +@ifnottex + @node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir) -IDLWAVE is a package to support editing command files for the -Interactive Data Language (IDL), and for running IDL as an inferior -shell. @refill +IDLWAVE is a package which supports editing source code written in the +Interactive Data Language (IDL), and running IDL as an inferior shell. -@end ifinfo +@end ifnottex @menu -* Introduction:: What IDLWAVE is and what not +* Introduction:: What IDLWAVE is, and what it is not * IDLWAVE in a Nutshell:: One page quick-start guide -* The IDLWAVE Major Mode:: The mode to edit IDL programs -* The IDLWAVE Shell:: The mode to run IDL as inferior program +* Getting Started:: Tutorial +* The IDLWAVE Major Mode:: The mode for editing IDL programs +* The IDLWAVE Shell:: The mode for running IDL as an inferior program * Installation:: How to Install or Upgrade -* Acknowledgement:: Who helped +* Acknowledgements:: Who did what * Sources of Routine Info:: How does IDLWAVE know about routine XYZ -* Configuration Examples:: The user is king... +* HTML Help Browser Tips:: +* Configuration Examples:: The user is king +* Windows and MacOS:: What still works, and how +* Troubleshooting:: When good computers turn bad * Index:: Fast access @detailmenu - --- The Detailed Node Listing --- +Getting Started (Tutorial) + +* Lesson I -- Development Cycle:: +* Lesson II -- Customization:: +* Lesson III -- User Catalog:: + The IDLWAVE Major Mode * Code Formatting:: Making code look nice -* Routine Info:: Calling Sequences and Keywords +* Routine Info:: Calling Sequence and Keyword List +* Online Help:: One key press from source to help * Completion:: Completing routine names and Keywords -* Code Templates:: Abbreviations for frequent constructs +* Routine Source:: Finding routines, the easy way +* Resolving Routines:: Force the Shell to compile a routine +* Code Templates:: Frequent code constructs +* Abbreviations:: Abbreviations for common commands * Actions:: Changing case, Padding, End checking * Doc Header:: Inserting a standard header * Motion Commands:: Moving through the structure of a program @@ -129,13 +137,28 @@ The IDLWAVE Major Mode Code Formatting * Code Indentation:: Reflecting the logical structure +* Continued Statement Indentation:: * Comment Indentation:: Special indentation for comment lines * Continuation Lines:: Splitting statements over lines * Syntax Highlighting:: Font-lock support +* Octals and Highlighting:: Why "123 causes problems + +Online Help + +* Help with HTML Documentation:: +* Help with Source:: + +Completion + +* Case of Completed Words:: CaseOFcomPletedWords +* Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity:: obj->Method, what? +* Object Method Completion in the Shell:: +* Class and Keyword Inheritance:: obj->Method, _EXTRA=e +* Structure Tag Completion:: Completing state.Tag Actions -* Block Boundary Check:: Is the END correct +* Block Boundary Check:: Is the END statement correct? * Padding Operators:: Enforcing space around `=' etc * Case Changes:: Enforcing upper case keywords @@ -143,25 +166,38 @@ The IDLWAVE Shell * Starting the Shell:: How to launch IDL as a subprocess * Using the Shell:: Interactively working with the Shell -* Debugging IDL Programs:: Compilation/Debugging +* Commands Sent to the Shell:: +* Debugging IDL Programs:: +* Examining Variables:: +* Custom Expression Examination:: Debugging IDL Programs -* Compiling Programs:: Compiling buffers under the shell -* Breakpoints and Stepping:: Deciding where to stop and look -* Examining Variables:: What is the value now? +* A Tale of Two Modes:: +* Debug Key Bindings:: +* Breakpoints and Stepping:: +* Compiling Programs:: +* Walking the Calling Stack:: +* Electric Debug Mode:: Installation * Installing IDLWAVE:: How to install the distribution -* Upgrading from idl.el:: Necessary configuration changes +* Installing Online Help:: Where to get the additional files needed Sources of Routine Info * Routine Definitions:: Where IDL Routines are defined. -* Routine Information Sources:: So how does IDLWAVE know about... -* Library Scan:: Scanning the Libraries for Routine Info -* Updating idlw-rinfo.el:: Scanning the Reference Manual +* Routine Information Sources:: So how does IDLWAVE know about... +* Catalogs:: +* Load-Path Shadows:: Routines defined in several places +* Documentation Scan:: Scanning the IDL Manuals + +Catalogs + +* Library Catalogs:: +* User Catalog:: + @end detailmenu @end menu @@ -169,118 +205,144 @@ Sources of Routine Info @chapter Introduction @cindex Introduction @cindex CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) +@cindex Interface Definition Language +@cindex Interactive Data Language @cindex cc-mode.el +@cindex @file{idl.el} +@cindex @file{idl-shell.el} @cindex Feature overview -IDLWAVE is a package to support editing command files for the -Interactive Data Language (IDL), and for running IDL as an inferior -shell. It also can be used for WAVE/CL command files, but the support -for these is limited. Note that this package has nothing to do with the -Interface Definition Language as part of the Common Object Request -Broker Architecture (CORBA). - -IDLWAVE is the successor to the @file{idl.el} and @file{idl-shell.el} -files written by Chris Chase. The modes and files had to be renamed -because of a name space conflict with CORBAs @code{idl-mode}, defined in -Emacs in the file @file{cc-mode.el}. If you have been using the old -files, check @ref{Upgrading from idl.el} for information on how to -switch. - -IDLWAVE consists of two parts: A major mode for editing command files -(@code{idlwave-mode}) and a mode to allow running the IDL program as an -inferior shell (@code{idlwave-shell-mode}). Both modes work closely -together and form a complete development environment.@refill - -Here is a brief summary of what IDLWAVE does. +IDLWAVE is a package which supports editing source files written in +the Interactive Data Language (IDL@footnote{IDL is a registered +trademark of Research Systems, Inc., a Kodak Company}), and running +IDL as an inferior shell@footnote{Note that this package has nothing +to do with the Interface Definition Language, part of the Common +Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA)}@footnote{IDLWAVE can also +be used for editing source files for the related WAVE/CL language, but +with only limited support.}. It is a feature-rich replacement for the +IDLDE development environment bundled with IDL, and uses the full +power of Emacs to make editing and running IDL programs easier, +quicker, and more structured. + +IDLWAVE consists of two main parts: a major mode for editing IDL +source files (@code{idlwave-mode}) and a mode for running the IDL +program as an inferior shell (@code{idlwave-shell-mode}). Although +one mode can be used without the other, both work together closely to +form a complete development environment. Here is a brief summary of +what IDLWAVE does: @itemize @bullet @item -Code indentation and formatting. +Smart code indentation and automatic-formatting. @item -Font-lock support on three levels. +Three level syntax highlighting support. @item -Display of calling sequence and keywords of more than 1000 IDL -routines. +Context-sensitive display of calling sequences and keywords for more +than 1000 native IDL routines, extendible to any additional number of +local routines, and already available with many pre-scanned libraries. +@item +Routine name space conflict search with likelihood-of-use ranking. @item -Context sensitive completion of routine names and keywords. +Fast, context-sensitive online HTML help, or source-header help for +undocumented routines. @item -Insertion of code templates. +Context sensitive completion of routine names, keywords, system +variables, class names and much more. @item -Actions to enforce coding standards during typing. +Easy insertion of code templates and abbreviations of common constructs. @item -Block structure check. +Automatic corrections to enforce a variety of customizable coding +standards. +@item +Integrity checks and auto-termination of logical blocks. +@item +Support for @file{imenu} (Emacs) and @file{func-menu} (XEmacs). @item Documentation support. @item -Running IDL as inferior process. +Running IDL as an inferior Shell with history search, command line +editing and all the completion and routine info capabilities present in +IDL source buffers. @item -Shell with history search, command line editing and completion. +Compilation, execution and interactive single-keystroke debugging of +programs directly from the source buffer. @item -Compilation, execution and debugging of programs directly from the source -buffer. +Quick, source-guided navigation of the calling stack, with variable +inspection, etc. @item -Examining expressions with a mouse click. +Examining variables and expressions with a mouse click. +@item +And much, much more... @end itemize @ifnottex @cindex Screenshots -Here are a number of screenshots showing IDLWAVE in action. +Here are a number of screenshots showing IDLWAVE in action: + @itemize @bullet @item -@uref{http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~dominik/Tools/idlwave/font-lock.gif, -XEmacs 21.1 with formatted and fontified code} +@uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_nav.gif,An IDLWAVE buffer} @item -@uref{http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~dominik/Tools/idlwave/rinfo.gif, -XEmacs 21.1 displaying routine info} +@uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_keys.gif,A keyword being completed} @item -@uref{http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~dominik/Tools/idlwave/complete.gif, -XEmacs 21.1 completing a keyword} +@uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_help.gif,Online help text.} @item -@uref{http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~dominik/Tools/idlwave/shell.gif, -XEmacs 21.1 with debugging toolbar; execution stopped at a breakpoint} +@uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_ri.gif,Routine information displayed} +@item +@uref{http://idlwave.org/screenshots/emacs_21_bp.gif,Debugging code +stopped at a breakpoint} @end itemize @end ifnottex -In this manual, each section contains a list of user options related to -the subject. Don't be confused by the shear number of options available --- in most cases the default settings are just fine. The variables are -listed here to make sure you know where to look if you want to change -things. For a full description of what a particular variable does and -how to configure it, see the documentation string of that variable. -Some configuration examples are also given in the appendix. - -@node IDLWAVE in a Nutshell, The IDLWAVE Major Mode, Introduction, Top +IDLWAVE is the distant successor to the @file{idl.el} and +@file{idl-shell.el} files written by Chris Chase. The modes and files +had to be renamed because of a name space conflict with CORBA's +@code{idl-mode}, defined in Emacs in the file @file{cc-mode.el}. + +In this manual, each section ends with a list of related user options. +Don't be confused by the sheer number of options available --- in most +cases the default settings are just fine. The variables are listed here +to make sure you know where to look if you want to change anything. For +a full description of what a particular variable does and how to +configure it, see the documentation string of that variable (available +with @kbd{C-h v}). Some configuration examples are also given in the +appendix. + +@node IDLWAVE in a Nutshell, Getting Started, Introduction, Top @chapter IDLWAVE in a Nutshell -@cindex Quick-Start -@cindex Getting Started +@cindex Summary of important commands @cindex IDLWAVE in a Nutshell @cindex Nutshell, IDLWAVE in a -If you are in a hurry, here is some quick-start information. - @subheading Editing IDL Programs @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 @item @key{TAB} @tab Indent the current line relative to context. -@item @kbd{M-C-\} +@item @kbd{C-M-\} @tab Re-indent all lines in the current region. +@item @kbd{C-u @key{TAB}} +@tab Re-indent all lines in the current statement. @item @kbd{M-@key{RET}} -@tab Start a continuation line. Or split the current line at point. +@tab Start a continuation line, or split the current line at point. @item @kbd{M-q} @tab Fill the current comment paragraph. @item @kbd{C-c ?} -@tab Display calling sequence, keywords of the procedure/function call +@tab Display calling sequence and keywords for the procedure or function call at point. +@item @kbd{M-?} +@tab Load context sensitive online help for nearby routine, keyword, etc. @item @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} @tab Complete a procedure name, function name or keyword in the buffer. @item @kbd{C-c C-i} @tab Update IDLWAVE's knowledge about functions and procedures. @item @kbd{C-c C-v} -@tab Find the source code of a procedure/function. +@tab Visit the source code of a procedure/function. +@item @kbd{C-u C-c C-v} +@tab Visit the source code of a procedure/function in this buffer. @item @kbd{C-c C-h} @tab Insert a standard documentation header. -@item @kbd{C-c C-m} +@item @kbd{C-c @key{RET}} @tab Insert a new timestamp and history item in the documentation header. @end multitable @@ -289,61 +351,428 @@ at point. @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 @item @kbd{C-c C-s} @tab Start IDL as a subprocess and/or switch to the interaction buffer. -@item @kbd{C-u C-c C-s} -@tab Start the shell in a separate frame. @item @kbd{M-p} -@tab Cycle back through IDL command history matching command line input. +@tab Cycle back through IDL command history. @item @kbd{M-n} @tab Cycle forward. -@item @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} +@item @kbd{@key{TAB}} @tab Complete a procedure name, function name or keyword in the shell buffer. @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-c} @tab Save and compile the source file in the current buffer. @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-x} -@tab Goto next syntax error. +@tab Go to next syntax error. +@item @kbd{C-c C-d C-v} +@tab Switch to electric debug mode. @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-b} -@tab Set a breakpoint at the current source line. +@tab Set a breakpoint at the nearest viable source line. @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-d} -@tab Clear the current breakpoint. +@tab Clear the nearest breakpoint. +@item @kbd{C-c C-d [} +@tab Go to the previous breakpoint. +@item @kbd{C-c C-d ]} +@tab Go to the next breakpoint. @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-p} -@tab Ask IDL to print the value of the expression near point. +@tab Print the value of the expression near point in IDL. @end multitable @subheading Commonly used Settings in @file{.emacs} @lisp ;; Change the indentation preferences -(setq idlwave-main-block-indent 2 ; default 0 - idlwave-block-indent 2 ; default 4 - idlwave-end-offset -2) ; default -4 - +(setq idlwave-main-block-indent 2 ; default 0 + idlwave-block-indent 2 ; default 4 + idlwave-end-offset -2) ; default -4 +;; Start autoloading routine info after 2 idle seconds +(setq idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after 2) +;; Pad some operators with spaces +(setq idlwave-do-actions t + idlwave-surround-by-blank t) ;; Syntax Highlighting (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock) -;; Automatically expand END to ENDIF, ENDELSE, ... -(setq idlwave-expand-generic-end t) - ;; Automatically start the shell when needed (setq idlwave-shell-automatic-start t) -;; Always use a separate frame for the shell buffer -(setq idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame t) +;; Bind debugging commands with CONTROL and SHIFT modifiers +(setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(control shift)) +@end lisp + +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Getting Started, The IDLWAVE Major Mode, IDLWAVE in a Nutshell, Top +@chapter Getting Started (Tutorial) +@cindex Quick-Start +@cindex Tutorial +@cindex Getting Started + +@menu +* Lesson I -- Development Cycle:: +* Lesson II -- Customization:: +* Lesson III -- User Catalog:: +@end menu + +@node Lesson I -- Development Cycle, Lesson II -- Customization, Getting Started, Getting Started +@section Lesson I: Development Cycle + +The purpose of this tutorial is to guide you through a very basic +development cycle using IDLWAVE. We will paste a simple program into +a buffer and use the shell to compile, debug and run it. On the way +we will use many of the important IDLWAVE commands. Note, however, +that IDLWAVE has many more capabilities than covered here, which can +be discovered by reading the entire manual, or hovering over the +shoulder of your nearest IDLWAVE guru for a few days. + +It is assumed that you have access to Emacs or XEmacs with the full +IDLWAVE package including online help (@pxref{Installation}). We also +assume that you are familiar with Emacs and can read the nomenclature of +key presses in Emacs (in particular, @kbd{C} stands for @key{CONTROL} +and @kbd{M} for @key{META} (often the @key{ALT} key carries this +functionality)). + +Open a new source file by typing: + +@example +@kbd{C-x C-f tutorial.pro @key{RET}} +@end example -;; Specify a file where library info can be stored. -(setq idlwave-libinfo-file "~/idlinfo.el") +A buffer for this file will pop up, and it should be in IDLWAVE mode, +indicated in the mode line just below the editing window. Also, the +menu bar should contain @samp{IDLWAVE}. + +Now cut-and-paste the following code, also available as +@file{tutorial.pro} in the IDLWAVE distribution. + +@example +function daynr,d,m,y + ;; compute a sequence number for a date + ;; works 1901-2099. + if y lt 100 then y = y+1900 + if m le 2 then delta = 1 else delta = 0 + m1 = m + delta*12 + 1 + y1 = y * delta + return, d + floor(m1*30.6)+floor(y1*365.25)+5 +end + +function weekday,day,month,year + ;; compute weekday number for date + nr = daynr(day,month,year) + return, nr mod 7 +end + +pro plot_wday,day,month + ;; Plot the weekday of a date in the first 10 years of this century. + years = 2000,+indgen(10) + wdays = intarr(10) + for i=0,n_elements(wdays)-1 do begin + wdays[i] = weekday(day,month,years[i]) + end + plot,years,wdays,YS=2,YT="Wday (0=Sunday)" +end +@end example + +The indentation probably looks funny, since it's different from the +settings you use, so use the @key{TAB} key in each line to +automatically line it up (or, more quickly, @emph{select} the entire +buffer with @kbd{C-x h}, and indent the whole region with +@kbd{C-M-\}). Notice how different syntactical elements are +highlighted in different colors, if you have set up support for +font-lock. + +Let's check out two particular editing features of IDLWAVE. Place the +cursor after the @code{end} statement of the @code{for} loop and press +@key{SPC}. IDLWAVE blinks back to the beginning of the block and +changes the generic @code{end} to the specific @code{endfor} +automatically (as long as the variable @code{idlwave-expand-generic-end} +is turned on --- @pxref{Lesson II -- Customization}). Now place the +cursor in any line you would like to split and press @kbd{M-@key{RET}}. +The line is split at the cursor position, with the continuation @samp{$} +and indentation all taken care of. Use @kbd{C-/} to undo the last +change. + +The procedure @code{plot_wday} is supposed to plot the day of the week +of a given date for the first 10 years of the 21st century. As in +most code, there are a few bugs, which we are going to use IDLWAVE to +help us fix. + +First, let's launch the IDLWAVE shell. You do this with the command +@kbd{C-c C-s}. The Emacs window will split or another window will popup +to display IDL running in a shell interaction buffer. Type a few +commands like @code{print,!PI} to convince yourself that you can work +there just as well as in a terminal, or the IDLDE. Use the arrow keys +to cycle through your command history. Are we having fun now? + +Now go back to the source window and type @kbd{C-c C-d C-c} to compile +the program. If you watch the shell buffer, you see that IDLWAVE types +@samp{.run tutorial.pro} for you. But the compilation fails because +there is a comma in the line @samp{years=...}. The line with the error +is highlighted and the cursor positioned at the error, so remove the +comma (you should only need to hit @kbd{Delete}!). Compile again, using +the same keystrokes as before. Notice that the file is automatically +saved for you. This time everything should work fine, and you should +see the three routines compile. + +Now we want to use the command to plot the day of the week on January +1st. We could type the full command ourselves, but why do that? Go +back to the shell window, type @samp{plot_} and hit @key{TAB}. After +a bit of a delay (while IDLWAVE initializes its routine info database, +if necessary), the window will split to show all procedures it knows +starting with that string, and @w{@code{plot_wday}} should be one of +them. Saving the buffer alerted IDLWAVE about this new routine. +Click with the middle mouse button on @code{plot_wday} and it will be +copied to the shell buffer, or if you prefer, add @samp{w} to +@samp{plot_} to make it unambiguous (depending on what other routines +starting with @samp{plot_} you have installed on your system), hit +@key{TAB} again, and the full routine name will be completed. Now +provide the two arguments: + +@example +plot_wday,1,1 +@end example + +@noindent and press @key{RET}. This fails with an error message telling +you the @code{YT} keyword to plot is ambiguous. What are the allowed +keywords again? Go back to the source window and put the cursor into +the `plot' line and press @kbd{C-c ?}. This shows the routine info +window for the plot routine, which contains a list of keywords, along +with the argument list. Oh, we wanted @code{YTITLE}. Fix that up. +Recompile with @kbd{C-c C-d C-c}. Jump back into the shell with +@kbd{C-c C-s}, press the @key{UP} arrow to recall the previous command +and execute again. + +This time we get a plot, but it is pretty ugly --- the points are all +connected with a line. Hmm, isn't there a way for @code{plot} to use +symbols instead? What was that keyword? Position the cursor on the +plot line after a comma (where you'd normally type a keyword), and hit +@kbd{M-@key{Tab}}. A long list of plot's keywords appears. Aha, +there it is, @code{PSYM}. Middle click to insert it. An @samp{=} +sign is included for you too. Now what were the values of @code{PSYM} +supposed to be? With the cursor on or after the keyword, press +@kbd{M-?} for online help (alternatively, you could have right clicked +on the colored keyword itself in the completion list). A browser will +pop up showing the HTML documentation for the @code{PYSM} keyword. +OK, let's use diamonds=4. Fix this, recompile (you know the command +by now: @kbd{C-c C-d C-c}), go back to the shell (if it's vanished, +you know what to do: @kbd{C-c C-s}) and execute again. Now things +look pretty good. + +Let's try a different day --- how about April fool's day? + +@example +plot_wday,1,4 +@end example + +Oops, this looks very wrong. All April fool's days cannot be Fridays! +We've got a bug in the program, perhaps in the @code{daynr} function. +Let's put a breakpoint on the last line there. Position the cursor on +the @samp{return, d+...} line and press @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}. IDL sets a +breakpoint (as you see in the shell window), and the break line is +indicated. Back to the shell buffer, re-execute the previous command. +IDL stops at the line with the breakpoint. Now hold down the SHIFT +key and click with the middle mouse button on a few variables there: +@samp{d}, @samp{y}, @samp{m}, @samp{y1}, etc. Maybe @code{d} isn't +the correct type. CONTROL-SHIFT middle-click on it for help. Well, +it's an integer, so that's not the problem. Aha, @samp{y1} is zero, +but it should be the year, depending on delta. Shift click +@samp{delta} to see that it's 0. Below, we see the offending line: +@samp{y1=y*delta...} the multiplication should have been a minus sign! +Hit @kbd{q} to exit the debugging mode, and fix the line to read: + +@example +y1 = y - delta +@end example + +Now remove all breakpoints: @kbd{C-c C-d C-a}. Recompile and rerun the +command. Everything should now work fine. How about those leap years? +Change the code to plot 100 years and see that every 28 years, the +sequence of weekdays repeats. + +@node Lesson II -- Customization, Lesson III -- User Catalog, Lesson I -- Development Cycle, Getting Started +@section Lesson II: Customization + +Emacs is probably the most customizable piece of software ever +written, and it would be a shame if you did not make use of this and +adapt IDLWAVE to your own preferences. Customizing Emacs or IDLWAVE +is accomplished by setting Lisp variables in the @file{.emacs} file in +your home directory --- but do not be dismayed; for the most part, you +can just copy and work from the examples given here. + +Let's first use a boolean variable. These are variables which you turn +on or off, much like a checkbox. A value of @samp{t} means on, a value +of @samp{nil} means off. Copy the following line into your +@file{.emacs} file, exit and restart Emacs. + +@lisp +(setq idlwave-reserved-word-upcase t) +@end lisp + +When this option is turned on, each reserved word you type into an IDL +source buffer will be converted to upper case when you press @key{SPC} +or @key{RET} right after the word. Try it out! @samp{if} changes to +@samp{IF}, @samp{begin} to @samp{BEGIN}. If you don't like this +behavior, remove the option again from your @file{.emacs} file and +restart Emacs. + +You likely have your own indentation preferences for IDL code. For +example, some like to indent the main block of an IDL program from the +margin, different from the conventions used by RSI, and use only 3 +spaces as indentation between @code{BEGIN} and @code{END}. Try the +following lines in @file{.emacs}: + +@lisp +(setq idlwave-main-block-indent 2) +(setq idlwave-block-indent 3) +(setq idlwave-end-offset -3) +@end lisp + +Restart Emacs, and re-indent the program we developed in the first part +of this tutorial with @kbd{C-c h} and @kbd{C-M-\}. You may want to keep +these lines in @file{.emacs}, with values adjusted to your likings. If +you want to get more information about any of these variables, type, +e.g., @kbd{C-h v idlwave-main-block-indent @key{RET}}. To find which +variables can be customized, look for items marked @samp{User Option:} +throughout this manual. + +If you cannot seem to master this Lisp customization in @file{.emacs}, +there is another, more user-friendly way to customize all the IDLWAVE +variables. You can access it through the IDLWAVE menu in one of the +@file{.pro} buffers, menu item @code{Customize->Browse IDLWAVE +Group}. Here you'll be presented with all the various variables grouped +into categories. You can navigate the hierarchy (e.g. @samp{IDLWAVE +Code Formatting->Idlwave Abbrev And Indent Action->Idlwave Expand +Generic End} to turn on @code{END} expansion), read about the variables, +change them, and `Save for Future Sessions'. Few of these variables +need customization, but you can exercise considerable control over +IDLWAVE's functionality with them. + +You may also find the key bindings used for the debugging commands too +long and complicated. Often we have heard complaints along the lines +of, ``Do I really have to go through the finger gymnastics of @kbd{C-c +C-d C-c} to run a simple command?'' Due to Emacs rules and +conventions, shorter bindings cannot be set by default, but you can +easily enable them. First, there is a way to assign all debugging +commands in a single sweep to another simpler combination. The only +problem is that we have to use something which Emacs does not need for +other important commands. One good option is to execute debugging +commands by holding down @key{CONTROL} and @key{SHIFT} while pressing +a single character: @kbd{C-S-b} for setting a breakpoint, @kbd{C-S-c} +for compiling the current source file, @kbd{C-S-a} for deleting all +breakpoints (try it, it's easier). You can enable this with: + +@lisp +(setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(shift control)) +@end lisp + +@noindent If you have a special keyboard with, for example, a +@key{SUPER} key, you could even shorten that: + +@lisp +(setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(super)) +@end lisp + +@noindent to get compilation on @kbd{S-c}. Often, a modifier key like +@key{SUPER} or @key{HYPER} is bound or can be bound to an otherwise +unused key on your keyboard --- consult your system documentation. + +You can also assign specific commands to keys. This you must do in the +@emph{mode-hook}, a special function which is run when a new IDLWAVE +buffer gets set up. The possibilities for key customization are +endless. Here we set function keys f4-f8 to common debugging commands. + +@lisp +;; First for the source buffer +(add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook + (lambda () + (local-set-key [f4] 'idlwave-shell-retall) + (local-set-key [f5] 'idlwave-shell-break-here) + (local-set-key [f6] 'idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp) + (local-set-key [f7] 'idlwave-shell-cont) + (local-set-key [f8] 'idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp))) +;; Then for the shell buffer +(add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook + (lambda () + (local-set-key [f4] 'idlwave-shell-retall) + (local-set-key [f5] 'idlwave-shell-break-here) + (local-set-key [f6] 'idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp) + (local-set-key [f7] 'idlwave-shell-cont) + (local-set-key [f8] 'idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp))) @end lisp -@node The IDLWAVE Major Mode, The IDLWAVE Shell, IDLWAVE in a Nutshell, Top +@node Lesson III -- User Catalog, , Lesson II -- Customization, Getting Started +@section Lesson III: User and Library Catalogs + +We have already used the routine info display in the first part of this +tutorial. This was the invoked using @kbd{C-c ?}, and displays +information about the IDL routine near the cursor position. Wouldn't it +be nice to have the same kind of information available for your own +routines and for the huge amount of code in major libraries like JHUPL +or the IDL-Astro library? In many cases, you may already have this +information. Files named @file{.idlwave_catalog} in library directories +contain scanned information on the routines in that directory; many +popular libraries ship with these ``library catalogs'' pre-scanned. +Users can scan their own routines in one of two ways: either using the +supplied tool to scan directories and build their own +@file{.idlwave_catalog} files, or using the built-in method to create a +single ``user catalog'', which we'll show here. @xref{Catalogs}, for +more information on choosing which method to use. + +To build a user catalog, select @code{Routine Info/Select Catalog +Directories} from the IDLWAVE entry in the menu bar. If necessary, +start the shell first with @kbd{C-c C-s} (@pxref{Starting the Shell}). +IDLWAVE will find out about the IDL @code{!PATH} variable and offer a +list of directories on the path. Simply select them all (or whichever +you want --- directories with existing library catalogs will not be +selected by default) and click on the @samp{Scan&Save} button. Then +go for a cup of coffee while IDLWAVE collects information for each and +every IDL routine on your search path. All this information is +written to the file @file{.idlwave/idlusercat.el} in your home +directory and will from now on automatically load whenever you use +IDLWAVE. You may find it necessary to rebuild the catalog on occasion +as your local libraries change, or build a library catalog for those +directories instead. Invoke routine info (@kbd{C-c ?}) or completion +(@kbd{M-@key{TAB}}) on any routine or partial routine name you know to +be located in the library. E.g., if you have scanned the IDL-Astro +library: + +@example + a=readf@key{M-@key{TAB}} +@end example + +expands to `readfits('. Then try + +@example + a=readfits(@key{C-c ?} +@end example + +and you get: + +@example +Usage: Result = READFITS(filename, header, heap) +... +@end example + +I hope you made it until here. Now you are set to work with IDLWAVE. +On the way you will want to change other things, and to learn more +about the possibilities not discussed in this short tutorial. Read +the manual, look at the documentation strings of interesting variables +(with @kbd{C-h v idlwave<-variable-name> @key{RET}}) and ask the +remaining questions on the newsgroup @code{comp.lang.idl-pvwave}. + +@node The IDLWAVE Major Mode, The IDLWAVE Shell, Getting Started, Top @chapter The IDLWAVE Major Mode @cindex IDLWAVE major mode @cindex Major mode, @code{idlwave-mode} -The IDLWAVE major mode supports editing IDL and WAVE/CL command files. -In this chapter we describe the main features of the mode and how to -customize them. +The IDLWAVE major mode supports editing IDL source files. In this +chapter we describe the main features of the mode and how to customize +them. @menu * Code Formatting:: Making code look nice -* Routine Info:: Calling Sequences and Keywords +* Routine Info:: Calling Sequence and Keyword List +* Online Help:: One key press from source to help * Completion:: Completing routine names and Keywords -* Code Templates:: Abbreviations for frequent constructs +* Routine Source:: Finding routines, the easy way +* Resolving Routines:: Force the Shell to compile a routine +* Code Templates:: Frequent code constructs +* Abbreviations:: Abbreviations for common commands * Actions:: Changing case, Padding, End checking * Doc Header:: Inserting a standard header * Motion Commands:: Moving through the structure of a program @@ -357,53 +786,141 @@ customize them. @menu * Code Indentation:: Reflecting the logical structure +* Continued Statement Indentation:: * Comment Indentation:: Special indentation for comment lines * Continuation Lines:: Splitting statements over lines * Syntax Highlighting:: Font-lock support +* Octals and Highlighting:: Why "123 causes problems @end menu -@node Code Indentation, Comment Indentation, Code Formatting, Code Formatting +The IDL language, with its early roots in FORTRAN, modern +implementation in C, and liberal borrowing of features of many vector +and other languages along its 25+ year history, has inherited an +unusual mix of syntax elements. Left to his or her own devices, a +novice IDL programmer will often conjure code which is very difficult +to read and impossible to adapt. Much can be gleaned from studying +available IDL code libraries for coding style pointers, but, due to +the variety of IDL syntax elements, replicating this style can be +challenging at best. Luckily, IDLWAVE understands the structure of +IDL code very well, and takes care of almost all formatting issues for +you. After configuring it to match your coding standards, you can +rely on it to help keep your code neat and organized. + + +@node Code Indentation, Continued Statement Indentation, Code Formatting, Code Formatting @subsection Code Indentation @cindex Code indentation @cindex Indentation Like all Emacs programming modes, IDLWAVE performs code indentation. The @key{TAB} key indents the current line relative to context. -@key{LFD} insert a newline and indents the new line. The indentation is -governed by a number of variables. +@key{LFD} insert a newline and indents the new line. The indentation is +governed by a number of variables. IDLWAVE indents blocks (between +@code{PRO}/@code{FUNCTION}/@code{BEGIN} and @code{END}), and +continuation lines. @cindex Foreign code, adapting @cindex Indentation, of foreign code +@kindex C-M-\ To re-indent a larger portion of code (e.g. when working with foreign code -written with different conventions), use @kbd{M-C-\} +written with different conventions), use @kbd{C-M-\} (@code{indent-region}) after marking the relevant code. Useful marking -commands are @kbd{C-x h} (the entire file) or @kbd{M-C-h} (the +commands are @kbd{C-x h} (the entire file) or @kbd{C-M-h} (the current subprogram). @xref{Actions}, for information how to impose additional formatting conventions on foreign code. @defopt idlwave-main-block-indent (@code{0}) Extra indentation for the main block of code. That is the block between the FUNCTION/PRO statement and the END statement for that program -unit.@refill +unit. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-block-indent (@code{4}) Extra indentation applied to block lines. If you change this, you -probably also want to change @code{idlwave-end-offset}.@refill +probably also want to change @code{idlwave-end-offset}. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-end-offset (@code{-4}) Extra indentation applied to block END lines. A value equal to negative @code{idlwave-block-indent} will make END lines line up with the block -BEGIN lines.@refill +BEGIN lines. @end defopt +@node Continued Statement Indentation, Comment Indentation, Code Indentation, Code Formatting +@subsection Continued Statement Indentation +@cindex Indentation, continued statement +@cindex Continued statement indentation +Continuation lines (following a line ending with @code{$}) can receive a +fixed indentation offset from the main level, but in several situations +IDLWAVE can use a special form of indentation which aligns continued +statements more naturally. Special indentation is calculated for +continued routine definition statements and calls, enclosing parentheses +(like function calls, structure/class definitions, explicit structures +or lists, etc.), and continued assignments. An attempt is made to line +up with the first non-whitespace character after the relevant opening +punctuation mark (@code{,},@code{(},@code{@{},@code{[},@code{=}). For +lines without any non-comment characters on the line with the opening +punctuation, the continued line(s) are aligned just past the +punctuation. An example: + +@example +function foo, a, b, $ + c, d + bar = sin( a + b + $ + c + d) +end +@end example +@noindent + +The only drawback to this special continued statement indentation is +that it consumes more space, e.g., for long function names or left hand +sides of an assignment: + +@example +function thisfunctionnameisverylongsoitwillleavelittleroom, a, b, $ + c, d +@end example + +You can instruct IDLWAVE when to avoid using this special continuation +indentation by setting the variable +@code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent}, which specifies the +maximum additional indentation beyond the basic indent to be +tolerated, otherwise defaulting to a fixed-offset from the enclosing +indent (the size of which offset is set in +@code{idlwave-continuation-indent}). As a special case, continuations +of routine calls without any arguments or keywords will @emph{not} +align the continued line, under the assumption that you continued +because you needed the space. + +Also, since the indentation level can be somewhat dynamic in continued +statements with special continuation indentation, especially if +@code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent} is small, the key +@kbd{C-u @key{TAB}} will re-indent all lines in the current statement. +Note that @code{idlwave-indent-to-open-paren}, if non-@code{nil}, overrides +the @code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent} limit, for +parentheses only, forcing them always to line up. + + @defopt idlwave-continuation-indent (@code{2}) -Extra indentation applied to continuation lines and insided unbalanced -parenthesis.@refill +Extra indentation applied to normal continuation lines. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent (@code{20}) +The maximum additional indentation (over the basic continuation-indent) +that will be permitted for special continues. To effectively disable +special continuation indentation, set to @code{0}. To enable it +constantly, set to a large number (like @code{100}). Note that the +indentation in a long continued statement never decreases from line to +line, outside of nested parentheses statements. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-indent-to-open-paren (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means indent continuation lines to innermost open +parenthesis, regardless of whether the +@code{idlwave-max-extra-continuation-indent} limit is satisfied. @end defopt -@node Comment Indentation, Continuation Lines, Code Indentation, Code Formatting +@node Comment Indentation, Continuation Lines, Continued Statement Indentation, Code Formatting @subsection Comment Indentation @cindex Comment indentation @cindex Hanging paragraphs @@ -420,68 +937,71 @@ unchanged. @item @code{;;} @tab Lines starting with two semicolons are indented like the surrounding code. @item @code{;} -@tab Lines starting with a single semicolon are indent to a minimum column. +@tab Lines starting with a single semicolon are indented to a minimum column. @end multitable +@noindent The indentation of comments starting in column 0 is never changed. @defopt idlwave-no-change-comment -The indentation of a comment that starts with this regular -expression will not be changed. +The indentation of a comment starting with this regexp will not be +changed. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-begin-line-comment -A comment anchored at the beginning of line. A comment matched by this -regular expression will not have its indentation changed.@refill +A comment anchored at the beginning of line. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-code-comment -A comment that starts with this regular expression on a line by itself -is indented as if it is a part of IDL code.@refill +A comment that starts with this regexp is indented as if it is a part of +IDL code. @end defopt @node Continuation Lines, Syntax Highlighting, Comment Indentation, Code Formatting @subsection Continuation Lines and Filling @cindex Continuation lines @cindex Line splitting +@cindex String splitting @cindex Splitting, of lines -@cindex Filling -@cindex @code{auto-fill-mode} -@cindex Hanging paragraphs +@kindex M-@key{RET} In IDL, a newline character terminates a statement unless preceded by a @samp{$}. If you would like to start a continuation line, use -@kbd{M-@key{RET}} which calls the command @code{idlwave-split-line}. It -inserts a @samp{$} to indicate that the following line is a continuation -of the current line, terminates the line with a newline and indents the -new line. The command @kbd{M-@key{RET}} can also be used in the middle -of a line to split the line at that point. When used inside a long -string constant, the string is split with the @samp{+} concatenation -operator. You could even use @code{auto-fill-mode} to automatically -break code lines into several lines while you type. For this, set the -variable @code{idlwave-fill-comment-line-only} to @code{nil} and turn on -@code{auto-fill-mode}. @code{auto-fill-mode} can be toggled with -@kbd{C-c C-a}. +@kbd{M-@key{RET}}, which calls the command @code{idlwave-split-line}. +It inserts the continuation character @samp{$}, terminates the line and +indents the new line. The command @kbd{M-@key{RET}} can also be invoked +inside a string to split it at that point, in which case the @samp{+} +concatenation operator is used. +@cindex Filling +@cindex @code{auto-fill-mode} +@cindex Hanging paragraphs When filling comment paragraphs, IDLWAVE overloads the normal filling -functions and uses a function which creates hanging paragraphs as they -are customary in the IDL routine headers. When @code{auto-fill-mode} is -turned on, comments will be auto-filled. If the first line of a -paragraph is matched by @code{idlwave-hang-indent-regexp}, subsequent -lines are indented to after the position of this match, as in the -following example. +functions and uses a function which creates the hanging paragraphs +customary in IDL routine headers. When @code{auto-fill-mode} is turned +on (toggle with @kbd{C-c C-a}), comments will be auto-filled. If the +first line of a paragraph contains a match for +@code{idlwave-hang-indent-regexp} (a dash-space by default), subsequent +lines are positioned to line up after it, as in the following example. @example -; INPUTS +@group +;================================= ; x - an array containing ; lots of interesting numbers. ; ; y - another variable where ; a hanging paragraph is used ; to describe it. +;================================= +@end group @end example -You also refill a comment paragraph with @kbd{M-q}. +@kindex M-q +You can also refill a comment at any time paragraph with @kbd{M-q}. +Comment delimiting lines as in the above example, consisting of one or +more @samp{;} followed by one or more of the characters @samp{+=-_*}, +are kept in place, as is. @defopt idlwave-fill-comment-line-only (@code{t}) Non-@code{nil} means auto fill will only operate on comment lines. @@ -497,298 +1017,893 @@ Non-@code{nil} means @code{idlwave-split-line} will split strings with @samp{+}. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-hanging-indent +@defopt idlwave-hanging-indent (@code{t}) Non-@code{nil} means comment paragraphs are indented under the hanging indent given by @code{idlwave-hang-indent-regexp} match in the first -line of the paragraph.@refill +line of the paragraph. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-hang-indent-regexp +@defopt idlwave-hang-indent-regexp (@code{"- "}) Regular expression matching the position of the hanging indent -in the first line of a comment paragraph.@refill +in the first line of a comment paragraph. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-use-last-hang-indent (@code{nil}) Non-@code{nil} means use last match on line for -@code{idlwave-indent-regexp}.@refill +@code{idlwave-indent-regexp}. @end defopt -@node Syntax Highlighting, , Continuation Lines, Code Formatting +@node Syntax Highlighting, Octals and Highlighting, Continuation Lines, Code Formatting @subsection Syntax Highlighting @cindex Syntax highlighting +@cindex Highlighting of syntax @cindex Font lock Highlighting of keywords, comments, strings etc. can be accomplished -with @code{font-lock}. To enable @code{font-lock} for IDL files, place -the following line into your @file{.emacs} (see -@ref{Configuration Examples})@refill +with @code{font-lock}. If you are using @code{global-font-lock-mode} +(in Emacs), or have @code{font-lock} turned on in any other buffer in +XEmacs, it should also automatically work in IDLWAVE buffers. If you'd +prefer invoking font-lock individually by mode, you can enforce it in +@code{idlwave-mode} with the following line in your @file{.emacs}: @lisp (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook 'turn-on-font-lock) @end lisp -IDLWAVE supports 3 levels of syntax highlighting. The variable -@code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} determines which level is selected. +@noindent IDLWAVE supports 3 increasing levels of syntax highlighting. +The variable @code{font-lock-maximum-decoration} determines which level +is selected. Individual categories of special tokens can be selected +for highlighting using the variable +@code{idlwave-default-font-lock-items}. @defopt idlwave-default-font-lock-items Items which should be fontified on the default fontification level -2.@refill +2. @end defopt -@node Routine Info, Completion, Code Formatting, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@node Octals and Highlighting, , Syntax Highlighting, Code Formatting +@subsection Octals and Highlighting +@cindex Syntax highlighting, Octals +@cindex Highlighting of syntax, Octals + +A rare syntax highlighting problem results from an extremely unfortunate +notation for octal numbers in IDL: @code{"123}. This unpaired quotation +mark is very difficult to parse, given that it can be mixed on a single +line with any number of strings. Emacs will incorrectly identify this +as a string, and the highlighting of following lines of code can be +distorted, since the string is never terminated. + +One solution to this involves terminating the mistakenly identified +string yourself by providing a closing quotation mark in a comment: + +@example + string("305B) + $ ;" <--- for font-lock + ' is an Angstrom.' +@end example + +@noindent A far better solution is to abandon this notation for octals +altogether, and use the more sensible alternative IDL provides: + +@example + string('305'OB) + ' is an Angstrom.' +@end example + +@noindent This simultaneously solves the font-lock problem and is more +consistent with the notation for hexadecimal numbers, e.g. @code{'C5'XB}. + +@node Routine Info, Online Help, Code Formatting, The IDLWAVE Major Mode @section Routine Info @cindex Routine info - -IDL defines more than one thousand procedures, functions and object -methods. This large command set makes it difficult to remember the -calling sequence and keywords of a command. IDLWAVE contains a list of -all builtin routines with calling sequences and keywords@footnote{This -list was created by scanning the IDL manual and might contain (very few) -errors. Please report any detected errors to the maintainer, so that -they can be fixed.}. It also scans Emacs buffers and library files for -routine definitions and queries the IDLWAVE-Shell for the properties of -modules currently compiled under the shell. When you have edited a -buffer or compiled additional routines under the shell, use @kbd{C-c -C-i} (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}) to update IDLWAVE's idea about -these routines.@refill - -To display the information about a routine, press @kbd{C-c ?} which +@cindex Updating routine info +@cindex Scanning buffers for routine info +@cindex Buffers, scanning for routine info +@cindex Shell, querying for routine info + +@kindex C-c C-i +IDL comes bundled with more than one thousand procedures, functions +and object methods, and large libraries typically contain hundreds or +even thousands more (each with a few to tens of keywords and +arguments). This large command set can make it difficult to remember +the calling sequence and keywords for the routines you use, but +IDLWAVE can help. It builds up routine information from a wide +variety of sources; IDLWAVE in fact knows far more about the +@samp{.pro} routines on your system than IDL itself! It maintains a +list of all built-in routines, with calling sequences and +keywords@footnote{This list is created by scanning the IDL manuals and +might contain (very few) errors. Please report any errors to the +maintainer, so that they can be fixed.}. It also scans Emacs buffers +for routine definitions, queries the IDLWAVE-Shell for information +about routines currently compiled there, and automatically locates +library and user-created catalogs. This information is updated +automatically, and so should usually be current. To force a global +update and refresh the routine information, use @kbd{C-c C-i} +(@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}). + +@kindex C-c ? +To display the information about a routine, press @kbd{C-c ?}, which calls the command @code{idlwave-routine-info}. When the current cursor position is on the name or in the argument list of a procedure or function, information will be displayed about the routine. For example, -consider the cursor positions in the following line +consider the indicated cursor positions in the following line: @example plot,x,alog(x+5*sin(x) + 2), + | | | | | | | | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 @end example -@cindex Object methods +@cindex Default routine, for info and help On positions 1,2 and 8, information about the @samp{plot} procedure will be shown. On positions 3,4, and 7, the @samp{alog} function will be -described, while positions 5 and 6 will select the @samp{sin} function. +described, while positions 5 and 6 will investigate the @samp{sin} +function. + When you ask for routine information about an object method, and the method exists in several classes, IDLWAVE queries for the class of the -object. +object, unless the class is already known through a text property on the +@samp{->} operator (@pxref{Object Method Completion and Class +Ambiguity}), or by having been explicity included in the call +(e.g. @code{a->myclass::Foo}). @cindex Calling sequences @cindex Keywords of a routine +@cindex Routine source information The description displayed contains the calling sequence, the list of -keywords and the origin of this information (@emph{system routine}, -@emph{library routine}, @emph{Emacs buffer}, or @emph{compiled -module}). It looks like this: +keywords and the source location of this routine. It looks like this: @example -Usage: MAP_PROJ_INFO, iproj -Keywords: CIRCLE CURRENT CYLINDRICAL NAME UV_LIMITS WIDTH -Origin: buffer visiting /soft1/idl/lib/map_set.pro +Usage: XMANAGER, NAME, ID +Keywords: BACKGROUND CATCH CLEANUP EVENT_HANDLER GROUP_LEADER + JUST_REG MODAL NO_BLOCK +Source: SystemLib [LCSB] /soft1/idl53/lib/xmanager.pro @end example -Some of the text in the @file{*Help*} buffer will be active (it -highlights when you move the mouse over it). Clicking with the middle -mouse button on any of the active fields will try to find the source file of -the routine and display it in another window. Another click on the same -line will switch back to the buffer from which @kbd{C-c ?} was -called. Clicking with the right mouse button on an active field will -search the IDL online help for this item.@refill +@cindex Categories, of routines +@cindex Load-path shadows +@cindex Shadows, load-path +@cindex IDL variable @code{!PATH} +@cindex @code{!PATH}, IDL variable +@cindex IDL variable @code{!DIR} +@cindex @code{!DIR}, IDL variable + +If a definition of this routine exists in several files accessible to +IDLWAVE, several @samp{Source} lines will point to the different +files. This may indicate that your routine is shadowing a system +library routine, which may or may not be what you want +(@pxref{Load-Path Shadows}). The information about the calling +sequence and keywords is derived from the first source listed. +Library routines are available only if you have scanned your local IDL +directories or are using pre-scanned libraries (@pxref{Catalogs}). +The source entry consists of a @emph{source category}, a set of +@emph{flags} and the path to the @emph{source file}. The following +default categories exist: -@cindex Routine source file -@cindex Module source file -Another way to find the source file of a routine is the command @kbd{C-c -C-v} (@code{idlwave-find-module}). It asks for a module name, offering -the same default as @code{idlwave-routine-info} would have used. In the -minibuffer, specify a complete routine name (including the class part). -IDLWAVE will display the source file in another window.@refill +@multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 +@item @i{System} +@tab A system routine of unknown origin. When the system library has +been scanned as part of a catalog (@pxref{Catalogs}), this category +will automatically split into the next two. +@item @i{Builtin} +@tab A builtin system routine with no source code available. +@item @i{SystemLib} +@tab A library system routine in the official lib directory @file{!DIR/lib}. +@item @i{Obsolete} +@tab A library routine in the official lib directory @file{!DIR/lib/obsolete}. +@item @i{Library} +@tab A routine in a file on IDL's search path @code{!PATH}. +@item @i{Other} +@tab Any other routine with a file not known to be on the search path. +@item @i{Unresolved} +@tab An otherwise unkown routine the shell lists as unresolved +(referenced, but not compiled). +@end multitable -@cindex @code{RESOLVE_ROUTINE} -@cindex Compiling library modules -@cindex Routines, resolving -@cindex Online help, for IDL routines -The two other commands that work with the routine at point need a -running IDLWAVE shell. The key sequence @kbd{M-?} calls the command -@code{idlwave-routine-info-from-idlhelp}. This sends the command line -@samp{ONLINE_HELP, '@var{routine_name}'} to IDL in order to display the -documentation of the routine in the IDL online documentation. The key -sequence @kbd{C-c =} calls the command @code{idlwave-resolve} and sends -the line @samp{RESOLVE_ROUTINE, '@var{routine_name}'} to IDL in order to -resolve (compile) it. +Any routines discovered in library catalogs (@pxref{Library +Catalogs}), will display the category assigned during creation, +e.g. @samp{NasaLib}. For routines not discovered in this way, you can +create additional categories based on the routine's filename using the +variable @code{idlwave-special-lib-alist}. + +@cindex Flags, in routine info +@cindex Duplicate routines +@cindex Multiply defined routines +@cindex Routine definitions, multiple +The flags @code{[LCSB]} indicate the source of the information IDLWAVE +has regarding the file: from a library catalog (@w{@code{[L---]}}), +from a user catalog (@w{@code{[-C--]}}, from the IDL Shell +(@w{@code{[--S-]}}) or from an Emacs buffer (@w{@code{[---B]}}). +Combinations are possible (a compiled library routine visited in a +buffer might read @w{@code{[L-SB]}}). If a file contains multiple +definitions of the same routine, the file name will be prefixed with +@samp{(Nx)} where @samp{N} is the number of definitions. + +@cindex Online Help from the routine info buffer +@cindex Active text, in routine info +@cindex Inserting keywords, from routine info +@cindex Source file, access from routine info +Some of the text in the @file{*Help*} routine info buffer will be active +(it is highlighted when the mouse moves over it). Typically, clicking +with the right mouse button invokes online help lookup, and clicking +with the middle mouse button inserts keywords or visits files: + +@multitable @columnfractions 0.15 0.85 +@item @i{Usage} +@tab If online help is installed, a click with the @emph{right} mouse +button on the @i{Usage:} line will access the help for the +routine (@pxref{Online Help}). +@item @i{Keyword} +@tab Online help about keywords is also available with the +@emph{right} mouse button. Clicking on a keyword with the @emph{middle} +mouse button will insert this keyword in the buffer from where +@code{idlwave-routine-info} was called. Holding down @key{SHIFT} while +clicking also adds the initial @samp{/}. +@item @i{Source} +@tab Clicking with the @emph{middle} mouse button on a @samp{Source} line +finds the source file of the routine and visits it in another window. +Another click on the same line switches back to the buffer from which +@kbd{C-c ?} was called. If you use the @emph{right} mouse button, the +source will not be visited by a buffer, but displayed in the online help +window. +@item @i{Classes} +@tab The @i{Classes} line is only included in the routine info window if +the current class inherits from other classes. You can click with the +@emph{middle} mouse button to display routine info about the current +method in other classes on the inheritance chain, if such a method +exists there. +@end multitable -@code{idlwave-resolve} is one way to get a library module within reach -of IDLWAVE's routine info collecting functions. A better way is to -prescan (parts of) the library (@pxref{Library Scan}). Routine info on -library modules will then be available without the need to compile the -modules first, and even without a running shell. +@defopt idlwave-resize-routine-help-window (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means resize the Routine-info @file{*Help*} window to +fit the content. +@end defopt -@xref{Sources of Routine Info}, for in-depth information where IDLWAVE -collects data about routines, and how to update this information. +@defopt idlwave-special-lib-alist +Alist of regular expressions matching special library directories. +@end defopt -@defopt idlwave-scan-all-buffers-for-routine-info (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, scan all buffers for IDL programs when updating -info. When this variable is @code{nil}, it only parses the current -buffer.@refill +@defopt idlwave-rinfo-max-source-lines (@code{5}) +Maximum number of source files displayed in the Routine Info window. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-query-shell-for-routine-info (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means query the shell for info about compiled routines. + +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Online Help, Completion, Routine Info, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@section Online Help + +@cindex Online Help +@cindex @file{idlw-help.txt} +@cindex @file{idlw-help.el} +@cindex Installing online help +@cindex Online Help, Installation +@cindex Speed, of online help + +For IDL system routines, RSI provides extensive documentation. +IDLWAVE can access an HTML version of this documentation very quickly +and accurately. This is @emph{much} faster than using the IDL online +help application, because IDLWAVE usually gets you to the right place +in the documentation directly --- e.g. a specific keyword of a routine +--- without any additional browsing and scrolling. For this online +help to work, an HTML version of the IDL documentation, which is not +part of the standalone IDLWAVE distribution, is required. The +necessary files can be downloaded from @uref{@value{IDLWAVE-HOMEPAGE}, +the maintainers webpage}. There are a variety of options for +displaying the HTML help: see below. Help for routines without HTML +documentation is also available, using the routine documentation +header and/or source. + +@kindex M-? +In any IDL program (or, as with most IDLWAVE commands, in the IDL +Shell), press @kbd{M-?} (@code{idlwave-context-help}), or click with +@kbd{S-Mouse-3} to access context sensitive online help. The following +locations are recognized context for help: + +@cindex Context, for online help +@multitable @columnfractions .25 .75 +@item @i{Routine name} +@tab The name of a routine (function, procedure, method). +@item @i{Keyword Parameter} +@tab A keyword parameter of a routine. +@item @i{System Variable} +@tab System variables like @code{!DPI}. +@item @i{System Variable Tags} +@tab System variables tags like @code{!D.X_SIZE}. +@item @i{IDL Statement} +@tab Statements like @code{PRO}, @code{REPEAT}, @code{COMPILE_OPT}, etc. +@item @i{Class name} +@tab A class name in an @code{OBJ_NEW} call. +@item @i{Class Init} +@tab Beyond the class name in an @code{OBJ_NEW} call. +@item @i{Executive Command} +@tab An executive command like @code{.RUN}. Mostly useful in the shell. +@item @i{Structure Tags} +@tab Structure tags like @code{state.xsize} +@item @i{Class Tags} +@tab Class tags like @code{self.value}. +@item @i{Default} +@tab The routine that would be selected for routine info display. +@end multitable + +@cindex @code{OBJ_NEW}, special online help +Note that the @code{OBJ_NEW} function is special in that the help +displayed depends on the cursor position. If the cursor is on the +@samp{OBJ_NEW}, this function is described. If it is on the class +name inside the quotes, the documentation for the class is pulled up. +If the cursor is @emph{after} the class name, anywhere in the argument +list, the documentation for the corresponding @code{Init} method and +its keywords is targeted. + +Apart from an IDLWAVE buffer or shell, there are two more places from +which online help can be accessed. + +@itemize @bullet +@item +Online help for routines and keywords can be accessed through the +Routine Info display. Click with @kbd{Mouse-3} on an item to see the +corresponding help (@pxref{Routine Info}). +@item +When using completion and Emacs pops up a @file{*Completions*} buffer +with possible completions, clicking with @kbd{Mouse-3} on a completion +item invokes help on that item (@pxref{Completion}). Items for which +help is available in the online system documentation (vs. just the +program source itself) will be emphasized (e.g. colored blue). +@end itemize +@noindent +In both cases, a blue face indicates that the item is documented in +the IDL manual, but an attempt will be made to visit non-blue items +directly in the originating source file. + + +@menu +* Help with HTML Documentation:: +* Help with Source:: +@end menu + +@node Help with HTML Documentation, Help with Source, Online Help, Online Help +@subsection Help with HTML Documentation +@cindex HTML Help +@cindex Help using HTML manuals +@cindex IDL manual, HTML version + +Help using the HTML documentation is invoked with the built-in Emacs +command @code{browse-url}, which displays the relevant help topic in a +browser of your choosing. There are many possible browsers to choose +among, with differing advantages and disadvantages. The variable +@code{idlwave-help-browser-function} controls which browser help is +sent to. This function is used to set the variable +@code{browse-url-browser-function} locally for IDLWAVE help only. +Customize this variable to see what choices of browsers your system +offers. + +Certain browsers like @code{w3} (bundled with many versions of Emacs) +and @code{w3m} (@uref{http://emacs-w3m.namazu.org/}, the author's help +browser of choice) are run within Emacs, and use Emacs buffers to +display the HTML help. This can be convenient, especially on small +displays, and images can even be displayed in-line on new Emacs +versions. However, better formatting results are often achieved with +external browsers, like Mozilla. IDLWAVE assumes any browser function +containing "w3" is displayed in a local buffer. If you are using +another Emacs-local browser for which this is not true, set the +variable @code{idlwave-help-browser-is-local}. + +@emph{N.B. For Windows users}: IDLWAVE can bring up RSI help directly +in the Microsoft HTMLHelp documentation supplied with IDL: no +additional help files are needed. Be sure to set +@code{idlwave-system-directory} and the help file will be found +automatically (or, alternatively, specify its location directly with +@code{idlwave-html-help-location}). The variable +@code{idlwave-help-use-hh} controls whether HTMLHelp is used, and +which application is called to invoke it (@code{HH} is the default). +The free helper application @code{KEYHH} +(@uref{http://www.keyworks.net/keyhh.htm}) can be used instead, and is +preferrable, as it permits loading new help topics into the same help +window. @code{KEYHH} must be downloaded and installed separately. + +@xref{HTML Help Browser Tips}, for more information on selecting and +configuring a browser for use with IDL's HTML help system. + +@defopt idlwave-html-help-location @file{/usr/local/etc} +The directory where the @file{idl_html_help} dir or @file{idl.chm} +HTMLHelp files live. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-resize-routine-help-window (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, resize the Routine-info @file{*Help*} window to -fit the content.@refill +@defopt idlwave-help-use-hh @code{nil} +If set to @code{'hh} or @code{'keyhh}, use Windows native HTMLHelp +with the specified help application. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-browser-function +The browser function to use to display IDLWAVE HTML help. Should be +one of the functions available for setting +@code{browse-url-browser-function}, which see. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-browser-is-local +Is the browser selected in @code{idlwave-help-browser-function} run in a +local Emacs buffer? Defaults to @code{t} if the function contains +"-w3". +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-link-face +The face for links to IDLWAVE online help. +@end defopt + +@node Help with Source, , Help with HTML Documentation, Online Help +@subsection Help with Source +@cindex Help using routine source + +@cindex Source code, as online help +@cindex DocLib header, as online help +For routines which are not documented in an HTML manual (for example +personal or library routines), the source code itself is used as help +text. If the requested information can be found in a (more or less) +standard DocLib file header, IDLWAVE shows the header (scrolling down to +a keyword, if appropriate). Otherwise the routine definition statement +(@code{pro}/@code{function}) is shown. The doclib header sections which +are searched for include @samp{NAME} and @samp{KEYWORDS}. Localization +support can be added by customizing the @code{idlwave-help-doclib-name} +and @code{idlwave-help-doclib-keyword} variables. + +@cindex Structure tags, in online help +@cindex Class tags, in online help +Help is also available for class structure tags (@code{self.TAG}), and +generic structure tags, if structure tag completion is enabled +(@pxref{Structure Tag Completion}). This is implemented by visiting the +tag within the class or structure definition source itself. Help is not +available on built-in system class tags. + +The help window is normally displayed in the same frame, but can be +popped-up in a separate frame. The following commands can be used to +navigate inside the help system for source files: + +@multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 +@item @kbd{@key{SPACE}} +@tab Scroll forward one page. +@item @kbd{@key{RET}} +@tab Scroll forward one line. +@item @kbd{@key{DEL}} +@tab Scroll back one page. +@item @kbd{h} +@tab Jump to DocLib Header of the routine whose source is displayed +as help. +@item @kbd{H} +@tab Jump to the first DocLib Header in the file. +@item @kbd{.} @r{(Dot)} +@tab Jump back and forth between the routine definition (the +@code{pro}/@code{function} statement) and the description of the help +item in the DocLib header. +@item @kbd{F} +@tab Fontify the buffer like source code. See the variable @code{idlwave-help-fontify-source-code}. +@item @kbd{q} +@tab Kill the help window. +@end multitable + + +@defopt idlwave-help-use-dedicated-frame (@code{nil}) +Non-@code{nil} means use a separate frame for Online Help if possible. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-frame-parameters +The frame parameters for the special Online Help frame. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-max-popup-menu-items (@code{20}) +Maximum number of items per pane in pop-up menus. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-extra-help-function +Function to call for help if the normal help fails. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-fontify-source-code (@code{nil}) +Non-@code{nil} means fontify source code displayed as help. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-source-try-header (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means try to find help in routine header when +displaying source file. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-doclib-name (@code{"name"}) +The case-insensitive heading word in doclib headers to locate the +@emph{name} section. Can be a regexp, e.g. @code{"\\(name\\|nom\\)"}. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-help-doclib-keyword (@code{"KEYWORD"}) +The case-insensitive heading word in doclib headers to locate the +@emph{keywords} section. Can be a regexp. @end defopt -@node Completion, Code Templates, Routine Info, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@node Completion, Routine Source, Online Help, The IDLWAVE Major Mode @section Completion @cindex Completion - -IDLWAVE offers completion for routine names and keywords. As in many -programming modes, completion is bound to @kbd{M-@key{TAB}}. -Completion uses the same internal information as routine info, -so in order to update IDLWAVE's idea about your own routines after you -have edited or compiled them, press @kbd{C-c C-i} -(@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}).@refill +@cindex Keyword completion +@cindex Method completion +@cindex Object method completion +@cindex Class name completion +@cindex Function name completion +@cindex Procedure name completion + +@kindex M-@key{TAB} +@kindex C-c C-i +IDLWAVE offers completion for class names, routine names, keywords, +system variables, system variable tags, class structure tags, regular +structure tags and file names. As in many programming modes, +completion is bound to @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} (or @kbd{@key{TAB}} in the +IDLWAVE Shell --- @pxref{Using the Shell}). Completion uses exactly +the same internal information as routine info, so when necessary +(rarely) it can be updated with @kbd{C-c C-i} +(@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}). The completion function is context sensitive and figures out what to -complete at point. Here are example lines and what @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} -would try to complete when the cursor is on the position marked with a -@samp{*}. +complete based location of the point. Here are example lines and what +@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} would try to complete when the cursor is on the +position marked with a @samp{_}: @example -plo* @r{Procedure} -x = a* @r{Function} -plot,xra* @r{Keyword of @code{plot} procedure} -plot,x,y,/x* @r{Keyword of @code{plot} procedure} -plot,min(* @r{Keyword of @code{min} function} -obj -> a* @r{Object method (procedure)} -a(2,3) = obj -> a* @r{Object method (function)} -x = obj_new('IDL* @r{Class name} -x = obj_new('MyCl',a* @r{Keyword to @code{Init} method in class @code{MyCl}} +plo_ @r{Procedure} +x = a_ @r{Function} +plot,xra_ @r{Keyword of @code{plot} procedure} +plot,x,y,/x_ @r{Keyword of @code{plot} procedure} +plot,min(_ @r{Keyword of @code{min} function} +obj -> a_ @r{Object method (procedure)} +a(2,3) = obj -> a_ @r{Object method (function)} +x = obj_new('IDL_ @r{Class name} +x = obj_new('MyCl',a_ @r{Keyword to @code{Init} method in class @code{MyCl}} +pro A_ @r{Class name} +pro _ @r{Fill in @code{Class::} of first method in this file} +!v_ @r{System variable} +!version.t_ @r{Structure tag of system variable} +self.g_ @r{Class structure tag in methods} +state.w_ @r{Structure tag, if tag completion enabled} +name = 'a_ @r{File name (default inside quotes)} @end example +@cindex Completion, ambiguity +@cindex Completion, forcing function name +The only place where completion is ambiguous is procedure/function +@emph{keywords} versus @emph{functions}. After @samp{plot,x,_}, IDLWAVE +will always assume a keyword to @samp{plot}. However, a function is +also a possible completion here. You can force completion of a function +name at such a location by using a prefix arg: @kbd{C-u M-@key{TAB}}. + +Giving two prefix arguments (@kbd{C-u C-u M-@key{TAB}}) prompts for a +regular expression to search among the commands to be completed. As +an example, completing a blank line in this way will allow you to +search for a procedure matching a regexp. + @cindex Scrolling the @file{*Completions*} window @cindex Completion, scrolling +@cindex Completion, Online Help +@cindex Online Help in @file{*Completions*} buffer If the list of completions is too long to fit in the @file{*Completions*} window, the window can be scrolled by pressing -@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} repeatedly.@refill +@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} repeatedly. Online help (if installed) for each +possible completion is available by clicking with @kbd{Mouse-3} on the +item. Items for which system online help (from the IDL manual) is +available will be emphasized (e.g. colored blue). For other items, the +corresponding source code or DocLib header will be used as the help +text. + +@cindex Completion, cancelling +@cindex Cancelling completion +Completion is not a blocking operation --- you are free to continue +editing, enter commands, or simply ignore the @file{*Completions*} +buffer during a completion operation. If, however, the most recent +command was a completion, @kbd{C-g} will remove the buffer and restore +the window configuration. You can also remove the buffer at any time +with no negative consequences. -@cindex Case of completed words -The case of the completed words is determined by what is already in the -buffer. When the partial word being completed is all lower case, the -completion will be lower case as well. If at least one character is -upper case, the string will be completed in upper case or mixed case. -The default is to use upper case for procedures, functions and keywords, -and mixed case for object class names and methods, similar to the -conventions in the IDL manuals. These defaults can be changed with the -variable @code{idlwave-completion-case}.@refill +@defopt idlwave-keyword-completion-adds-equal (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means completion automatically adds @samp{=} after +completed keywords. +@end defopt -@defopt idlwave-completion-case -Association list setting the case (UPPER/lower/Capitalized/...) of completed -words.@refill +@defopt idlwave-function-completion-adds-paren (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means completion automatically adds @samp{(} after +completed function. A value of `2' means also add the closing +parenthesis and position the cursor between the two. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-completion-force-default-case (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means, completion will always honor the settings in -@code{idlwave-completion-case}. When nil (the default), lower case -strings will be completed to lower case. +@defopt idlwave-completion-restore-window-configuration (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means restore window configuration after successful +completion. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-complete-empty-string-as-lower-case (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means, the empty string is considered lower case for -completion.@refill +@defopt idlwave-highlight-help-links-in-completion (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means highlight completions for which system help is +available. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-keyword-completion-adds-equal (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, completion automatically adds @samp{=} after -completed keywords.@refill +@menu +* Case of Completed Words:: CaseOFcomPletedWords +* Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity:: obj->Method, what? +* Object Method Completion in the Shell:: +* Class and Keyword Inheritance:: obj->Method, _EXTRA=e +* Structure Tag Completion:: Completing state.Tag +@end menu + +@node Case of Completed Words, Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity, Completion, Completion +@subsection Case of Completed Words +@cindex Case of completed words +@cindex Mixed case completion +IDL is a case-insensitive language, so casing is a matter of style +only. IDLWAVE helps maintain a consistent casing style for completed +items. The case of the completed words is determined by what is +already in the buffer. As an exception, when the partial word being +completed is all lower case, the completion will be lower case as +well. If at least one character is upper case, the string will be +completed in upper case or mixed case, depending on the value of the +variable @code{idlwave-completion-case}. The default is to use upper +case for procedures, functions and keywords, and mixed case for object +class names and methods, similar to the conventions in the IDL +manuals. For instance, to enable mixed-case completion for routines +in addition to classes and methods, you need an entry such as +@code{(routine . preserve)} in that variable. To enable total control +over the case of completed items, independent of buffer context, set +@code{idlwave-completion-force-default-case} to non-@code{nil}. + +@defopt idlwave-completion-case +Association list setting the case (UPPER/lower/Capitalized/MixedCase...) +of completed words. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-function-completion-adds-paren (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, completion automatically adds @samp{(} after -completed function. A value of `2' means, also add the closing -parenthesis and position cursor between the two.@refill +@defopt idlwave-completion-force-default-case (@code{nil}) +Non-@code{nil} means completion will always honor the settings in +@code{idlwave-completion-case}. When nil (the default), entirely lower +case strings will always be completed to lower case, no matter what the +settings in @code{idlwave-completion-case}. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-completion-restore-window-configuration (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, restore window configuration after successful -completion.@refill +@defopt idlwave-complete-empty-string-as-lower-case (@code{nil}) +Non-@code{nil} means the empty string is considered lower case for +completion. @end defopt -@subsubheading Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity +@node Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity, Object Method Completion in the Shell, Case of Completed Words, Completion +@subsection Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity @cindex Object methods @cindex Class ambiguity +@cindex @code{self} object, default class An object method is not uniquely determined without the object's class. -Since the class part is usually omitted in the source code, IDLWAVE -considers all available methods in all classes as possible completions -of an object method name. For keywords, the combined keywords of the -current method in all available classes will be considered. In the -@file{*Completions*} buffer, the classes allowed for each completion -will be shown next to the item (see option -@code{idlwave-completion-show-classes}).@refill - +Since the class is almost always omitted in the calling source, IDLWAVE +considers all available methods in all classes as possible method name +completions. The combined list of keywords of the current method in +@emph{all} known classes which contain that method will be considered +for keyword completion. In the @file{*Completions*} buffer, the +matching classes will be shown next to each item (see option +@code{idlwave-completion-show-classes}). As a special case, the class +of an object called @samp{self} is always taken to be the class of the +current routine. All classes it inherits from are considered as well +where appropriate. + +@cindex Forcing class query. +@cindex Class query, forcing You can also call @code{idlwave-complete} with a prefix arg: @kbd{C-u M-@key{TAB}}. IDLWAVE will then prompt you for the class in order to narrow down the number of possible completions. The variable -@code{idlwave-query-class} can be configured to make this behavior the -default (not really recommended). After you have specified the class -for a particular statement (e.g. when completing the method), IDLWAVE -can remember it for the rest of the editing session. Subsequent -completions in the same statement (e.g. keywords) can then reuse this -class information. Remembering the class works by placing a text -property in the object operator @samp{->}. This is not enabled by -default - the variable @code{idlwave-store-inquired-class} can be used -to turn it on.@refill - -@defopt idlwave-completion-show-classes (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, show classes in @file{*Completions*} buffer when -completing object methods and keywords.@refill +@code{idlwave-query-class} can be configured to make such prompting the +default for all methods (not recommended), or selectively for very +common methods for which the number of completing keywords would be too +large (e.g. @code{Init}). + +@cindex Saving object class on @code{->} +@cindex @code{->} +After you have specified the class for a particular statement (e.g. when +completing the method), IDLWAVE can remember it for the rest of the +editing session. Subsequent completions in the same statement +(e.g. keywords) can then reuse this class information. This works by +placing a text property on the method invocation operator @samp{->}, +after which the operator will be shown in a different face. This is not +enabled by default --- the variable @code{idlwave-store-inquired-class} +can be used to turn it on. + +@defopt idlwave-completion-show-classes (@code{1}) +Non-@code{nil} means show up to that many classes in +@file{*Completions*} buffer when completing object methods and +keywords. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-completion-fontify-classes (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, fontify the classes in completions buffer. +Non-@code{nil} means fontify the classes in completions buffer. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-query-class (@code{nil}) -Association list governing query for object classes during completion.@refill +Association list governing query for object classes during completion. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-store-inquired-class (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means, store class of a method call as text property on -@samp{->}.@refill +Non-@code{nil} means store class of a method call as text property on +@samp{->}. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-class-arrow-face Face to highlight object operator arrows @samp{->} which carry a class -property.@refill +text property. @end defopt -@node Code Templates, Actions, Completion, The IDLWAVE Major Mode -@section Code Templates -@cindex Code templates -@cindex Abbreviations -@cindex Templates +@node Object Method Completion in the Shell, Class and Keyword Inheritance, Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity, Completion +@subsection Object Method Completion in the Shell +@cindex Method Completion in Shell +In the IDLWAVE Shell (@pxref{The IDLWAVE Shell}), objects on which +methods are being invoked have a special property: they must exist as +variables, and so their class can be determined (for instance, using the +@code{obj_class()} function). In the Shell, when attempting completion, +routine info, or online help within a method routine, a query is sent to +determine the class of the object. If this query is successful, the +class found will be used to select appropriate completions, routine +info, or help. If unsuccessful, information from all known classes will +be used (as in the buffer). Setting the variable +@code{idlwave-store-inquired-class} can eliminate unnecessary repetitive +queries for the object's class, and speed up completion. + +@node Class and Keyword Inheritance, Structure Tag Completion, Object Method Completion in the Shell, Completion +@subsection Class and Keyword Inheritance +@cindex Inheritance, class +@cindex Keyword inheritance +@cindex Inheritance, keyword + +Class inheritance affects which methods are called in IDL. An object of +a class which inherits methods from one or more superclasses can +override that method by defining its own method of the same name, extend +the method by calling the method(s) of its superclass(es) in its +version, or inherit the method directly by making no modifications. +IDLWAVE examines class definitions during completion and routine +information display, and records all inheritance information it finds. +This information is displayed if appropriate with the calling sequence +for methods (@pxref{Routine Info}), as long as variable +@code{idlwave-support-inheritance} is non-@code{nil}. + +In many class methods, @emph{keyword} inheritance (@code{_EXTRA} and +@code{_REF_EXTRA}) is used hand-in-hand with class inheritance and +method overriding. E.g., in a @code{SetProperty} method, this technique +allows a single call @code{obj->SetProperty} to set properties up the +entire class inheritance chain. This is often referred to as +@emph{chaining}, and is characterized by chained method calls like +@w{@code{self->MySuperClass::SetProperty,_EXTRA=e}}. + +IDLWAVE can accomodate this special synergy between class and keyword +inheritance: if @code{_EXTRA} or @code{_REF_EXTRA} is detected among a +method's keyword parameters, all keywords of superclass versions of +the method being considered can be included in completion. There is +of course no guarantee that this type of keyword chaining actually +occurrs, but for some methods it's a very convenient assumption. The +variable @code{idlwave-keyword-class-inheritance} can be used to +configure which methods have keyword inheritance treated in this +simple, class-driven way. By default, only @code{Init} and +@code{(Get|Set)Property} are. The completion buffer will label +keywords based on their originating class. + +@defopt idlwave-support-inheritance (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means consider inheritance during completion, online help etc. +@end defopt -IDLWAVE can insert IDL code templates into the buffer. For a few -templates, this is done with direct keybindings: +@defopt idlwave-keyword-class-inheritance +A list of regular expressions to match methods for which simple +class-driven keyword inheritance will be used for Completion. +@end defopt -@multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 -@item @kbd{C-c C-c} -@tab @code{CASE} statement template -@item @kbd{C-c C-f} -@tab @code{FOR} loop template -@item @kbd{C-c C-r} -@tab @code{REPEAT} loop template -@item @kbd{C-c C-w} -@tab @code{WHILE} loop template +@node Structure Tag Completion, , Class and Keyword Inheritance, Completion +@subsection Structure Tag Completion +@cindex Completion, structure tag +@cindex Structure tag completion + +In many programs, especially those involving widgets, large structures +(e.g. the @samp{state} structure) are used to communicate among +routines. It is very convenient to be able to complete structure tags, +in the same way as for instance variables (tags) of the @samp{self} +object (@pxref{Object Method Completion and Class Ambiguity}). Add-in +code for structure tag completion is available in the form of a loadable +completion module: @file{idlw-complete-structtag.el}. Tag completion in +structures is highly ambiguous (much more so than @samp{self} +completion), so @code{idlw-complete-structtag} makes an unusual and very +specific assumption: the exact same variable name is used to refer to +the structure in all parts of the program. This is entirely unenforced +by the IDL language, but is a typical convention. If you consistently +refer to the same structure with the same variable name +(e.g. @samp{state}), structure tags which are read from its definition +in the same file can be used for completion. + +Structure tag completion is not enabled by default. To enable it, +simply add the following to your @file{.emacs}: + +@lisp + (add-hook 'idlwave-load-hook + (lambda () (require 'idlw-complete-structtag))) +@end lisp + +Once enabled, you'll also be able to access online help on the structure +tags, using the usual methods (@pxref{Online Help}). + +@node Routine Source, Resolving Routines, Completion, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@section Routine Source +@cindex Routine source file +@cindex Module source file +@cindex Source file, of a routine +@kindex C-c C-v +In addition to clicking on a @i{Source:} line in the routine info +window, there is another way to quickly visit the source file of a +routine. The command @kbd{C-c C-v} (@code{idlwave-find-module}) asks +for a module name, offering the same default as +@code{idlwave-routine-info} would have used, taken from nearby buffer +contents. In the minibuffer, specify a complete routine name (including +any class part). IDLWAVE will display the source file in another +window, positioned at the routine in question. You can also visit a +routine in the current buffer, with completion, by using a single prefix +(@kbd{C-u C-c C-v}). + +@cindex Buffers, killing +@cindex Killing autoloaded buffers +Since getting the source of a routine into a buffer is so easy with +IDLWAVE, too many buffers visiting different IDL source files are +sometimes created. The special command @kbd{C-c C-k} +(@code{idlwave-kill-autoloaded-buffers}) can be used to easily remove +these buffers. + +@node Resolving Routines, Code Templates, Routine Source, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@section Resolving Routines +@cindex @code{RESOLVE_ROUTINE} +@cindex Compiling library modules +@cindex Routines, resolving + +The key sequence @kbd{C-c =} calls the command @code{idlwave-resolve} +and sends the line @samp{RESOLVE_ROUTINE, '@var{routine_name}'} to IDL +in order to resolve (compile) it. The default routine to be resolved is +taken from context, but you get a chance to edit it. + +@code{idlwave-resolve} is one way to get a library module within reach +of IDLWAVE's routine info collecting functions. A better way is to +keep routine information available in catalogs (@pxref{Catalogs}). +Routine info on modules will then be available without the need to +compile the modules first, and even without a running shell. + +@xref{Sources of Routine Info}, for more information on the ways IDLWAVE +collects data about routines, and how to update this information. + +@node Code Templates, Abbreviations, Resolving Routines, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@section Code Templates +@cindex Code templates +@cindex Templates + +IDLWAVE can insert IDL code templates into the buffer. For a few +templates, this is done with direct key bindings: + +@multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 +@item @kbd{C-c C-c} +@tab @code{CASE} statement template +@item @kbd{C-c C-f} +@tab @code{FOR} loop template +@item @kbd{C-c C-r} +@tab @code{REPEAT} loop template +@item @kbd{C-c C-w} +@tab @code{WHILE} loop template @end multitable -Otherwise, special abbreviations are used. Emacs abbreviations are -expanded by typing text into the buffer and pressing @key{SPC} or -@key{RET}. The special abbreviations used to insert code templates all -start with a @samp{\} (the backslash). Here are a few examples of -predefined abbreviations. For a full list, use @kbd{M-x +All code templates are also available as abbreviations +(@pxref{Abbreviations}). + +@node Abbreviations, Actions, Code Templates, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@section Abbreviations +@cindex Abbreviations + +Special abbreviations exist to enable rapid entry of commonly used +commands. Emacs abbreviations are expanded by typing text into the +buffer and pressing @key{SPC} or @key{RET}. The special abbreviations +used to insert code templates all start with a @samp{\} (the backslash), +or, optionally, any other character set in +@code{idlwave-abbrev-start-char}. IDLWAVE ensures that abbreviations are +only expanded where they should be (i.e., not in a string or comment), +and permits the point to be moved after an abbreviation expansion --- +very useful for positioning the mark inside of parentheses, etc. + +Special abbreviations are pre-defined for code templates and other +useful items. To visit the full list of abbreviations, use @kbd{M-x idlwave-list-abbrevs}. +Template abbreviations: + @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 @item @code{\pr} @tab @code{PROCEDURE} template @@ -806,62 +1921,197 @@ idlwave-list-abbrevs}. @tab @code{IF} statement template @item @code{\elif} @tab @code{IF-ELSE} statement template +@end multitable + +String abbreviations: + +@multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 +@item @code{\ap} +@tab @code{arg_present()} @item @code{\b} -@tab @code{BEGIN} +@tab @code{begin} +@item @code{\cb} +@tab @code{byte()} +@item @code{\cc} +@tab @code{complex()} +@item @code{\cd} +@tab @code{double()} +@item @code{\cf} +@tab @code{float()} +@item @code{\cl} +@tab @code{long()} +@item @code{\co} +@tab @code{common} +@item @code{\cs} +@tab @code{string()} +@item @code{\cx} +@tab @code{fix()} +@item @code{\e} +@tab @code{else} +@item @code{\ec} +@tab @code{endcase} +@item @code{\ee} +@tab @code{endelse} +@item @code{\ef} +@tab @code{endfor} +@item @code{\ei} +@tab @code{endif else if} +@item @code{\el} +@tab @code{endif else} +@item @code{\en} +@tab @code{endif} +@item @code{\er} +@tab @code{endrep} +@item @code{\es} +@tab @code{endswitch} +@item @code{\ew} +@tab @code{endwhile} +@item @code{\g} +@tab @code{goto,} +@item @code{\h} +@tab @code{help,} +@item @code{\ik} +@tab @code{if keyword_set() then} +@item @code{\iap} +@tab @code{if arg_present() then} +@item @code{\ine} +@tab @code{if n_elements() eq 0 then} +@item @code{\inn} +@tab @code{if n_elements() ne 0 then} +@item @code{\k} +@tab @code{keyword_set()} +@item @code{\n} +@tab @code{n_elements()} +@item @code{\np} +@tab @code{n_params()} +@item @code{\oi} +@tab @code{on_ioerror,} +@item @code{\or} +@tab @code{openr,} +@item @code{\ou} +@tab @code{openu,} +@item @code{\ow} +@tab @code{openw,} +@item @code{\p} +@tab @code{print,} +@item @code{\pt} +@tab @code{plot,} +@item @code{\re} +@tab @code{read,} +@item @code{\rf} +@tab @code{readf,} +@item @code{\rt} +@tab @code{return} +@item @code{\ru} +@tab @code{readu,} +@item @code{\s} +@tab @code{size()} +@item @code{\sc} +@tab @code{strcompress()} +@item @code{\sl} +@tab @code{strlowcase()} +@item @code{\sm} +@tab @code{strmid()} +@item @code{\sn} +@tab @code{strlen()} +@item @code{\sp} +@tab @code{strpos()} +@item @code{\sr} +@tab @code{strtrim()} +@item @code{\st} +@tab @code{strput()} +@item @code{\su} +@tab @code{strupcase()} +@item @code{\t} +@tab @code{then} +@item @code{\u} +@tab @code{until} +@item @code{\wc} +@tab @code{widget_control,} +@item @code{\wi} +@tab @code{widget_info()} +@item @code{\wu} +@tab @code{writeu,} @end multitable - -@defopt idlwave-abbrev-start-char -A single character string used to start abbreviations in abbrev -mode.@refill + +@noindent You can easily add your own abbreviations or override existing +abbrevs with @code{define-abbrev} in your mode hook, using the +convenience function @code{idlwave-define-abbrev}: + +@lisp +(add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook + (lambda () + (idlwave-define-abbrev "wb" "widget_base()" + (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 1)) + (idlwave-define-abbrev "ine" "IF N_Elements() EQ 0 THEN" + (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 11)))) +@end lisp + +Notice how the abbreviation (here @emph{wb}) and its expansion +(@emph{widget_base()}) are given as arguments, and the single argument to +@code{idlwave-keyword-abbrev} (here @emph{1}) specifies how far back to +move the point upon expansion (in this example, to put it between the +parentheses). + +The abbreviations are expanded in upper or lower case, depending upon +the variables @code{idlwave-abbrev-change-case} and, for reserved word +templates, @code{idlwave-reserved-word-upcase} (@pxref{Case Changes}). + +@defopt idlwave-abbrev-start-char (@code{"\"}) +A single character string used to start abbreviations in abbrev mode. +Beware of common characters which might naturally occur in sequence with +abbreviation strings. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-abbrev-move (@code{t}) Non-@code{nil} means the abbrev hook can move point, e.g. to end up -between the parenthesis of a function call. +between the parentheses of a function call. @end defopt -@node Actions, Doc Header, Code Templates, The IDLWAVE Major Mode +@node Actions, Doc Header, Abbreviations, The IDLWAVE Major Mode @section Actions @cindex Actions @cindex Coding standards, enforcing -@emph{Actions} are special commands which are executed automatically -while you write code in order to check the structure of the program or -to enforce coding standards. Most actions which have been implemented -in IDLWAVE are turned off by default, assuming that the average user -wants her code the way she writes it. But if you are a lazy typist and -want your code to adhere to certain standards, they can be -helpful.@refill +@emph{Actions} are special formatting commands which are executed +automatically while you write code in order to check the structure of +the program or to enforce coding standards. Most actions which have +been implemented in IDLWAVE are turned off by default, assuming that the +average user wants her code the way she writes it. But if you are a +lazy typist and want your code to adhere to certain standards, actions +can be helpful. + +Actions can be applied in three ways: -Action can be applied in three ways: @itemize @bullet @item Some actions are applied directly while typing. For example, pressing @samp{=} can run a check to make sure that this operator is surrounded by spaces and insert these spaces if necessary. Pressing @key{SPC} after a reserved word can call a command to change the word to upper -case.@refill +case. @item When a line is re-indented with @key{TAB}, actions can be applied to the entire line. To enable this, the variable @code{idlwave-do-actions} -must be non-@code{nil}.@refill +must be non-@code{nil}. @item @cindex Foreign code, adapting @cindex Actions, applied to foreign code -Action can also be applied to a larger piece of code, e.g. in order to -convert foreign code to your own style. To do this, mark the relevant -part of the code and execute @kbd{M-x expand-region-abbrevs}. Useful -marking commands are @kbd{C-x h} (the entire file) or @kbd{M-C-h} (the -current subprogram). @xref{Code Indentation}, for information how to -ajust the indentation of the code.@refill +Actions can also be applied to a larger piece of code, e.g. to convert +foreign code to your own style. To do this, mark the relevant part of +the code and execute @kbd{M-x expand-region-abbrevs}. Useful marking +commands are @kbd{C-x h} (the entire file) or @kbd{C-M-h} (the current +subprogram). @xref{Code Indentation}, for information how to adjust the +indentation of the code. @end itemize @defopt idlwave-do-actions (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means performs actions when indenting. +Non-@code{nil} means performs actions when indenting. Individual action +settings are described below and set separately. @end defopt @menu -* Block Boundary Check:: Is the END correct +* Block Boundary Check:: Is the END statement correct? * Padding Operators:: Enforcing space around `=' etc * Case Changes:: Enforcing upper case keywords @end menu @@ -871,41 +2121,47 @@ Non-@code{nil} means performs actions when indenting. @cindex Block boundary check @cindex @code{END} type checking @cindex @code{END}, automatic insertion +@cindex @code{END}, expanding @cindex Block, closing @cindex Closing a block Whenever you type an @code{END} statement, IDLWAVE finds the corresponding start of the block and the cursor blinks back to that location for a second. If you have typed a specific @code{END}, like -@code{ENDIF} or @code{ENDCASE}, you get a warning if that kind of END -does not match the type of block it terminates.@refill +@code{ENDIF} or @code{ENDCASE}, you get a warning if that terminator +does not match the type of block it terminates. Set the variable @code{idlwave-expand-generic-end} in order to have all -generic @code{END} statements automatically expanded to a specific type. -You can also type @kbd{C-c ]} to close the current block by inserting -the appropriate @code{END} statement.@refill +generic @code{END} statements automatically expanded to the appropriate +type. You can also type @kbd{C-c ]} to close the current block by +inserting the appropriate @code{END} statement. @defopt idlwave-show-block (@code{t}) Non-@code{nil} means point blinks to block beginning for -@code{idlwave-show-begin}.@refill +@code{idlwave-show-begin}. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-expand-generic-end (@code{nil}) +@defopt idlwave-expand-generic-end (@code{t}) Non-@code{nil} means expand generic END to ENDIF/ENDELSE/ENDWHILE etc. @end defopt +@defopt idlwave-reindent-end (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means re-indent line after END was typed. +@end defopt + @node Padding Operators, Case Changes, Block Boundary Check, Actions @subsection Padding Operators @cindex Padding operators with spaces @cindex Operators, padding with spaces +@cindex Space, around operators Some operators can be automatically surrounded by spaces. This can -happen when the operator is typed, or also later when the line is -indented. IDLWAVE contains this setting for the operators @samp{&}, -@samp{<}, @samp{>}, @samp{,}, @samp{=}, but the feature is turned off by -default. If you want to turn it on, customize the variable -@code{idlwave-surround-by-blank}. You can also define similar actions -for other operators by using the function +happen when the operator is typed, or later when the line is indented. +IDLWAVE can pad the operators @samp{&}, @samp{<}, @samp{>}, @samp{,}, +@samp{=}, and @samp{->}, but this feature is turned off by default. If +you want to turn it on, customize the variables +@code{idlwave-surround-by-blank} and @code{idlwave-do-actions}. You can +also define similar actions for other operators by using the function @code{idlwave-action-and-binding} in the mode hook. For example, to enforce space padding of the @samp{+} and @samp{*} operators, try this in @file{.emacs} @@ -919,25 +2175,27 @@ in @file{.emacs} @end lisp @defopt idlwave-surround-by-blank (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means, enable @code{idlwave-surround}. If non-nil, -@samp{=}, @samp{<}, @samp{>}, @samp{&}, @samp{,} are surrounded with -spaces by @code{idlwave-surround}. +Non-@code{nil} means enable @code{idlwave-surround}. If non-@code{nil}, +@samp{=}, @samp{<}, @samp{>}, @samp{&}, @samp{,}, @samp{->} are +surrounded with spaces by @code{idlwave-surround}. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-pad-keyword (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means pad @samp{=} for keywords like assignments.@refill +Non-@code{nil} means pad @samp{=} for keywords like assignments. @end defopt @node Case Changes, , Padding Operators, Actions @subsection Case Changes @cindex Case changes +@cindex Upcase, enforcing for reserved words +@cindex Downcase, enforcing for reserved words Actions can be used to change the case of reserved words or expanded abbreviations by customizing the variables @code{idlwave-abbrev-change-case} and @code{idlwave-reserved-word-upcase}. If you want to change the case of additional words automatically, put something like the following into -your @file{.emacs} file:@refill +your @file{.emacs} file: @lisp (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook @@ -953,7 +2211,9 @@ your @file{.emacs} file:@refill @end lisp For more information, see the documentation string for the function -@code{idlwave-action-and-binding}. +@code{idlwave-action-and-binding}. For information on controlling the +case of routines, keywords, classes, and methods as they are completed, see +@ref{Completion}. @defopt idlwave-abbrev-change-case (@code{nil}) Non-@code{nil} means all abbrevs will be forced to either upper or lower @@ -961,7 +2221,7 @@ case. Legal values are @code{nil}, @code{t}, and @code{down}. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-reserved-word-upcase (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means, reserved words will be made upper case via abbrev +Non-@code{nil} means reserved words will be made upper case via abbrev expansion. @end defopt @@ -969,22 +2229,31 @@ expansion. @node Doc Header, Motion Commands, Actions, The IDLWAVE Major Mode @section Documentation Header @cindex Documentation header +@cindex DocLib header @cindex Modification timestamp @cindex Header, for file documentation @cindex Timestamp, in doc header. @cindex Changelog, in doc header. +@kindex C-c C-h +@kindex C-c C-m The command @kbd{C-c C-h} inserts a standard routine header into the -buffer, with the usual fields for documentation. One of the keywords is +buffer, with the usual fields for documentation (a different header can +be specified with @code{idlwave-file-header}). One of the keywords is @samp{MODIFICATION HISTORY} under which the changes to a routine can be recorded. The command @kbd{C-c C-m} jumps to the @samp{MODIFICATION -HISTORY} of the current routine or file and inserts the user -name with a timestamp. +HISTORY} of the current routine or file and inserts the user name with a +timestamp. @defopt idlwave-file-header The doc-header template or a path to a file containing it. @end defopt +@defopt idlwave-header-to-beginning-of-file (@code{nil}) +Non-@code{nil} means the documentation header will always be at start +of file. +@end defopt + @defopt idlwave-timestamp-hook The hook function used to update the timestamp of a function. @end defopt @@ -1006,9 +2275,28 @@ Regexp matching the start of a document library header. @cindex Motion commands @cindex Program structure, moving through @cindex Code structure, moving through +@cindex @file{Func-menu}, XEmacs package +@cindex @file{Imenu}, Emacs package +@cindex Function definitions, jumping to +@cindex Procedure definitions, jumping to -Several commands allow to move quickly through the structure of an IDL -program. These are +IDLWAVE supports both @file{Imenu} and @file{Func-menu}, two packages +which make it easy to jump to the definitions of functions and +procedures in the current file with a pop-up selection. To bind +@file{Imenu} to a mouse-press, use in your @file{.emacs}: + +@lisp +(define-key global-map [S-down-mouse-3] 'imenu) +@end lisp + +@cindex @file{Speedbar}, Emacs package + +In addition, @file{Speedbar} support allows convenient navigation of a +source tree of IDL routine files, quickly stepping to routine +definitions. See @code{Tools->Display Speedbar}. + +Several commands allow you to move quickly through the structure of an +IDL program: @multitable @columnfractions .15 .85 @item @kbd{C-M-a} @@ -1019,13 +2307,13 @@ program. These are @tab Beginning of block (stay inside the block) @item @kbd{C-c @}} @tab End of block (stay inside the block) -@item @kbd{M-C-n} +@item @kbd{C-M-n} @tab Forward block (on same level) -@item @kbd{M-C-p} +@item @kbd{C-M-p} @tab Backward block (on same level) -@item @kbd{M-C-d} +@item @kbd{C-M-d} @tab Down block (enters a block) -@item @kbd{M-C-u} +@item @kbd{C-M-u} @tab Backward up block (leaves a block) @item @kbd{C-c C-n} @tab Next Statement @@ -1034,6 +2322,7 @@ program. These are @node Misc Options, , Motion Commands, The IDLWAVE Major Mode @section Miscellaneous Options +@cindex Hooks @defopt idlwave-help-application The external application providing reference help for programming. @@ -1054,38 +2343,35 @@ Normal hook. Executed when @file{idlwave.el} is loaded. - - - - - - - - - - - - - @node The IDLWAVE Shell, Installation, The IDLWAVE Major Mode, Top @chapter The IDLWAVE Shell @cindex IDLWAVE shell @cindex Major mode, @code{idlwave-shell-mode} - -The IDLWAVE shell is an Emacs major mode which allows to run the IDL -program as an inferior process of Emacs. It can be used to work with -IDL interactively, to compile and run IDL programs in Emacs buffers and -to debug these programs. The IDLWAVE shell uses @file{comint}, an Emacs -packages which handles the communication with the IDL program. -Unfortunately IDL for Windows and MacOS does not allow the interaction -with Emacs@footnote{Please inform the maintainer if you come up with a way -to make the IDLWAVE shell work on these systems.} - so the IDLWAVE shell -only works under Unix.@refill +@cindex IDL, as Emacs subprocess +@cindex Subprocess of Emacs, IDL +@cindex Comint, Emacs package +@cindex Windows +@cindex MacOS + +The IDLWAVE shell is an Emacs major mode which permits running the IDL +program as an inferior process of Emacs, and works closely with the +IDLWAVE major mode in buffers. It can be used to work with IDL +interactively, to compile and run IDL programs in Emacs buffers and to +debug these programs. The IDLWAVE shell is built on @file{comint}, an +Emacs packages which handles the communication with the IDL program. +Unfortunately IDL for Windows does not have command-prompt versions +and thus do not allow the interaction with Emacs@footnote{Please +inform the maintainer if you come up with a way to make the IDLWAVE +shell work on these systems.} --- so the IDLWAVE shell currently only +works under Unix and MacOSX. @menu * Starting the Shell:: How to launch IDL as a subprocess * Using the Shell:: Interactively working with the Shell -* Debugging IDL Programs:: Compilation/Debugging +* Commands Sent to the Shell:: +* Debugging IDL Programs:: +* Examining Variables:: +* Custom Expression Examination:: @end menu @node Starting the Shell, Using the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell @@ -1094,26 +2380,48 @@ only works under Unix.@refill @cindex Shell, starting @cindex Dedicated frame, for shell buffer @cindex Frame, for shell buffer +@cindex Subprocess of Emacs, IDL +@kindex C-c C-s The IDLWAVE shell can be started with the command @kbd{M-x idlwave-shell}. In @code{idlwave-mode} the function is bound to @kbd{C-c C-s}. It creates a buffer @file{*idl*} which is used to -interact with the shell. If the shell is already running, @kbd{C-c C-s} -will simple switch to the shell buffer. The command @kbd{C-c C-l} -(@code{idlwave-shell-recenter-shell-window}) displays the -shell window without selecting it.@refill +interact with the shell. If the shell is already running, @kbd{C-c +C-s} will simply switch to the shell buffer. The command @kbd{C-c +C-l} (@code{idlwave-shell-recenter-shell-window}) displays the shell +window without selecting it. The shell can also be started +automatically when another command tries to send a command to it. To +enable auto start, set the variable +@code{idlwave-shell-automatic-start} to @code{t}. In order to create a separate frame for the IDLWAVE shell buffer, call @code{idlwave-shell} with a prefix argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-s} or @kbd{C-u C-c C-l}. If you always want a dedicated frame for the shell window, configure the variable -@code{idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame}.@refill +@code{idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame}. -The shell can also be started automatically when another command tries -to send a command to it. To enable auto start, set the variable -@code{idlwave-shell-automatic-start} to @code{t}.@refill +To launch a quick IDLWAVE shell directly from a shell prompt without +an IDLWAVE buffer (e.g., as a replacement for running inside an +xterm), define a system alias with the following content: -@defopt idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name +@example +emacs -geometry 80x32 -eval "(idlwave-shell 'quick)" +@end example + +Replace the @samp{-geometry 80x32} option with @samp{-nw} if you prefer +the Emacs process to run directly inside the terminal window. + +@cindex ENVI +@cindex IDL> Prompt + +To use IDLWAVE with ENVI or other custom packages which change the +@samp{IDL> } prompt, you must change the +@code{idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern}, which defaults to @samp{"^ ?IDL> +"}. Normally, you can just replace the @samp{IDL} in this expression +with the prompt you see. A suitable pattern which matches the prompt +for both ENVI and IDL simultaneously is @samp{"^ ?\\(ENVI\\|IDL\\)> "}. + +@defopt idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name (@file{idl}) This is the command to run IDL. @end defopt @@ -1129,7 +2437,7 @@ Regexp to match IDL prompt at beginning of a line. Name to be associated with the IDL process. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-shell-automatic-start +@defopt idlwave-shell-automatic-start (@code{nil}) Non-@code{nil} means attempt to invoke idlwave-shell if not already running. @end defopt @@ -1138,42 +2446,63 @@ running. Initial commands, separated by newlines, to send to IDL. @end defopt +@defopt idlwave-shell-save-command-history (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means preserve command history between sessions. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-shell-command-history-file (@file{~/.idlwave/.idlwhist}) +The file in which the command history of the idlwave shell is saved. +Unless it's an absolute path, it goes in +@code{idlwave-config-directory}. +@end defopt + @defopt idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means, IDLWAVE should use a special frame to display -shell buffer. +Non-@code{nil} means IDLWAVE should use a special frame to display the +shell buffer. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-shell-frame-parameters The frame parameters for a dedicated idlwave-shell frame. @end defopt +@defopt idlwave-shell-raise-frame (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means `idlwave-shell' raises the frame showing the shell +window. +@end defopt + @defopt idlwave-shell-temp-pro-prefix -The prefix for temporary IDL files used when compiling regions.@refill +The prefix for temporary IDL files used when compiling regions. @end defopt +@cindex Hooks @defopt idlwave-shell-mode-hook Hook for customizing @code{idlwave-shell-mode}. @end defopt -@node Using the Shell, Debugging IDL Programs, Starting the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell +@node Using the Shell, Commands Sent to the Shell, Starting the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell @section Using the Shell -@cindex comint +@cindex Comint @cindex Shell, basic commands The IDLWAVE shell works in the same fashion as other shell modes in Emacs. It provides command history, command line editing and job -control. Here is a list of commonly used commands, see the Emacs -documentation on @file{comint} for additional information.@refill +control. The @key{UP} and @key{DOWN} arrows cycle through the input +history just like in an X terminal@footnote{This is different from +normal Emacs/Comint behavior, but more like an xterm. If you prefer the +default comint functionality, check the variable +@code{idlwave-shell-arrows-do-history}.}. The history is preserved +between emacs and IDL sessions. Here is a list of commonly used +commands: @multitable @columnfractions .12 .88 -@item @kbd{M-p} -@tab Cycle backwards in input history matching input -@item @kbd{M-n} -@tab Cycle forwards +@item @key{UP}, @key{M-p} +@tab Cycle backwards in input history +@item @key{DOWN}, @key{M-n} +@tab Cycle forwards in input history @item @kbd{M-r} @tab Previous input matching a regexp @item @kbd{M-s} -@tab Next input that matches a regexp +@tab Next input matching a regexp @item @kbd{return} @tab Send input or copy line to current prompt @item @kbd{C-c C-a} @@ -1197,16 +2526,21 @@ documentation on @file{comint} for additional information.@refill @end multitable In addition to these standard @file{comint} commands, -@code{idlwave-shell-mode} has some bindings which correspond to similar -commands in @code{idlwave-mode}. See @ref{Routine Info} and -@ref{Completion} for more information on these commands.@refill - -@cindex Completion in the shell -@cindex Routine info in the shell +@code{idlwave-shell-mode} provides many of the same commands which +simplify writing IDL code available in IDLWAVE buffers. This includes +abbreviations, online help, and completion. See @ref{Routine Info} and +@ref{Online Help} and @ref{Completion} for more information on these +commands. + +@cindex Completion, in the shell +@cindex Routine info, in the shell +@cindex Online Help, in the shell @multitable @columnfractions .12 .88 @item @kbd{@key{TAB}} -@tab Completion of file names, routine names and keywords -(@code{idlwave-shell-complete})@refill +@tab Completion of file names (between quotes and after executive +commands @samp{.run} and @samp{.compile}), routine names, class names, +keywords, system variables, system variable tags etc. +(@code{idlwave-shell-complete}). @item @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} @tab Same as @key{TAB} @item @kbd{C-c ?} @@ -1222,118 +2556,249 @@ commands in @code{idlwave-mode}. See @ref{Routine Info} and @tab Compile a library routine (@code{idlwave-resolve}) @end multitable +@defopt idlwave-shell-arrows-do-history (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means @key{UP} and @key{DOWN} arrows move through command +history like xterm. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-shell-comint-settings +Alist of special settings for the comint variables in the IDLWAVE Shell. +@end defopt + @defopt idlwave-shell-file-name-chars The characters allowed in file names, as a string. Used for file name -completion.@refill +completion. @end defopt -@node Debugging IDL Programs, , Using the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell +@defopt idlwave-shell-graphics-window-size +Size of IDL graphics windows popped up by special IDLWAVE command. +@end defopt + +@cindex Input mode +@cindex Character input mode (Shell) +@cindex Line input mode (Shell) +@cindex Magic spells, for input mode +@cindex Spells, magic +IDLWAVE works in line input mode: You compose a full command line, using +all the power Emacs gives you to do this. When you press @key{RET}, the +whole line is sent to IDL. Sometimes it is necessary to send single +characters (without a newline), for example when an IDL program is +waiting for single character input with the @code{GET_KBRD} function. +You can send a single character to IDL with the command @kbd{C-c C-x} +(@code{idlwave-shell-send-char}). When you press @kbd{C-c C-y} +(@code{idlwave-shell-char-mode-loop}), IDLWAVE runs a blocking loop +which accepts characters and immediately sends them to IDL. The loop +can be exited with @kbd{C-g}. It terminates also automatically when the +current IDL command is finished. Check the documentation of the two +variables described below for a way to make IDL programs trigger +automatic switches of the input mode. + +@defopt idlwave-shell-use-input-mode-magic (@code{nil}) +Non-@code{nil} means IDLWAVE should check for input mode spells in +output. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-shell-input-mode-spells +The three regular expressions which match the magic spells for input +modes. +@end defopt + +@node Commands Sent to the Shell, Debugging IDL Programs, Using the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell +@section Commands Sent to the Shell +@cindex Commands in shell, showing +@cindex Showing commands in shell + +The IDLWAVE buffers and shell interact very closely. In addition to the +normal commands you enter at the @code{IDL>} prompt, many other special +commands are sent to the shell, sometimes as a direct result of invoking +a key command, menu item, or toolbar button, but also automatically, as +part of the normal flow of information updates between the buffer and +shell. + +The commands sent include @code{breakpoint}, @code{.step} and other +debug commands (@pxref{Debugging IDL Programs}), @code{.run} and other +compilation statements (@pxref{Compiling Programs}), examination +commands like @code{print} and @code{help} (@pxref{Examining +Variables}), and other special purpose commands designed to keep +information on the running shell current. + +By default, much of this background shell input and output is hidden +from the user, but this is configurable. The custom variable +@code{idlwave-abbrev-show-commands} allows you to configure which +commands sent to the shell are shown there. For a related customization +for separating the output of @emph{examine} commands, see @ref{Examining +Variables}. + +@defopt idlwave-shell-show-commands (@code{'(run misc breakpoint)}) +A list of command types to echo in the shell when sent. Possible values +are @code{run} for @code{.run}, @code{.compile} and other run commands, +@code{misc} for lesser used commands like @code{window}, +@code{retall},@code{close}, etc., @code{breakpoint} for breakpoint +setting and clearing commands, and @code{debug} for other debug, +stepping, and continue commands. In addition, if the variable is set to +the single symbol @code{'everything}, all the copious shell input is +displayed (which is probably only useful for debugging purposes). +N.B. For hidden commands which produce output by side-effect, that +output remains hidden (e.g., stepping through a @code{print} command). +As a special case, any error message in the output will be displayed +(e.g., stepping to an error). +@end defopt + +@node Debugging IDL Programs, Examining Variables, Commands Sent to the Shell, The IDLWAVE Shell @section Debugging IDL Programs @cindex Debugging @cindex Keybindings for debugging @cindex Toolbar Programs can be compiled, run, and debugged directly from the source -buffer in Emacs. The IDLWAVE shell installs keybindings both in the -shell buffer and in all IDL code buffers of the current Emacs session. -On Emacs versions which support this, it also installs a debugging -toolbar. The display of the toolbar can be toggled with @kbd{C-c C-d -C-t} (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-toolbar}).@refill - -The debugging keybindings are by default on the prefix key @kbd{C-c -C-d}, so for example setting a breakpoint is done with @kbd{C-c C-d -C-b}. If you find this too much work and your ALT key is still -available, turn on the variable -@code{idlwave-shell-activate-alt-keybindings} in order to get breakpoint -setting on @kbd{A-b}. In the remainder of this chapter we will assume -that the @kbd{C-c C-d} bindings are active. - -@defopt idlwave-shell-prefix-key -The prefix key for the debugging map -@code{idlwave-shell-mode-prefix-map}.@refill -@end defopt +buffer in Emacs, walking through arbitrarily deeply nested code, +printing expressions and skipping up and down the calling stack along +the way. IDLWAVE makes compiling and debugging IDL programs far less +cumbersome by providing a full-featured, key/menu/toolbar-driven +interface to commands like @code{breakpoint}, @code{.step}, +@code{.run}, etc. It can even perform complex debug operations not +natively supported by IDL (like continuing to the line at the cursor). + +The IDLWAVE shell installs key bindings both in the shell buffer and +in all IDL code buffers of the current Emacs session, so debug +commands work in both places (in the shell, commands operate on the +last file compiled). On Emacs versions which support it, a debugging +toolbar is also installed. The toolbar display can be toggled with +@kbd{C-c C-d C-t} (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-toolbar}). -@defopt idlwave-shell-activate-prefix-keybindings (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, debug commands will be bound to the prefix -key, like @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}. -@end defopt - -@defopt idlwave-shell-activate-alt-keybindings (@code{nil}) -Non-@code{nil} means, debug commands will be bound to alternate -keys, like @kbd{A-b}. -@end defopt @defopt idlwave-shell-use-toolbar (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, use the debugging toolbar in all IDL related -buffers.@refill +Non-@code{nil} means use the debugging toolbar in all IDL related +buffers. @end defopt - @menu -* Compiling Programs:: Compiling buffers under the shell -* Breakpoints and Stepping:: Deciding where to stop and look -* Examining Variables:: What is the value now? +* A Tale of Two Modes:: +* Debug Key Bindings:: +* Breakpoints and Stepping:: +* Compiling Programs:: +* Walking the Calling Stack:: +* Electric Debug Mode:: @end menu -@node Compiling Programs, Breakpoints and Stepping, Debugging IDL Programs, Debugging IDL Programs -@subsection Compiling Programs -@cindex Compiling programs -@cindex Programs, compiling -@cindex Default command line, executing -@cindex Executing a default command line -In order to compile the current buffer under the IDLWAVE shell, press -@kbd{C-c C-d C-c} (@code{idlwave-save-and-run}). This first saves the -current buffer and then send the command @samp{.run path/to/file} to the -shell. You can laso execute @kbd{C-c C-d C-c} from the shell buffer, in -which case the most recently compiled buffer will be saved and -re-compiled. +@node A Tale of Two Modes, Debug Key Bindings, Debugging IDL Programs, Debugging IDL Programs +@subsection A Tale of Two Modes +@cindex Electric Debug Mode +@cindex Debugging Interface + +The many debugging, compiling, and examination commands provided in +IDLWAVE are available simultaneously through two different interfaces: +the original, multi-key command interface, and the new Electric Debug +Mode. The functionality they offer is similar, but the way you +interact with them is quite different. The main difference is that, +in Electric Debug Mode, the source buffers are made read-only, and +single key-strokes are used to step through, examine expressions, set +and remove breakpoints, etc. The same variables, prefix arguments, +and settings apply to both versions, and both can be used +interchangeably. By default, when breakpoints are hit, Electric Debug +Mode is enabled. The traditional interface is described first. +@xref{Electric Debug Mode}, for more on that mode. + + +@sp 1 +@noindent @strong{Note that electric debug mode can be prevented from +activating automatically by customizing the variable +@code{idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug}.} + +@node Debug Key Bindings, Breakpoints and Stepping, A Tale of Two Modes, Debugging IDL Programs +@subsection Debug Key Bindings +@kindex C-c C-d +@cindex Key bindings + +The standard debugging key bindings are always available by default on +the prefix key @kbd{C-c C-d}, so, for example, setting a breakpoint is +done with @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}, and compiling a source file with @kbd{C-c +C-d C-c}. You can also easily configure IDLWAVE to use one or more +modifier keys not in use by other commands, in lieu of the prefix +@kbd{C-c C-d} (though these bindings will typically also be available +--- see @code{idlwave-shell-activate-prefix-keybindings}). For +example, if you include in @file{.emacs}: -When developing or debugging a program, it is often necessary to execute -the same command line many times. A convenient way to do this is -@kbd{C-c C-d C-y} (@code{idlwave-shell-execute-default-command-line}). -This command first resets IDL from a state of interrupted execution by -closing all files and returning to the main interpreter level. Then a -default command line is send to the shell. To edit the default command -line, call @code{idlwave-shell-execute-default-command-line} with a -prefix argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-y}.@refill +@lisp +(setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(control shift)) +@end lisp -@defopt idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, mark the source code line where IDL is currently -stopped. The value decides about the preferred method. Legal values -are @code{nil}, @code{t}, @code{arrow}, and @code{face}.@refill +@noindent a breakpoint can then be set by pressing @kbd{b} while holding down +@kbd{shift} and @kbd{control} keys, i.e. @kbd{C-S-b}. Compiling a +source file will be on @kbd{C-S-c}, deleting a breakpoint @kbd{C-S-d}, +etc. In the remainder of this chapter we will assume that the +@kbd{C-c C-d} bindings are active, but each of these bindings will +have an equivalent shortcut if modifiers are given in the +@code{idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers} variable (@pxref{Lesson II -- +Customization}). A much simpler and faster form of debugging for +running code is also available by default --- see @ref{Electric Debug +Mode}. + +@defopt idlwave-shell-prefix-key (@kbd{C-c C-d}) +The prefix key for the debugging map +@code{idlwave-shell-mode-prefix-map}. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-shell-overlay-arrow -The overlay arrow to display at source lines where execution -halts.@refill +@defopt idlwave-shell-activate-prefix-keybindings (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means debug commands will be bound to the prefix +key, like @kbd{C-c C-d C-b}. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-shell-stop-line-face -The face which highlights the source line where IDL is -stopped.@refill +@defopt idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers (@code{nil}) +List of modifier keys to use for additional, alternative binding of +debugging commands in the shell and source buffers. Can be one or +more of @code{control}, @code{meta}, @code{super}, @code{hyper}, +@code{alt}, and @code{shift}. @end defopt -@node Breakpoints and Stepping, Examining Variables, Compiling Programs, Debugging IDL Programs +@node Breakpoints and Stepping, Compiling Programs, Debug Key Bindings, Debugging IDL Programs @subsection Breakpoints and Stepping @cindex Breakpoints @cindex Stepping - -You can set breakpoints and step through a program with IDLWAVE. -Setting a breakpoint in the current line of the source buffer is done -with @kbd{C-c C-d C-b} (@code{idlwave-shell-break-here}). With a prefix -arg of 1, the breakpoint gets a @code{/ONCE} keyword, meaning that it -will be deleted after first use. With a numeric prefix greater than -one, the breakpoint will only be active the @code{nth} time it is hit. -To clear the breakpoint in the current line, use @kbd{C-c C-d C-d} -(@code{idlwave-clear-current-bp}). To clear all breakpoints, use -@kbd{C-c C-d C-a} (@code{idlwave-clear-all-bp}). Breakpoint lines are -highlighted in the source code.@refill - -Once the program has stopped somewhere, you can step through it. Here -is a summary of the breakpoint and stepping commands: - -@multitable @columnfractions .2 .8 +@cindex Execution, controlled + +@kindex C-c C-d C-b +@kindex C-c C-d C-b +IDLWAVE helps you set breakpoints and step through code. Setting a +breakpoint in the current line of the source buffer is accomplished +with @kbd{C-c C-d C-b} (@code{idlwave-shell-break-here}). With a +prefix arg of 1 (i.e. @kbd{C-1 C-c C-d C-b}), the breakpoint gets a +@code{/ONCE} keyword, meaning that it will be deleted after first use. +With a numeric prefix greater than one (e.g. @kbd{C-4 C-c C-d C-b}), +the breakpoint will only be active the @code{nth} time it is hit. +With a single non-numeric prefix (i.e. @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-b}), prompt +for a condition --- an IDL expression to be evaulated and trigger the +breakpoint only if true. To clear the breakpoint in the current line, +use @kbd{C-c C-d C-d} (@code{idlwave-clear-current-bp}). When +executed from the shell window, the breakpoint where IDL is currently +stopped will be deleted. To clear all breakpoints, use @kbd{C-c C-d +C-a} (@code{idlwave-clear-all-bp}). Breakpoints can also be disabled +and re-enabled: @kbd{C-c C-d C-\} +(@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-enable-current-bp}). + + +Breakpoint lines are highlighted or indicated with an icon in the +source code (different icons for conditional, after, and other break +types). Disabled breakpoints are @emph{grayed out} by default. Note +that IDL places breakpoints as close as possible on or after the line +you specify. IDLWAVE queries the shell for the actual breakpoint +location which was set, so the exact line you specify may not be +marked. You can re-sync the breakpoint list and display at any time +(e.g., if you add or remove some on the command line) using @kbd{C-c +C-d C-l}. + +Once the program has stopped somewhere, you can step through it. The +most important stepping commands are @kbd{C-c C-d C-s} to execute one +line of IDL code ("step into"); @kbd{C-c C-d C-n} to step a single line, +treating procedure and function calls as a single step ("step over"); +@kbd{C-c C-d C-h} to continue execution to the line at the cursor and +@kbd{C-c C-d C-r} to continue execution. @xref{Commands Sent to the +Shell}, for information on displaying or hiding the breakpoint and +stepping commands the shell receives. Here is a summary of the +breakpoint and stepping commands: + +@multitable @columnfractions .23 .77 @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-b} @tab Set breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-break-here}) @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-i} @@ -1342,6 +2807,14 @@ is a summary of the breakpoint and stepping commands: @tab Clear current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp}) @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-a} @tab Clear all breakpoints (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp}) +@item @kbd{C-c C-d [} +@tab Go to the previous breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-goto-previous-bp}) +@item @kbd{C-c C-d ]} +@tab Go to the next breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-goto-next-bp}) +@item @kbd{C-c C-d C-\} +@tab Disable/Enable current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-enable-current-bp}) +@item @kbd{C-c C-d C-j} +@tab Set a breakpoint at the beginning of the enclosing routine. @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-s} @tab Step, into function calls (@code{idlwave-shell-step}) @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-n} @@ -1357,51 +2830,296 @@ is a summary of the breakpoint and stepping commands: @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-h} @tab Continue to line at cursor position (@code{idlwave-shell-to-here}) @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-r} -@tab Continue execution to next breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-cont}) +@tab Continue execution to next breakpoint, if any (@code{idlwave-shell-cont}) @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-up} @tab Show higher level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-up}) @item @kbd{C-c C-d C-down} @tab Show lower level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-down}) @end multitable +All of these commands have equivalents in Electric Debug Mode, which +provides faster access (@pxref{Electric Debug Mode}). + @defopt idlwave-shell-mark-breakpoints (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, mark breakpoints in the source file buffers. The +Non-@code{nil} means mark breakpoints in the source file buffers. The value indicates the preferred method. Legal values are @code{nil}, @code{t}, @code{face}, and @code{glyph}. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-shell-breakpoint-face The face for breakpoint lines in the source code if -@code{idlwave-shell-mark-breakpoints} has the value @code{face}.@refill +@code{idlwave-shell-mark-breakpoints} has the value @code{face}. +@end defopt + +@node Compiling Programs, Walking the Calling Stack, Breakpoints and Stepping, Debugging IDL Programs +@subsection Compiling Programs +@cindex Compiling programs +@cindex Programs, compiling +@cindex Default command line, executing +@cindex Executing a default command line + +@kindex C-c C-d C-c +In order to compile the current buffer under the IDLWAVE shell, press +@kbd{C-c C-d C-c} (@code{idlwave-save-and-run}). This first saves the +current buffer and then sends the command @samp{.run path/to/file} to the +shell. You can also execute @kbd{C-c C-d C-c} from the shell buffer, in +which case the most recently compiled buffer will be saved and +re-compiled. + +When developing or debugging a program, it is often necessary to execute +the same command line many times. A convenient way to do this is +@kbd{C-c C-d C-y} (@code{idlwave-shell-execute-default-command-line}). +This command first resets IDL from a state of interrupted execution by +closing all files and returning to the main interpreter level. Then a +default command line is send to the shell. To edit the default command +line, call @code{idlwave-shell-execute-default-command-line} with a +prefix argument: @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-y}. If no default command line has +been set (or you give two prefix arguments), the last command on the +@code{comint} input history is sent. + +@defopt idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line (@code{t}) +Non-@code{nil} means mark the source code line where IDL is currently +stopped. The value specifies the preferred method. Legal values are +@code{nil}, @code{t}, @code{arrow}, and @code{face}. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-shell-overlay-arrow (@code{">"}) +The overlay arrow to display at source lines where execution halts, if +configured in @code{idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line}. @end defopt -@node Examining Variables, , Breakpoints and Stepping, Debugging IDL Programs -@subsection Examining Variables +@defopt idlwave-shell-stop-line-face +The face which highlights the source line where IDL is stopped, if +configured in @code{idlwave-shell-mark-stop-line}. +@end defopt + +@node Walking the Calling Stack, Electric Debug Mode, Compiling Programs, Debugging IDL Programs +@subsection Walking the Calling Stack +@cindex Calling stack, walking + +While debugging a program, it can be very useful to check the context in +which the current routine was called, for instance to help understand +the value of the arguments passed. To do so conveniently you need to +examine the calling stack. If execution is stopped somewhere deep in a +program, you can use the commands @kbd{C-c C-d C-@key{UP}} +(@code{idlwave-shell-stack-up}) and @kbd{C-c C-d C-@key{DOWN}} +(@code{idlwave-shell-stack-down}), or the corresponding toolbar buttons, +to move up or down through the calling stack. The mode line of the +shell window will indicate the position within the stack with a label +like @samp{[-3:MYPRO]}. The line of IDL code at that stack position +will be highlighted. If you continue execution, IDLWAVE will +automatically return to the current level. @xref{Examining Variables}, +for information how to examine the value of variables and expressions on +higher calling stack levels. + +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Electric Debug Mode, , Walking the Calling Stack, Debugging IDL Programs +@subsection Electric Debug Mode +@cindex Electric Debug Mode +@cindex @samp{*Debugging*} + +Even with a convenient debug key prefix enabled, repetitive stepping, +variable examination (@pxref{Examining Variables}), and other +debugging activities can be awkward and slow using commands which +require multiple keystrokes. Luckily, there's a better way, inspired +by the lisp e-debug mode, and available through the @emph{Electric +Debug Mode}. By default, as soon as a breakpoint is hit, this minor +mode is enabled. The buffer showing the line where execution has +halted is switched to Electric Debug Mode. This mode is visible as +@samp{*Debugging*} in the mode line, and a different face (violet by +default, where color is available) for the line stopped at point. The +buffer is made read-only and single-character bindings for the most +commonly used debugging commands are enabled: + +@multitable @columnfractions .2 .8 +@item @kbd{a} +@tab Clear all breakpoints (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-all-bp}) +@item @kbd{b} +@tab Set breakpoint, @kbd{C-u b} for a conditional break, @kbd{C-n b} for nth hit (@code{idlwave-shell-break-here}) +@item @kbd{d} +@tab Clear current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp}) +@item @kbd{h} +@tab Continue to the line at cursor position (@code{idlwave-shell-to-here}) +@item @kbd{i} +@tab Set breakpoint in function named here (@code{idlwave-shell-break-in}) +@item @kbd{[} +@tab Go to the previous breakpoint in the file (@code{idlwave-shell-goto-previous-bp}) +@item @kbd{]} +@tab Go to the next breakpoint in the file +(@code{idlwave-shell-goto-next-bp}) +@item @kbd{\} +@tab Disable/Enable current breakpoint (@code{idlwave-shell-toggle-enable-current-bp}) +@item @kbd{j} +@tab Set breakpoint at beginning of enclosing routine (@code{idlwave-shell-break-this-module}) +@item @kbd{k} +@tab Skip one statement (@code{idlwave-shell-skip}) +@item @kbd{m} +@tab Continue to end of function (@code{idlwave-shell-return}) +@item @kbd{n} +@tab Step, over function calls (@code{idlwave-shell-stepover}) +@item @kbd{o} +@tab Continue past end of function (@code{idlwave-shell-out}) +@item @kbd{p} +@tab Print expression near point or in region with @kbd{C-u p} (@code{idlwave-shell-print}) +@item @kbd{q} +@tab End the debugging session and return to the Shell's main level +(@code{idlwave-shell-retall}) +@item @kbd{r} +@tab Continue execution to next breakpoint, if any (@code{idlwave-shell-cont}) +@item @kbd{s} or @kbd{@key{SPACE}} +@tab Step, into function calls (@code{idlwave-shell-step}) +@item @kbd{t} +@tab Print a calling-level traceback in the shell +@item @kbd{u} +@tab Continue to end of block (@code{idlwave-shell-up}) +@item @kbd{v} +@tab Turn Electric Debug Mode off +(@code{idlwave-shell-electric-debug-mode}) +@item @kbd{x} +@tab Examine expression near point (or in region with @kbd{C-u x}) +with shortcut of examine type. +@item @kbd{z} +@tab Reset IDL (@code{idlwave-shell-reset}) +@item @kbd{+} or @kbd{=} +@tab Show higher level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-up}) +@item @kbd{-} or @kbd{_} +@tab Show lower level in calling stack (@code{idlwave-shell-stack-down}) +@item @kbd{?} +@tab Help on expression near point or in region with @kbd{C-u ?} +(@code{idlwave-shell-help-expression}) +@item @kbd{C-?} +@tab Show help on the commands available. +@end multitable + +Most single-character electric debug bindings use the final keystroke +of the equivalent multiple key commands (which are of course also +still available), but some differ (e.g. @kbd{t},@kbd{q},@kbd{x}). +Some have additional convenience bindings (like @kbd{@key{SPACE}} for +stepping). All prefix and other argument options described in this +section for the commands invoked by electric debug bindings are still +valid. For example, @kbd{C-u b} sets a conditional breakpoint, just +as it did with @kbd{C-u C-c C-d C-b}. + +You can toggle the electric debug mode at any time in a buffer using +@kbd{C-c C-d C-v} (@kbd{v} to turn it off while in the mode), or from +the Debug menu. Normally the mode will be enabled and disabled at the +appropriate times, but occassionally you might want to edit a file +while still debugging it, or switch to the mode for conveniently +setting lots of breakpoints. + +To quickly abandon a debugging session and return to normal editing at +the Shell's main level, use @kbd{q} (@code{idlwave-shell-retall}). +This disables electric debug mode in all IDLWAVE buffers@footnote{Note +that this binding is not symmetric: @kbd{C-c C-d C-q} is bound to +@code{idlwave-shell-quit}, which quits your IDL session.}. Help is +available for the command shortcuts with @kbd{C-?}. If you find this +mode gets in your way, you can keep it from automatically activating +by setting the variable @code{idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug} +to @code{nil}, or @code{'breakpoint}. If you'd like the convenient +electric debug shortcuts available also when run-time errors are +encountered, set to @code{t}. + +@defopt idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug (@code{'breakpoint}) +Whether to enter electric debug mode automatically when a breakpoint +or run-time error is encountered, and then disable it in all buffers +when the $MAIN$ level is reached (either through normal program +execution, or retall). In addition to @code{nil} for never, and +@code{t} for both breakpoints and errors, this can be +@code{'breakpoint} (the default) to enable it only at breakpoint +halts. +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-shell-electric-zap-to-file (@code{t}) +If set, when entering electric debug mode, select the window displaying +the file where point is stopped. This takes point away from the shell +window, but is useful for immediate stepping, etc. +@end defopt + +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Examining Variables, Custom Expression Examination, Debugging IDL Programs, The IDLWAVE Shell +@section Examining Variables @cindex @code{PRINT} expressions @cindex @code{HELP}, on expressions -@cindex Expressions, printing -@cindex Expressions, help +@cindex Expressions, printing & help +@cindex Examining expressions +@cindex Printing expressions @cindex Mouse binding to print expressions -When execution is stopped you can examine the values of variables. The -command @kbd{C-c C-d C-p} prints the expression at point in the shell -buffer, while @kbd{C-c C-d ?} shows help on this expression. The -expression at point is an array expression or a function call, or the -contents of a pair of parenthesis. The selected expression becomes -highlighted in the source code for a short time. - -I find it very convenient to bind these functions to a mouse event, so -that simply clicking on an expression prints its value. Here is a way -to do this with XEmacs: +@kindex C-c C-d C-p +Do you find yourself repeatedly typing, +e.g. @code{print,n_elements(x)}, and similar statements to remind +yourself of the type/size/structure/value/etc. of variables and +expressions in your code or at the command line? IDLWAVE has a suite +of special commands to automate these types of variable or expression +examinations. They work by sending statements to the shell formatted +to include the indicated expression. + +These examination commands can be used in the shell or buffer at any +time (as long as the shell is running), and are very useful when +execution is stopped in a buffer due to a triggered breakpoint or error, +or while composing a long command in the IDLWAVE shell. In the latter +case, the command is sent to the shell and its output is visible, but +point remains unmoved in the command being composed --- you can inspect +the contituents of a command you're building without interrupting the +process of building it! You can even print arbitrary expressions from +older input or output further up in the shell window --- any expression, +variable, number, or function you see can be examined. + +If the variable @code{idlwave-shell-separate-examine-output} is +non-@code{nil} (the default), all examine output will be sent to a +special @file{*Examine*} buffer, rather than the shell. The output of +prior examine commands is saved. In this buffer @key{c} clears the +contents, and @key{q} hides the buffer. + +The two most basic examine commands are bound to @kbd{C-c C-d C-p}, to +print the expression at point, and @kbd{C-c C-d ?}, to invoke help on +this expression@footnote{Available as @kbd{p} and @kbd{?} in Electric +Debug Mode (@pxref{Electric Debug Mode})}. The expression at point is +either an array expression or a function call, or the contents of a +pair of parentheses. The selected expression is highlighted, and +simultaneously the resulting output is highlighted in the shell. +Calling the above commands with a prefix argument will use the current +region as expression instead of using the one at point. Two prefix +arguments (@kbd{C-u C-u C-c C-d C-p}) will prompt for an expression. + +For added speed and convenience, there are mouse bindings which allow +you to click on expressions and examine their values. Use +@kbd{S-Mouse-2} to print an expression and @kbd{C-M-Mouse-2} to invoke +help (i.e. you need to hold down @key{META} and @key{CONTROL} while +clicking with the middle mouse button). If you simply click, the +nearest expression will be selected in the same manner as described +above. You can also @emph{drag} the mouse in order to highlight +exactly the specific expression or sub-expression you want to examine. +For custom expression examination, and the powerful customizable +pop-up examine selection, @xref{Custom Expression Examination}. + +@cindex Printing expressions, on calling stack +@cindex Restrictions for expression printing +The same variable inspection commands work both in the IDL Shell and +IDLWAVE buffers, and even for variables at higher levels of the calling +stack. For instance, if you're stopped at a breakpoint in a routine, +you can examine the values of variables and expressions inside its +calling routine, and so on, all the way up through the calling stack. +Simply step up the stack, and print variables as you see them +(@pxref{Walking the Calling Stack}, for information on stepping back +through the calling stack). The following restrictions apply for all +levels except the current: -@lisp -(add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook - (lambda() - (define-key idlwave-mode-map [(shift button1)] - 'idlwave-shell-mouse-print) - (define-key idlwave-mode-map [(shift button2)] - 'idlwave-shell-mouse-help))) -@end lisp +@itemize @bullet +@item +Array expressions must use the @samp{[ ]} index delimiters. Identifiers +with a @samp{( )} will be interpreted as function calls. +@item +@cindex ROUTINE_NAMES, IDL procedure +N.B.: printing values of expressions on higher levels of the calling +stack uses the @emph{unsupported} IDL routine @code{ROUTINE_NAMES}, +which may or may not be available in future versions of IDL. Caveat +Examinor. +@end itemize @defopt idlwave-shell-expression-face The face for @code{idlwave-shell-expression-overlay}. @@ -1409,309 +3127,754 @@ Allows you to choose the font, color and other properties for the expression printed by IDL. @end defopt +@defopt idlwave-shell-output-face +The face for @code{idlwave-shell-output-overlay}. +Allows to choose the font, color and other properties for the most +recent output of IDL when examining an expression." +@end defopt + +@defopt idlwave-shell-separate-examine-output (@code{t}) +If non-@code{nil}, re-direct the output of examine commands to a special +@file{*Examine*} buffer, instead of in the shell itself. +@end defopt + +@node Custom Expression Examination, , Examining Variables, The IDLWAVE Shell +@section Custom Expression Examination +@cindex Expressions, custom examination +@cindex Custom expression examination + +The variety of possible variable and expression examination commands is +endless (just look, for instance, at the keyword list to +@code{widget_info()}). Rather than attempt to include them all, IDLWAVE +provides two easy methods to customize your own commands, with a special +mouse examine command, and two macros for generating your own examine +key and mouse bindings. + +The most powerful and flexible mouse examine command of all is +available on @kbd{C-S-Mouse-2}. Just as for all the other mouse +examine commands, it permits click or drag expression selection, but +instead of sending hard-coded commands to the shell, it pops-up a +customizable selection list of examine functions to choose among, +configured with the @code{idlwave-shell-examine-alist} +variable@footnote{In Electric Debug Mode (@pxref{Electric Debug +Mode}), the key @kbd{x} provides a single-character shortcut interface +to the same examine functions for the expression at point or marked by +the region.}. This variable is a list of key-value pairs (an +@emph{alist} in Emacs parlance), where the key gives a name to be +shown for the examine command, and the value is the command strings +itself, in which the text @code{___} (three underscores) will be +replaced by the selected expression before being sent to the shell. +An example might be key @code{Structure Help} with value +@code{help,___,/STRUCTURE}. In that case, you'd be prompted with +@emph{Structure Help}, which might send something like +@code{help,var,/STRUCTURE} to the shell for output. +@code{idlwave-shell-examine-alist} comes configured by default with a +large list of examine commands, but you can easily customize it to add +your own. + +In addition to configuring the functions available to the pop-up mouse +command, you can easily create your own customized bindings to inspect +expressions using the two convenience macros +@code{idlwave-shell-examine} and @code{idlwave-shell-mouse-examine}. +These create keyboard or mouse-based custom inspections of variables, +sharing all the same properties of the built-in examine commands. +Both functions take a single string argument sharing the syntax of the +@code{idlwave-shell-examine-alist} values, e.g.: + +@lisp +(add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook + (lambda () + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [s-down-mouse-2] + (idlwave-shell-mouse-examine + "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)")) + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f9] (idlwave-shell-examine + "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)")) + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f10] (idlwave-shell-examine + "print,size(___,/TNAME)")) + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f11] (idlwave-shell-examine + "help,___,/STRUCTURE")))) +@end lisp + +@noindent Now pressing @key{f9}, or middle-mouse dragging with the +@key{SUPER} key depressed, will print the dimensions of the nearby or +highlighted expression. Pressing @key{f10} will give the type string, +and @key{f11} will show the contents of a nearby structure. As you can +see, the possibilities are only marginally finite. + +@defopt idlwave-shell-examine-alist +An alist of examine commands in which the keys name the command and +are displayed in the selection pop-up, and the values are custom IDL +examine command strings to send, after all instances of @code{___} +(three underscores) are replaced by the indicated expression. +@end defopt + -@node Installation, Acknowledgement, The IDLWAVE Shell, Top +@node Installation, Acknowledgements, The IDLWAVE Shell, Top @chapter Installation @cindex Installation -@cindex FTP site -@cindex URL, homepage for IDLWAVE -@cindex Homepage for IDLWAVE @menu * Installing IDLWAVE:: How to install the distribution -* Upgrading from idl.el:: Necessary configuration changes +* Installing Online Help:: Where to get the additional files needed @end menu -@node Installing IDLWAVE, Upgrading from idl.el, Installation, Installation +@node Installing IDLWAVE, Installing Online Help, Installation, Installation @section Installing IDLWAVE -IDLWAVE is part of Emacs 21.1 and later. It is also@footnote{or will be -soon} an XEmacs packages and can be installed from +@cindex FTP site +@cindex URL, homepage for IDLWAVE +@cindex Homepage for IDLWAVE +@cindex IDLWAVE, homepage +@cindex XEmacs package IDLWAVE +@cindex Emacs, distributed with IDLWAVE +@cindex Copyright, of IDL manual +IDLWAVE is part of Emacs 21.1 and later. It is also an XEmacs package +and can be installed from @uref{ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/xemacs/packages/,the XEmacs ftp site} -with the normal package management system on XEmacs 21.@refill +with the normal package management system on XEmacs 21. These +pre-installed versions should work out-of-the-box. However, the HTML +files required for online HTML help are not distributed with +XEmacs/Emacs and have to be installed separately@footnote{Due to +copyright reasons, the HTML version of the IDL manual cannot be +distributed under the GPL.} (@pxref{Installing Online Help}). You can also download IDLWAVE and install it yourself from -@uref{http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~dominik/Tools/idlwave, the maintainers -webpage}. Follow the instructions in the INSTALL file.@refill +@uref{@value{IDLWAVE-HOMEPAGE}, the maintainers webpage}. Follow the +instructions in the INSTALL file. -@node Upgrading from idl.el, , Installing IDLWAVE, Installation -@section Upgrading from the old @b{@file{idl.el}} file -@cindex Upgrading from old @b{@file{idl.el}} -@cindex Renaming old variables -@cindex Old variables, renaming +@node Installing Online Help, , Installing IDLWAVE, Installation +@section Installing Online Help +@cindex Installing online help +@cindex Online Help, Installation -If you have been using the old @file{idl.el} and @file{idl-shell.el} -files and would like to use IDLWAVE, you need to update your -customization in @file{.emacs}. +If you want to use the online help display, an additional set of files +(HTML versions of the IDL documentation) must be installed. These +files can also be downloaded from @uref{@value{IDLWAVE-HOMEPAGE}, the +maintainers webpage}. You need to place the files somewhere on your +system and tell IDLWAVE where they are with -@enumerate -@item -Change all variable and function prefixes from @samp{idl-} to @samp{idlwave-}. -@item -Remove the now invalid @code{autoload} and @code{auto-mode-alist} forms -pointing to the @file{idl.el} and @file{idl-shell.el} files. -@item -If you have been using the hook function recommended in earlier versions -to get a separate frame for the IDL shell, remove that command from your -@code{idlwave-shell-mode-hook}. Instead, set the variable -@code{idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame} with @lisp -(setq idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame t) +(setq idlwave-html-help-location "/path/to/help/dir/") ;e.g. /usr/local/etc @end lisp -@end enumerate -@node Acknowledgement, Sources of Routine Info, Installation, Top -@chapter Acknowledgement -@cindex Acknowledgement +Note that the help package only changes with new versions of the IDL +documentation, and need not be updated unless your version of IDL +changes. + +@node Acknowledgements, Sources of Routine Info, Installation, Top +@chapter Acknowledgements +@cindex Acknowledgements +@cindex Maintainer, of IDLWAVE +@cindex Authors, of IDLWAVE +@cindex Contributors, to IDLWAVE +@cindex Email address, of Maintainer @cindex Thanks -@file{idl.el} and @file{idl-shell.el} were written by -@uref{mailto:chase@@att.com, Chris Chase}. The package -was extended and renamed to IDLWAVE by the current maintainer -@uref{mailto:dominik@@strw.leidenuniv.nl, Carsten Dominik}. +@noindent +The main contributors to the IDLWAVE package have been: + +@itemize @minus +@item +@uref{mailto:chase@@att.com, @b{Chris Chase}}, the original author. +Chris wrote @file{idl.el} and @file{idl-shell.el} and maintained them +for several years. + +@item +@uref{mailto:dominik@@astro.uva.nl, @b{Carsten Dominik}} was in charge +of the package from version 3.0, during which time he overhauled almost +everything, modernized IDLWAVE with many new features, and developed the +manual. + +@item +@uref{mailto:jdsmith@@as.arizona.edu, @b{J.D. Smith}}, the current +maintainer, as of version 4.10, helped shape object method completion +and most new features introduced in versions 4.x, and added +significant new capabilities for versions 5.x. +@end itemize -Thanks to the following people who have contributed to the development -of IDLWAVE with patches, ideas, bug reports and suggestions. +@noindent +The following people have also contributed to the development of IDLWAVE +with patches, ideas, bug reports and suggestions. @itemize @minus @item -Ulrik Dickow +Ulrik Dickow @item -Eric E. Dors +Eric E. Dors @item -Stein Vidar H. Haugan +Stein Vidar H. Haugan @item -David Huenemoerder +David Huenemoerder @item -Kevin Ivory +Kevin Ivory @item -Xuyong Liu +Dick Jackson @item -Simon Marshall +Xuyong Liu @item -Laurent Mugnier +Simon Marshall @item -Lubos Pochman +Craig Markwardt @item -Patrick M. Ryan +Laurent Mugnier @item -Marty Ryba +Lubos Pochman @item -Phil Williams +Bob Portmann @item -J.D. Smith +Patrick M. Ryan @item -Phil Sterne +Marty Ryba +@item +Phil Williams +@item +Phil Sterne +@item +Paul Sorenson @end itemize -@node Sources of Routine Info, Configuration Examples, Acknowledgement, Top +@noindent +Thanks to everyone! + +@node Sources of Routine Info, HTML Help Browser Tips, Acknowledgements, Top @appendix Sources of Routine Info -In @ref{Routine Info} and @ref{Completion} it was shown how IDLWAVE -displays the calling sequence and keywords of routines, and how it -completes routine names and keywords. For these features to work, -IDLWAVE must know about the accessible routines. +@cindex Sources of routine information +In @ref{Routine Info} and @ref{Completion} we showed how IDLWAVE +displays the calling sequence and keywords of routines, and completes +routine names and keywords. For these features to work, IDLWAVE must +know about the accessible routines. @menu * Routine Definitions:: Where IDL Routines are defined. -* Routine Information Sources:: So how does IDLWAVE know about... -* Library Scan:: Scanning the Libraries for Routine Info -* Updating idlw-rinfo.el:: Scanning the IDL Manuals +* Routine Information Sources:: So how does IDLWAVE know about... +* Catalogs:: +* Load-Path Shadows:: Routines defined in several places +* Documentation Scan:: Scanning the IDL Manuals @end menu @node Routine Definitions, Routine Information Sources, Sources of Routine Info, Sources of Routine Info -@section Routine Definitions +@appendixsec Routine Definitions @cindex Routine definitions +@cindex IDL variable @code{!PATH} +@cindex @code{!PATH}, IDL variable +@cindex @code{CALL_EXTERNAL}, IDL routine +@cindex @code{LINKIMAGE}, IDL routine +@cindex External routines -Routines which can be used in an IDL program can be defined in several -places: +@noindent Routines which can be used in an IDL program can be defined in +several places: @enumerate @item -@emph{System routines} are defined inside IDL itself. The source -code of such routines is not accessible to the user.@refill +@emph{Builtin routines} are defined inside IDL itself. The source +code of such routines is not available. @item -Routines @emph{part of the current program} are defined in a file which -is explicitly compiled by the user. This file may be located on the IDL -search path, but this is not certain.@refill +Routines which are @emph{part of the current program}, are defined in a +file explicitly compiled by the user. This file may or may not be +located on the IDL search path. @item -@emph{Library routines} are defined in special files which are located -somewhere on IDL's search path. When a library routine is called for -the first time, IDL will find the source file and compile it -dynamically.@refill +@emph{Library routines} are defined in files located on IDL's search +path, and will not need to be manually compiled. When a library routine +is called for the first time, IDL will find the source file and compile +it dynamically. A special sub-category of library routines are the +@emph{system routines} distributed with IDL, and usually available in +the @file{lib} subdirectory of the IDL distribution. @item External routines written in other languages (like Fortran or C) can be called with @code{CALL_EXTERNAL}, linked into IDL via @code{LINKIMAGE}, or included as dynamically loaded modules (DLMs). Currently IDLWAVE -cannot provide routine info and completion for external -routines.@refill +cannot provide routine info and completion for such external routines. @end enumerate -@node Routine Information Sources, Library Scan, Routine Definitions, Sources of Routine Info -@section Routine Information Sources +@node Routine Information Sources, Catalogs, Routine Definitions, Sources of Routine Info +@appendixsec Routine Information Sources @cindex Routine info sources +@cindex Builtin list of routines +@cindex Updating routine info +@cindex Scanning buffers for routine info +@cindex Buffers, scanning for routine info +@cindex Shell, querying for routine info -In oder to know about as many routines as possible, IDLWAVE will do the -following to collect information:@refill +@noindent To maintain the most comprehensive information about all IDL +routines on a system, IDLWAVE collects data from many sources: @enumerate @item -It has a @emph{builtin list} with the properties of the builtin IDL -routines. IDLWAVE @value{VERSION} is distributed with a list of +It has a @emph{builtin list} with information about the routines IDL +ships with. IDLWAVE @value{VERSION} is distributed with a list of @value{NSYSROUTINES} routines and @value{NSYSKEYWORDS} keywords, reflecting IDL version @value{IDLVERSION}. This list has been created by scanning the IDL manuals and is stored in the file -@file{idlw-rinfo.el}. @xref{Updating idlw-rinfo.el}, for -information how to regenerate this file for new versions of IDL.@refill +@file{idlw-rinfo.el}. @xref{Documentation Scan}, for information on +how to regenerate this file for new versions of IDL. -@item +@item It @emph{scans} all @emph{buffers} of the current Emacs session for routine definitions. This is done automatically when routine -information or completion is first requested by the user. The command -@kbd{C-c C-i} (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}) can be used at any -time to rescan all buffers.@refill +information or completion is first requested by the user. Each new +buffer and each buffer saved after making changes is also scanned. The +command @kbd{C-c C-i} (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}) can be used +at any time to rescan all buffers. @item -If you have an IDLWAVE-Shell running as inferior process of the current -Emacs session, IDLWAVE will @emph{query the shell} for compiled routines -and their arguments. This happens automatically when routine -information or completion is first requested by the user. The command -@kbd{C-c C-i} (@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}) can be used to ask -the shell again at any time.@refill +If you have an IDLWAVE-Shell running in the Emacs session, IDLWAVE will +@emph{query the shell} for compiled routines and their arguments. This +happens automatically when routine information or completion is first +requested by the user, and each time an Emacs buffer is compiled with +@kbd{C-c C-d C-c}. Though rarely necessary, the command @kbd{C-c C-i} +(@code{idlwave-update-routine-info}) can be used to update the shell +routine data. @item -IDLWAVE can scan all or selected library files and store the result in a -file which will be automatically loaded just like -@file{idlw-rinfo.el}. @xref{Library Scan}, for information how to -scan library files.@refill +Many popular libraries are distributed with routine information +already scanned into @emph{library catalogs} (@pxref{Library +Catalogs}). These per-directory catalog files can also be built by +the user with the supplied @file{idlwave_catalog} tool. + +@item +IDLWAVE can scan selected directories of source files and store the +result in a single @emph{user catalog} file which will be +automatically loaded just like @file{idlw-rinfo.el}. @xref{User +Catalog}, for information on how to scan files in this way. @end enumerate +Loading routine and catalog information can be a time consuming process, +especially over slow networks. Depending on the system and network +configuration it could take up to 30 seconds. In order to minimize the +wait time upon your first completion or routine info command in a +session, IDLWAVE uses Emacs idle time to do the initialization in six +steps, yielding to user input in between. If this gets into your way, +set the variable @code{idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after} to 0 (zero). +The more routines documented in library and user catalogs, the slower +the loading will be, so reducing this number can help alleviate any long +load times. + +@defopt idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after (@code{10}) +Seconds of idle time before routine info is automatically initialized. +@end defopt + @defopt idlwave-scan-all-buffers-for-routine-info (@code{t}) -Non-@code{nil} means, scan all buffers for IDL programs when updating -info. When this variable is @code{nil}, it only parses the current -buffer.@refill +Non-@code{nil} means scan all buffers for IDL programs when updating +info. @end defopt @defopt idlwave-query-shell-for-routine-info (@code{t}) Non-@code{nil} means query the shell for info about compiled routines. @end defopt +@defopt idlwave-auto-routine-info-updates +Controls under what circumstances routine info is updated automatically. +@end defopt -@node Library Scan, Updating idlw-rinfo.el, Routine Information Sources, Sources of Routine Info -@section Library Scan -@cindex Library scan -@cindex IDL library routine info - -IDLWAVE can extract routine information from library modules and store -that information in a file. To do this, the variable -@code{idlwave-libinfo-file} needs to contain the path to a file in an -existing directory (e.g. @code{"~/idlwave_libinfo.el"}). Since the file -will contain lisp code, it should end in @file{.el}. Under Windows and -MacOS, you also need to specify the search path for IDL library files in -the variable @code{idlwave-library-path}. Under UNIX, this path will -be automatically inferred from an IDLWAVE shell.@refill - -The command @kbd{M-x idlwave-create-libinfo-file} can then be used to -scan library files. It brings up a widget in which you can select some -or all directories on the search path. Pressing the @w{@samp{[Scan & Save]}} -button in the widget will scan all files in the selected directories and -write the resulting routine information into the file -@code{idlwave-libinfo-file}. In order to update the library information -from the same directories, call the command -@code{idlwave-update-routine-info} with a double prefix argument: -@kbd{C-u C-u C-c C-i}. This will rescan files in the previously -selected directories, write an updated version of the libinfo file and -rebuild IDLWAVEs internal lists.@refill +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Catalogs, Load-Path Shadows, Routine Information Sources, Sources of Routine Info +@appendixsec Catalogs +@cindex Catalogs + +@emph{Catalogs} are files containing scanned information on individual +routines, including arguments and keywords, calling sequence, file path, +class and procedure vs. function type, etc. They represent a way of +extending the internal built-in information available for IDL system +routines (@pxref{Routine Info}) to other source collections. + +Starting with version 5.0, there are two types of catalogs available +with IDLWAVE. The traditional @emph{user catalog} and the newer +@emph{library catalogs}. Although they can be used interchangeably, the +library catalogs are more flexible, and preferred. There are few +occasions when a user catalog might be preferred --- read below. Both +types of catalogs can coexist without causing problems. + +To facilitate the catalog systems, IDLWAVE stores information it gathers +from the shell about the IDL search paths, and can write this +information out automatically, or on-demand (menu @code{Debug->Save Path +Info}). On systems with no shell from which to discover the path +information (e.g. Windows), a library path must be specified in +@code{idlwave-library-path} to allow library catalogs to be located, and +to setup directories for user catalog scan (@pxref{User Catalog} for +more on this variable). + +@defopt idlwave-auto-write-path (@code{t}) +Write out information on the !PATH and !DIR paths from IDL automatically +when they change and when the Shell is closed. These paths are needed +to locate library catalogs. +@end defopt -A note of caution: Depending on your local installation, the IDL -library can be very large. Parsing it for routine information will take -time and loading this information into Emacs can require a -significant amount of memory.@refill +@defopt idlwave-library-path +IDL library path for Windows and MacOS. Not needed under Unix/MacOSX. +@end defopt -A routine which is both in the library listing and compiled under the -shell will show up twice in the @file{*Completions*} listing. This is -usually not a serious problem. However, if you have scanned the part of -the library relevant for you, and if you are not compiling files which -are not on the library search path, the information about compiled -routines is in fact unnecessary. In this case, you can turn of the -shell query for compiled routines with the variable -@code{idlwave-query-shell-for-routine-info}.@refill +@defopt idlwave-system-directory +The IDL system directory for Windows and MacOS. Not needed under +Unix/MacOSX (obtained from the Shell). +@end defopt -@defopt idlwave-libinfo-file -File for routine information of the IDL library. +@defopt idlwave-config-directory (@file{~/.idlwave}) +Default path where IDLWAVE saves configuration information and any +user catalog. @end defopt -@defopt idlwave-library-path -IDL library path for Windows and MacOS. Not needed under Unix. +@menu +* Library Catalogs:: +* User Catalog:: +@end menu + +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Library Catalogs, User Catalog, Catalogs, Catalogs +@appendixsubsec Library Catalogs +@cindex @file{.idlwave_catalog} +@cindex Library catalogs +@cindex @code{idlwave_catalog} + +Library catalogs are files named @file{.idlwave_catalog} stored in +directories containing @code{.pro} routine files. They are discovered +on the IDL search path and loaded automatically when routine information +is read. Each catalog file documents the routines found in that +directory --- one catalog per directory. Every catalog has a library +name associated with it (e.g. @emph{AstroLib}). This name will be shown +briefly when the catalog is found, and in the routine info of routines +it documents. + +Many popular libraries of routines are shipped with IDLWAVE catalog +files by default, and so will be automatically discovered. Library +catalogs are scanned externally to Emacs using a tool provided with +IDLWAVE. Each catalog can be re-scanned independently of any other. +Catalogs can easily be made available system-wide with a common source +repository, providing uniform routine information, and lifting the +burden of scanning from the user (who may not even know they're using a +scanned catalog). Since all catalogs are independent, they can be +re-scanned automatically to gather updates, e.g. in a @file{cron} job. +Scanning is much faster than with the built-in user catalog method. One +minor disadvantage: the entire IDL search path is scanned for catalog +files every time IDLWAVE starts up, which might be slow over a network. + +A Perl tool to create library catalogs is distributed with IDLWAVE: +@code{idlwave_catalog}. It can be called quite simply: +@example +idlwave_catalog MyLib +@end example + +@noindent This would scan all directories recursively beneath the current and +populate them with @file{.idlwave_catalog} files, tagging the routines +found with the name library ``MyLib''. The full usage information: + +@example +Usage: idlwave_catalog [-l] [-v] [-d] [-s] [-f] [-h] libname + libname - Unique name of the catalog (4 or more alphanumeric + characters). + -l - Scan local directory only, otherwise recursively + catalog all directories at or beneath this one. + -v - Print verbose information. + -d - Instead of scanning, delete all .idlwave_catalog files + here or below. + -s - Be silent. + -f - Force overwriting any catalogs found with a different + library name. + -h - Print this usage. +@end example + +To re-load the library catalogs on the IDL path, force a system routine +info update using a single prefix to @code{idlwave-update-routine-info}: +@kbd{C-u C-c C-i}. + +@defopt idlwave-use-library-catalogs (@code{t}) +Whether to search for and load library catalogs. Only disable if +performance is a problem and the catalogs are not needed. @end defopt +@node User Catalog, , Library Catalogs, Catalogs +@appendixsubsec User Catalog +@cindex User catalog +@cindex IDL library routine info +@cindex Windows +@cindex MacOS +@cindex IDL variable @code{!DIR} +@cindex @code{!DIR}, IDL variable + +The user catalog is the old routine catalog system. It is produced +within Emacs, and stored in a single file in the user's home directory +(@file{.idlwave/idlusercat.el} by default). Although library catalogs +are more flexible, there may be reasons to prefer a user catalog +instead, including: + +@itemize @bullet +@item The scan is internal to Emacs, so you don't need a working Perl +installation, as you do for library catalogs. +@item Can be used to scan directories for which the user has no write +privileges. +@item Easy widget-based path selection. +@end itemize + +However, no routine info is available in the user catalog by default; +the user must actively complete a scan. In addition, this type of +catalog is all or nothing: if a single routine changes, the entire +catalog must be rescanned to update it. Creating the user catalog is +also much slower than scanning library catalogs. + +You can scan any of the directories on the currently known path. Under +Windows and MacOS (not OSX), you need to specify the IDL search path in +the variable @code{idlwave-library-path}, and the location of the IDL +directory (the value of the @code{!DIR} system variable) in the variable +@code{idlwave-system-directory}, like this@footnote{The initial @samp{+} +leads to recursive expansion of the path, just like in IDL}: + +@lisp +(setq idlwave-library-path + '("+c:/RSI/IDL56/lib/" "+c:/user/me/idllibs")) +(setq idlwave-system-directory "c:/RSI/IDL56/") +@end lisp -@node Updating idlw-rinfo.el, , Library Scan, Sources of Routine Info -@section Updating @file{idlw-rinfo.el} -@cindex @file{get_rinfo} +@noindent Under GNU and UNIX, these values will be automatically gathered from +the IDLWAVE shell. + +The command @kbd{M-x idlwave-create-user-catalog-file} (or the menu item +@samp{IDLWAVE->Routine Info->Select Catalog Directories} can then be +used to create a user catalog. It brings up a widget in which you can +select some or all directories on the search path. Directories which +already contain a library catalog are marked with @samp{[LIB]}, and need +not be scanned (although there is no harm if you do so, other than the +additional memory used for the duplication). + +After selecting directories, click on the @w{@samp{[Scan & Save]}} +button in the widget to scan all files in the selected directories and +write out the resulting routine information. In order to update the +library information using the directory selection, call the command +@code{idlwave-update-routine-info} with a double prefix argument: +@w{@kbd{C-u C-u C-c C-i}}. This will rescan files in the previously +selected directories, write an updated version of the user catalog file +and rebuild IDLWAVE's internal lists. If you give three prefix +arguments @w{@kbd{C-u C-u C-u C-c C-i}}, updating will be done with a +background job@footnote{Unix systems only, I think.}. You can continue +to work, and the library catalog will be re-read when it is ready. If +you find you need to update the user catalog often, you should consider +building a library catalog for your routines instead (@pxref{Library +Catalogs}). + +@defopt idlwave-special-lib-alist +Alist of regular expressions matching special library directories for +labeling in routine-info display. +@end defopt + +@node Load-Path Shadows, Documentation Scan, Catalogs, Sources of Routine Info +@appendixsec Load-Path Shadows +@cindex Load-path shadows +@cindex Shadows, load-path +@cindex Duplicate routines +@cindex Multiply defined routines +@cindex Routine definitions, multiple +@cindex Application, testing for shadowing +@cindex Buffer, testing for shadowing + +IDLWAVE can compile a list of routines which are (re-)defined in more +than one file. Since one definition will hide (shadow) the others +depending on which file is compiled first, such multiple definitions are +called "load-path shadows". IDLWAVE has several routines to scan for +load path shadows. The output is placed into the special buffer +@file{*Shadows*}. The format of the output is identical to the source +section of the routine info buffer (@pxref{Routine Info}). The +different definitions of a routine are ordered by @emph{likelihood of +use}. So the first entry will be most likely the one you'll get if an +unsuspecting command uses that routine. Before listing shadows, you +should make sure that routine info is up-to-date by pressing @kbd{C-c +C-i}. Here are the different routines (also available in the Menu +@samp{IDLWAVE->Routine Info}): + +@table @asis +@item @kbd{M-x idlwave-list-buffer-load-path-shadows} +This commands checks the names of all routines defined in the current +buffer for shadowing conflicts with other routines accessible to +IDLWAVE. The command also has a key binding: @kbd{C-c C-b} +@item @kbd{M-x idlwave-list-shell-load-path-shadows}. +Checks all routines compiled under the shell for shadowing. This is +very useful when you have written a complete application. Just compile +the application, use @code{RESOLVE_ALL} to compile any routines used by +your code, update the routine info inside IDLWAVE with @kbd{C-c C-i} and +then check for shadowing. +@item @kbd{M-x idlwave-list-all-load-path-shadows} +This command checks all routines accessible to IDLWAVE for conflicts. +@end table + +For these commands to work fully you need to scan the entire load path +in either a user or library catalog. Also, IDLWAVE should be able to +distinguish between the system library files (normally installed in +@file{/usr/local/rsi/idl/lib}) and any site specific or user specific +files. Therefore, such local files should not be installed inside the +@file{lib} directory of the IDL directory. This is also advisable for +many other reasons. + +@cindex Windows +@cindex MacOS +@cindex IDL variable @code{!DIR} +@cindex @code{!DIR}, IDL variable +Users of Windows and MacOS also must set the variable +@code{idlwave-system-directory} to the value of the @code{!DIR} system +variable in IDL. IDLWAVE appends @file{lib} to the value of this +variable and assumes that all files found on that path are system +routines. + +Another way to find out if a specific routine has multiple definitions +on the load path is routine info display (@pxref{Routine Info}). + +@node Documentation Scan, , Load-Path Shadows, Sources of Routine Info +@appendixsec Documentation Scan +@cindex @file{get_html_rinfo} @cindex @file{idlw-rinfo.el} +@cindex Scanning the documentation @cindex Perl program, to create @file{idlw-rinfo.el} -The file @file{idlw-rinfo.el} contains the routine information for -the routines build into IDL. This constant depends upon the version of -IDL. If you are lucky, the maintainer of IDLWAVE will always have -access to the newest version of IDL and provide updates of -@file{idlw-rinfo.el} reflecting the currently released version of -IDL. The IDLWAVE package also contains a Perl program @file{get_rinfo} -which constructs this file by scanning selected files from the IDL -documentation. The program needs @file{pdftotext} by Derek B. Noonburg. -Instructions on how to use @file{get_rinfo} are in the program -itself.@refill - -@node Configuration Examples, Index, Sources of Routine Info, Top +IDLWAVE derives its knowledge about system routines from the IDL +manuals. The file @file{idlw-rinfo.el} contains the routine information +for the IDL system routines, and links to relevant sections of the HTML +documentation. The Online Help feature of IDLWAVE requires HTML +versions of the IDL manuals to be available; the HTML documentation is +not distributed with IDLWAVE by default, but must be downloaded +separately from the @uref{@value{IDLWAVE-HOMEPAGE}, the maintainers +webpage}. + +The HTML files and related images can be produced from the +@file{idl.chm} HTMLHelp file distributed with IDL using the free +Microsoft HTML Help Workshop. If you are lucky, the maintainer of +IDLWAVE will always have access to the newest version of IDL and +provide updates. The IDLWAVE distribution also contains the Perl +program @file{get_html_rinfo} which constructs the +@file{idlw-rinfo.el} file by scanning the HTML documents produced from +the IDL documentation. Instructions on how to use +@file{get_html_rinfo} are in the program itself. + +@node HTML Help Browser Tips, Configuration Examples, Sources of Routine Info, Top +@appendix HTML Help Browser Tips +@cindex Browser Tips + +There are a wide variety of possible browsers to use for displaying +the online HTML help available with IDLWAVE (starting with version +5.0). Since IDLWAVE runs on a many different system types, a single +browser configuration is not possible, but choices abound. + +On many systems, the default browser configured in +@code{browse-url-browser-function}, and hence inherited by default by +@code{idlwave-help-browser-function}, is Netscape. Unfortunately, the +HTML manuals decompiled from the original RSI source contain +formatting structures which Netscape 4.x does not handle well, though +they are still readable. A much better choice is Mozilla, or one of +the Mozilla-derived browsers such as +@uref{http://galeon.sourceforge.net/,Galeon} (Linux), +@uref{http://www.mozilla.org/projects/camino/,Camino} (MacOSX), or +@uref{http://www.mozilla.org/projects/firebird/,Firebird} (all +platforms). Newer versions of Emacs provide a browser-function choice +@code{browse-url-gnome-moz} which uses the Gnome-configured browser. + +Note that the HTML files decompiled from RSI Microsoft Help sources +contain specific references to the @samp{Symbol} font, which by default +is not permitted in normal encodings (it's technically illegal). Though +it only impacts a few symbols, you can trick Mozilla-based browsers into +recognizing @samp{Symbol} by following the directions +@uref{http://hutchinson.belmont.ma.us/tth/Xfonts.html, here}. With this +fix in place, HTML help pages look almost identical to their PDF +equivalents (yet can be bookmarked, browsed as history, searched, etc.). + +@noindent Individual platform recommendations: + +@itemize @bullet +@item Windows: The native Microsoft HTMLHelp browser is preferred, +with even better results using the free +@uref{http://www.keyworks.net/keyhh.htm,@code{KEYHH}} program to +permit IDL help to be targetted to a single window. To use HTMLHelp, +specify @code{idlwave-help-use-hh} as @code{'hh} or @code{'keyhh}. +One bonus: since IDL is shipped with the @file{idl.chm} help file, you +don't need to download the HTML help package. @xref{Help with HTML +Documentation}. +@item Unix/MacOSX: The @uref{http://www.w3m.org,@code{w3m}} browser +and its associated +@uref{http://emacs-w3m.namazu.org/,@code{emacs-w3m}} emacs mode +provide in-buffer browsing with image display, and excellent speed and +formatting. Both the Emacs mode and the browser itself must be +downloaded separately. To use this browser, include + +@lisp +(setq idlwave-help-browser-function 'w3m-browse-url) +@end lisp + +in your @file{.emacs}. Setting a few other nice @code{w3m} options +cuts down on screen clutter: + +@lisp +(setq w3m-use-tab nil + w3m-use-header-line nil + w3m-use-toolbar nil) +@end lisp + +If you use a dedicated frame for help, you might want to add the +following, to get consistent behavior with the @kbd{q} key: + +@lisp +;; Close my help window when w3m closes. +(defadvice w3m-close-window (after idlwave-close activate) + (if (boundp 'idlwave-help-frame) + (idlwave-help-quit))) +@end lisp + +Note that you can open the file in an external browser from within +@code{w3m} using @kbd{M}. +@end itemize + +@node Configuration Examples, Windows and MacOS, HTML Help Browser Tips, Top @appendix Configuration Examples @cindex Configuration examples @cindex Example configuration +@cindex @file{.emacs} +@cindex Default settings, of options +@cindex Interview, with the maintainer @noindent -@b{Question:} So now you have all these complicated configuration -options in your package, but which ones do @emph{you} as the maintainer -actually set in your own configuration? +@b{Question:} You have all these complicated configuration options in +your package, but which ones do @emph{you} as the maintainer actually +set in your own configuration? @noindent -@b{Answer:} Hardly any. As the maintainer, I set the default of all -options to what I think is best. However, I do not turn on features by -default which +@b{Answer:} Not many, beyond custom key bindings. I set most defaults +the way that seems best. However, the default settings do not turn on +features which: + @itemize @minus @item -are not self-evident (i.e. too magic) when used by an unsuspecting user +are not self-evident (i.e. too magic) when used by an unsuspecting user. +@item +are too intrusive. +@item +will not work properly on all Emacs installations. @item -are too intrusive +break with widely used standards. @item -will not work properly on all Emacs installations out there +use function or other non-standard keys. @item -break with what I think are widely used standards. +are purely personal customizations, like additional key bindings, and +library names. @end itemize -@noindent To see what I mean, here is the entire configuration I have in -my @file{.emacs}: +@noindent To see what I mean, here is the @emph{entire} configuration +the old maintainer had in his @file{.emacs}: @lisp -(setq idlwave-shell-activate-alt-keybindings t - idlwave-expand-generic-end t +(setq idlwave-shell-debug-modifiers '(control shift) idlwave-store-inquired-class t idlwave-shell-automatic-start t - idlwave-libinfo-file "~/lib/idl/libinfo.el" - idlwave-main-block-indent 2) -(add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook - (lambda() - (define-key idlwave-mode-map [(shift button1)] - 'idlwave-shell-mouse-print) - (define-key idlwave-mode-map [(shift button2)] - 'idlwave-shell-mouse-help))) + idlwave-main-block-indent 2 + idlwave-init-rinfo-when-idle-after 2 + idlwave-help-dir "~/lib/emacs/idlwave" + idlwave-special-lib-alist '(("/idl-astro/" . "AstroLib") + ("/jhuapl/" . "JHUAPL-Lib") + ("/dominik/lib/idl/" . "MyLib"))) @end lisp However, if you are an Emacs power-user and want IDLWAVE to work -completely differently, the options allow you to change almost every -aspect of it. Here is an example of a much more extensive configuration -of IDLWAVE. To say it again - this is not what I recommend, but the -user is King!@refill +completely differently, you can change almost every aspect of it. Here +is an example of a much more extensive configuration of IDLWAVE. The +user is King! @example ;;; Settings for IDLWAVE mode @@ -1731,36 +3894,68 @@ user is King!@refill (setq idlwave-hang-indent-regexp ": ") ; Change from "- " for auto-fill (setq idlwave-show-block nil) ; Turn off blinking to begin (setq idlwave-abbrev-move t) ; Allow abbrevs to move point +(setq idlwave-query-class '((method-default . nil) ; No query for method + (keyword-default . nil); or keyword completion + ("INIT" . t) ; except for these + ("CLEANUP" . t) + ("SETPROPERTY" .t) + ("GETPROPERTY" .t))) + +;; Using w3m for help (must install w3m and emacs-w3m) +(autoload 'w3m-browse-url "w3m" "Interface for w3m on Emacs." t) +(setq idlwave-help-browser-function 'w3m-browse-url + w3m-use-tab nil ; no tabs, location line, or toolbar + w3m-use-header-line nil + w3m-use-toolbar nil) + +;; Close my help window or frame when w3m closes with `q' +(defadvice w3m-close-window (after idlwave-close activate) + (if (boundp 'idlwave-help-frame) + (idlwave-help-quit))) ;; Some setting can only be done from a mode hook. Here is an example: - (add-hook 'idlwave-mode-hook (lambda () - (setq abbrev-mode 1) ; Turn on abbrevs (-1 for off) (setq case-fold-search nil) ; Make searches case sensitive ;; Run other functions here (font-lock-mode 1) ; Turn on font-lock mode (idlwave-auto-fill-mode 0) ; Turn off auto filling - ;; - ;; Pad with with 1 space (if -n is used then make the + (setq idlwave-help-browser-function 'browse-url-w3) + + ;; Pad with 1 space (if -n is used then make the ;; padding a minimum of n spaces.) The defaults use -1 ;; instead of 1. (idlwave-action-and-binding "=" '(idlwave-expand-equal 1 1)) (idlwave-action-and-binding "<" '(idlwave-surround 1 1)) (idlwave-action-and-binding ">" '(idlwave-surround 1 1 '(?-))) (idlwave-action-and-binding "&" '(idlwave-surround 1 1)) - ;; + ;; Only pad after comma and with exactly 1 space (idlwave-action-and-binding "," '(idlwave-surround nil 1)) - ;; + (idlwave-action-and-binding "&" '(idlwave-surround 1 1)) + + ;; Pad only after `->', remove any space before the arrow + (idlwave-action-and-binding "->" '(idlwave-surround 0 -1 nil 2)) + ;; Set some personal bindings ;; (In this case, makes `,' have the normal self-insert behavior.) (local-set-key "," 'self-insert-command) + (local-set-key [f5] 'idlwave-shell-break-here) + (local-set-key [f6] 'idlwave-shell-clear-current-bp) + ;; Create a newline, indenting the original and new line. ;; A similar function that does _not_ reindent the original ;; line is on "\C-j" (The default for emacs programming modes). (local-set-key "\n" 'idlwave-newline) ;; (local-set-key "\C-j" 'idlwave-newline) ; My preference. + + ;; Some personal abbreviations + (define-abbrev idlwave-mode-abbrev-table + (concat idlwave-abbrev-start-char "wb") "widget_base()" + (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 1)) + (define-abbrev idlwave-mode-abbrev-table + (concat idlwave-abbrev-start-char "on") "obj_new()" + (idlwave-keyword-abbrev 1)) )) ;;; Settings for IDLWAVE SHELL mode @@ -1770,15 +3965,279 @@ user is King!@refill (setq idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern "^WAVE> ") ; default is "^IDL> " (setq idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name "wave") (setq idlwave-shell-process-name "wave") -(setq idlwave-shell-use-dedicated-frame t) ; Shell on separate frame (setq idlwave-shell-use-toolbar nil) ; No toolbar + +;; Most shell interaction settings can be done from the shell-mode-hook. +(add-hook 'idlwave-shell-mode-hook + (lambda () + ;; Set up some custom key and mouse examine commands + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [s-down-mouse-2] + (idlwave-shell-mouse-examine + "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)")) + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f9] (idlwave-shell-examine + "print, size(___,/DIMENSIONS)")) + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f10] (idlwave-shell-examine + "print,size(___,/TNAME)")) + (idlwave-shell-define-key-both [f11] (idlwave-shell-examine + "help,___,/STRUCTURE")))) +@end example + +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Windows and MacOS, Troubleshooting, Configuration Examples, Top +@appendix Windows and MacOS +@cindex Windows +@cindex MacOS +@cindex MacOSX + +IDLWAVE was developed on a UNIX system. However, thanks to the +portability of Emacs, much of IDLWAVE does also work under different +operating systems like Windows (with NTEmacs or NTXEmacs) or MacOS. + +The only real problem is that RSI does not provide a command-line +version of IDL for Windows or MacOS(<=9) with which IDLWAVE can +interact@footnote{Call your RSI representative and complain --- it +should be trivial for them to provide one. And if enough people ask for +it, maybe they will. The new MacOSX version of IDL @emph{does} have a +shell and works well with IDLWAVE.}. As a result, the IDLWAVE Shell +does not work and you have to rely on IDLDE to run and debug your +programs. However, editing IDL source files with Emacs/IDLWAVE works +with all bells and whistles, including routine info, completion and fast +online help. Only a small amount of additional information must be +specified in your @file{.emacs} file: the path names which, on a UNIX +system, are automatically gathered by talking to the IDL program. + +Here is an example of the additional configuration needed for a Windows +system. I am assuming that IDLWAVE has been installed in +@w{@samp{C:\Program Files\IDLWAVE}} and that IDL is installed in +@w{@samp{C:\RSI\IDL55}}. + +@lisp +;; location of the lisp files (needed if IDLWAVE is not part of +;; the X/Emacs installation) +(setq load-path (cons "c:/program files/IDLWAVE" load-path)) + +;; The location of the IDL library files, both from RSI and your own. +;; note that the initial "+" expands the path recursively +(setq idlwave-library-path + '("+c:/RSI/IDL55/lib/" "+c:/user/me/idllibs" )) + +;; location of the IDL system directory (try "print,!DIR") +(setq idlwave-system-directory "c:/RSI/IDL55/") + +;; specify using the HTMLHelp documentation for online help, with the +;; KEYHH helper routine (Windows only) +(setq idlwave-use-hh 'keyhh) + +;; file in which to store the user catalog info +(setq idlwave-user-catalog-file "c:/IDLWAVE/idlcat.el") +@end lisp + +@noindent Furthermore, Windows sometimes tries to outsmart you --- make +sure you check the following things: + +@itemize @bullet +@item When you download the IDLWAVE distribution, make sure you save the +file under the names @file{idlwave.tar.gz}. +@item M-TAB switches among running programs --- use Esc-TAB +instead. +@item Other issues as yet unnamed... +@end itemize + +Windows users who'd like to make use of IDLWAVE's context-aware HTML +help can skip the browser and use the HTMLHelp functionality directly. +@xref{Help with HTML Documentation}. + +@ifhtml + +@end ifhtml +@node Troubleshooting, Index, Windows and MacOS, Top +@appendix Troubleshooting +@cindex Troubleshooting + +Although IDLWAVE usually installs and works without difficulty, a few +common problems and their solutions are documented below. + +@enumerate + +@item @strong{Whenever an IDL error occurs or a breakpoint is hit, I get +errors or strange behavior when I try to type anything into some of my +IDLWAVE buffers.} + +This is a @emph{feature}, not an error. You're in @emph{Electric +Debug Mode} (@pxref{Electric Debug Mode}). You should see +@code{*Debugging*} in the mode-line. The buffer is read-only and all +debugging and examination commands are available as single keystrokes; +@kbd{C-?} lists these shortcuts. Use @kbd{q} to quit the mode, and +customize the variable @code{idlwave-shell-automatic-electric-debug} +if you prefer not to enter electric debug on breakpoints@dots{} but +you really should try it before you disable it! You can also +customize this variable to enter debug mode when errors are +encountered too. + +@item @strong{I get errors like @samp{Searching for program: no such +file or directory, idl} when attempting to start the IDL shell.} + +IDLWAVE needs to know where IDL is in order to run it as a process. +By default, it attempts to invoke it simply as @samp{idl}, which +presumes such an executable is on your search path. You need to +ensure @samp{idl} is on your @samp{$PATH}, or specify the full +pathname to the idl program with the variable +@code{idlwave-shell-explicit-file-name}. Note that you may need to +set your shell search path in two places when running Emacs as an Aqua +application with MacOSX; see the next topic. + +@item @strong{IDLWAVE is disregarding my @samp{IDL_PATH} which I set +under MacOSX} + +If you run Emacs directly as an Aqua application, rather than from the +console shell, the environment is set not from your usual shell +configuration files (e.g. @file{.cshrc}), but from the file +@file{~/.MacOSX/environment.plist}. Either include your path settings +there, or start Emacs and IDLWAVE from the shell. + +@item @strong{I get errors like @samp{Symbol's function is void: +overlayp} when trying to start the shell in XEmacs} + +You don't have the @samp{fsf-compat} package installed, which IDLWAVE +needs to run under XEmacs. Install it and, if necessary, insert +@code{(require 'overlay)} in your @file{.emacs}. + +@item @strong{I'm getting errors like @samp{Symbol's value as variable is void: +cl-builtin-gethash} on completion or routine info.} + +This error arises if you upgraded Emacs from 20.x to 21.x without +re-installing IDLWAVE. Old Emacs and new Emacs are not byte-compatible +in compiled lisp files. Presumably, you kept the original .elc files in +place, and this is the source of the error. If you recompile (or just +"make; make install") from source, it should resolve this problem. +Another option is to recompile the @file{idlw*.el} files by hand using +@kbd{M-x byte-compile-file}. Why not take the opportunity to grab the +latest IDLWAVE version at @uref{@value{IDLWAVE-HOMEPAGE}, the +maintainers webpage} + +@item @strong{@kbd{M-@key{TAB}} doesn't complete words, it switches +windows on my desktop.} + +Your system is trapping @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} and using it for its own +nefarious purposes: Emacs never sees the keystrokes. On many Unix +systems, you can reconfigure your window manager to use another key +sequence for switching among windows. Another option is to use the +equivalent sequence @kbd{@key{ESC}-@key{TAB}}. + +@item @strong{When stopping at breakpoints or errors, IDLWAVE does not +seem to highlight the relevant line in the source.} + +IDLWAVE scans for error and halt messages and highlights the stop +location in the correct file. However, if you've changed the system +variable @samp{!ERROR_STATE.MSG_PREFIX}, it is unable to parse these +message correctly. Don't do that. + +@item @strong{IDLWAVE doesn't work correctly when using ENVI.} + +Though IDLWAVE was not written with ENVI in mind, it works just fine +with it, as long as you update the prompt it's looking for (@samp{IDL> +} by default). You can do this with the variable +@code{idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern} (@pxref{Starting the Shell}), e.g., +in your @file{.emacs}: + +@lisp +(setq idlwave-shell-prompt-pattern "^\\(ENVI\\|IDL\\)> ") +@end lisp + +@item @strong{Attempts to set breakpoints fail: no breakpoint is +indicated in the IDLWAVE buffer.} + +IDL changed its breakpoint reporting format starting with IDLv5.5. The +first version of IDLWAVE to support the new format is IDLWAVE v4.10. If +you have an older version and are using IDL >v5.5, you need to upgrade, +and/or make sure your recent version of IDLWAVE is being found on the +Emacs load-path (see the next entry). You can list the version being +used with @kbd{C-h v idlwave-mode-version @key{RET}}. + +@item @strong{I installed a new version of IDLWAVE, but the old +version is still being used} or @strong{IDLWAVE works, but when I +tried to install the optional modules @file{idlw-roprompt.el} or +@file{idlw-complete-structtag}, I get errors like @samp{Cannot open +load file}}. + +The problem is that your Emacs is not finding the version of IDLWAVE you +installed. Many Emacsen come with an older bundled copy of IDLWAVE +(e.g. v4.7 for Emacs 21.x), which is likely what's being used instead. +You need to make sure your Emacs @emph{load-path} contains the directory +where IDLWAVE is installed (@file{/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp}, by +default), @emph{before} Emacs' default search directories. You can +accomplish this by putting the following in your @file{.emacs}: + +@lisp +(setq load-path (cons "/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp" load-path)) +@end lisp + +@noindent You can check on your load-path value using @kbd{C-h v +load-path @key{RET}}. + +@item @strong{IDLWAVE is screwing up the formatting of my @file{.idl} files.} + +Actually, this isn't IDLWAVE at all, but @samp{idl-mode}, an unrelated +programming mode for CORBA's Interface Definition Language (you should +see @samp{(IDL)}, not @samp{(IDLWAVE)} in the mode-line). One +solution: don't name your file @file{.idl}, but rather @file{.pro}. +Another solution: make sure @file{.idl} files load IDLWAVE instead of +@samp{idl-mode} by adding the following to your @file{.emacs}: + +@lisp +(setcdr (rassoc 'idl-mode auto-mode-alist) 'idlwave-mode) +@end lisp + +@item @strong{The routine info for my local routines is out of date!} + +IDLWAVE collects routine info from various locations (@pxref{Routine +Information Sources}). Routines in files visited in a buffer or +compiled in the shell should be up to date. For other routines, the +information is only as current as the most recent scan. If you have a +rapidly changing set of routines, and you'd like the latest routine +information to be available for it, one powerful technique makes use of +the library catalog tool, @samp{idlwave_catalog}. Simply add a line to +your @samp{cron} file (@samp{crontab -e} will let you edit this on some +systems), like this: + +@example +45 3 * * 1-5 (cd /path/to/myidllib; /path/to/idlwave_catalog MyLib) @end example -@node Index, , Configuration Examples, Top +@noindent where @samp{MyLib} is the name of your library. This will +rescan all @file{.pro} files at or below @file{/path/to/myidllib} every +week night at 3:45am. You can even scan site-wide libraries with this +method, and the most recent information will be available to all users. + +@item @strong{All the Greek-font characters in the HTML help are +displayed as Latin characters!} + +Unfortunately, the HTMLHelp files RSI provides attempt to switch to +@samp{Symbol} font to display Greek characters, which is not really an +permitted method for doing this in HTML. There is a "workaround" for +many browsers: @xref{HTML Help Browser Tips}. + +@item @strong{In the shell, my long commands are truncated at 256 characters!} + +This actually happens when running IDL in an XTerm as well. There are +a couple of work arounds: @code{define_key,/control,'^d'} (e.g. in +your @file{$IDL_STARTUP} file) will disable the @samp{EOF} character +and give you a 512 character limit. You won't be able to use +@key{C-d} to quit the shell, however. Another possibility is +@code{!EDIT_INPUT=0}, which gives you an @emph{infinite} limit (OK, a +memory-bounded limit), but disables the processing of background +widget events (those with @code{/NO_BLOCK} passed to @code{XManager}). + +@end enumerate + +@node Index, , Troubleshooting, Top @unnumbered Index @printindex cp -@summarycontents -@contents @bye +@ignore + arch-tag: f1d73958-1423-4127-b8aa-f7b953d64492 +@end ignore