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| | ;;; subr-x.el --- extra Lisp functions -*- lexical-binding:t -*-
;; Copyright (C) 2013-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org
;; Keywords: convenience
;; Package: emacs
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
;; (at your option) any later version.
;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Commentary:
;; Less commonly used functions that complement basic APIs, often implemented in
;; C code (like hash-tables and strings), and are not eligible for inclusion
;; in subr.el.
;; Do not document these functions in the lispref.
;; https://lists.gnu.org/r/emacs-devel/2014-01/msg01006.html
;; NB If you want to use this library, it's almost always correct to use:
;; (eval-when-compile (require 'subr-x))
;;; Code:
(eval-when-compile (require 'cl-lib))
(defmacro internal--thread-argument (first? &rest forms)
"Internal implementation for `thread-first' and `thread-last'.
When Argument FIRST? is non-nil argument is threaded first, else
last. FORMS are the expressions to be threaded."
(pcase forms
(`(,x (,f . ,args) . ,rest)
`(internal--thread-argument
,first? ,(if first? `(,f ,x ,@args) `(,f ,@args ,x)) ,@rest))
(`(,x ,f . ,rest) `(internal--thread-argument ,first? (,f ,x) ,@rest))
(_ (car forms))))
(defmacro thread-first (&rest forms)
"Thread FORMS elements as the first argument of their successor.
Example:
(thread-first
5
(+ 20)
(/ 25)
-
(+ 40))
Is equivalent to:
(+ (- (/ (+ 5 20) 25)) 40)
Note how the single `-' got converted into a list before
threading."
(declare (indent 0)
(debug (form &rest [&or symbolp (sexp &rest form)])))
`(internal--thread-argument t ,@forms))
(defmacro thread-last (&rest forms)
"Thread FORMS elements as the last argument of their successor.
Example:
(thread-last
5
(+ 20)
(/ 25)
-
(+ 40))
Is equivalent to:
(+ 40 (- (/ 25 (+ 20 5))))
Note how the single `-' got converted into a list before
threading."
(declare (indent 0) (debug thread-first))
`(internal--thread-argument nil ,@forms))
(defsubst hash-table-empty-p (hash-table)
"Check whether HASH-TABLE is empty (has 0 elements)."
(zerop (hash-table-count hash-table)))
(defsubst hash-table-keys (hash-table)
"Return a list of keys in HASH-TABLE."
(cl-loop for k being the hash-keys of hash-table collect k))
(defsubst hash-table-values (hash-table)
"Return a list of values in HASH-TABLE."
(cl-loop for v being the hash-values of hash-table collect v))
(defsubst string-empty-p (string)
"Check whether STRING is empty."
(string= string ""))
(defsubst string-join (strings &optional separator)
"Join all STRINGS using SEPARATOR.
Optional argument SEPARATOR must be a string, a vector, or a list of
characters; nil stands for the empty string."
(mapconcat #'identity strings separator))
(define-obsolete-function-alias 'string-reverse 'reverse "25.1")
;;;###autoload
(defun string-truncate-left (string length)
"Truncate STRING to LENGTH, replacing initial surplus with \"...\"."
(let ((strlen (length string)))
(if (<= strlen length)
string
(setq length (max 0 (- length 3)))
(concat "..." (substring string (max 0 (- strlen 1 length)))))))
(defsubst string-blank-p (string)
"Check whether STRING is either empty or only whitespace.
The following characters count as whitespace here: space, tab, newline and
carriage return."
(string-match-p "\\`[ \t\n\r]*\\'" string))
(defsubst string-remove-prefix (prefix string)
"Remove PREFIX from STRING if present."
(if (string-prefix-p prefix string)
(substring string (length prefix))
string))
(defsubst string-remove-suffix (suffix string)
"Remove SUFFIX from STRING if present."
(if (string-suffix-p suffix string)
(substring string 0 (- (length string) (length suffix)))
string))
;;;###autoload
(defun string-clean-whitespace (string)
"Clean up whitespace in STRING.
All sequences of whitespaces in STRING are collapsed into a
single space character, and leading/trailing whitespace is
removed."
(let ((blank "[[:blank:]\r\n]+"))
(string-trim (replace-regexp-in-string blank " " string t t)
blank blank)))
(defun string-fill (string length)
"Try to word-wrap STRING so that no lines are longer than LENGTH.
Wrapping is done where there is whitespace. If there are
individual words in STRING that are longer than LENGTH, the
result will have lines that are longer than LENGTH."
(with-temp-buffer
(insert string)
(goto-char (point-min))
(let ((fill-column length)
(adaptive-fill-mode nil))
(fill-region (point-min) (point-max)))
(buffer-string)))
(defun string-limit (string length &optional end coding-system)
"Return a substring of STRING that is (up to) LENGTH characters long.
If STRING is shorter than or equal to LENGTH characters, return the
entire string unchanged.
If STRING is longer than LENGTH characters, return a substring
consisting of the first LENGTH characters of STRING. If END is
non-nil, return the last LENGTH characters instead.
If CODING-SYSTEM is non-nil, STRING will be encoded before
limiting, and LENGTH is interpreted as the number of bytes to
limit the string to. The result will be a unibyte string that is
shorter than LENGTH, but will not contain \"partial\" characters,
even if CODING-SYSTEM encodes characters with several bytes per
character.
When shortening strings for display purposes,
`truncate-string-to-width' is almost always a better alternative
than this function."
(unless (natnump length)
(signal 'wrong-type-argument (list 'natnump length)))
(if coding-system
(let ((result nil)
(result-length 0)
(index (if end (1- (length string)) 0)))
;; FIXME: This implementation, which uses encode-coding-char
;; to encode the string one character at a time, is in general
;; incorrect: coding-systems that produce prefix or suffix
;; bytes, such as ISO-2022-based or UTF-8/16 with BOM, will
;; produce those bytes for each character, instead of just
;; once for the entire string. encode-coding-char attempts to
;; remove those extra bytes at least in some situations, but
;; it cannot do that in all cases. And in any case, producing
;; what is supposed to be a UTF-16 or ISO-2022-CN encoded
;; string which lacks the BOM bytes at the beginning and the
;; charset designation sequences at the head and tail of the
;; result will definitely surprise the callers in some cases.
(while (let ((encoded (encode-coding-char
(aref string index) coding-system)))
(and (<= (+ (length encoded) result-length) length)
(progn
(push encoded result)
(cl-incf result-length (length encoded))
(setq index (if end (1- index)
(1+ index))))
(if end (> index -1)
(< index (length string)))))
;; No body.
)
(apply #'concat (if end result (nreverse result))))
(cond
((<= (length string) length) string)
(end (substring string (- (length string) length)))
(t (substring string 0 length)))))
(defun string-pad (string length &optional padding start)
"Pad STRING to LENGTH using PADDING.
If PADDING is nil, the space character is used. If not nil, it
should be a character.
If STRING is longer than the absolute value of LENGTH, no padding
is done.
If START is nil (or not present), the padding is done to the end
of the string, and if non-nil, padding is done to the start of
the string."
(unless (natnump length)
(signal 'wrong-type-argument (list 'natnump length)))
(let ((pad-length (- length (length string))))
(if (< pad-length 0)
string
(concat (and start
(make-string pad-length (or padding ?\s)))
string
(and (not start)
(make-string pad-length (or padding ?\s)))))))
(defun string-chop-newline (string)
"Remove the final newline (if any) from STRING."
(string-remove-suffix "\n" string))
(defun replace-region-contents (beg end replace-fn
&optional max-secs max-costs)
"Replace the region between BEG and END using REPLACE-FN.
REPLACE-FN runs on the current buffer narrowed to the region. It
should return either a string or a buffer replacing the region.
The replacement is performed using `replace-buffer-contents'
which also describes the MAX-SECS and MAX-COSTS arguments and the
return value.
Note: If the replacement is a string, it'll be placed in a
temporary buffer so that `replace-buffer-contents' can operate on
it. Therefore, if you already have the replacement in a buffer,
it makes no sense to convert it to a string using
`buffer-substring' or similar."
(save-excursion
(save-restriction
(narrow-to-region beg end)
(goto-char (point-min))
(let ((repl (funcall replace-fn)))
(if (bufferp repl)
(replace-buffer-contents repl max-secs max-costs)
(let ((source-buffer (current-buffer)))
(with-temp-buffer
(insert repl)
(let ((tmp-buffer (current-buffer)))
(set-buffer source-buffer)
(replace-buffer-contents tmp-buffer max-secs max-costs)))))))))
(defmacro named-let (name bindings &rest body)
"Looping construct taken from Scheme.
Like `let', bind variables in BINDINGS and then evaluate BODY,
but with the twist that BODY can evaluate itself recursively by
calling NAME, where the arguments passed to NAME are used
as the new values of the bound variables in the recursive invocation."
(declare (indent 2) (debug (symbolp (&rest (symbolp form)) body)))
(require 'cl-lib)
(let ((fargs (mapcar (lambda (b) (if (consp b) (car b) b)) bindings))
(aargs (mapcar (lambda (b) (if (consp b) (cadr b))) bindings)))
;; According to the Scheme semantics of named let, `name' is not in scope
;; while evaluating the expressions in `bindings', and for this reason, the
;; "initial" function call below needs to be outside of the `cl-labels'.
;; When the "self-tco" eliminates all recursive calls, the `cl-labels'
;; expands to a lambda which the byte-compiler then combines with the
;; funcall to make a `let' so we end up with a plain `while' loop and no
;; remaining `lambda' at all.
`(funcall
(cl-labels ((,name ,fargs . ,body)) #',name)
. ,aargs)))
(defmacro with-memoization (place &rest code)
"Return the value of CODE and stash it in PLACE.
If PLACE's value is non-nil, then don't bother evaluating CODE
and return the value found in PLACE instead."
(declare (indent 1) (debug (gv-place body)))
(gv-letplace (getter setter) place
`(or ,getter
,(macroexp-let2 nil val (macroexp-progn code)
`(progn
,(funcall setter val)
,val)))))
;;;###autoload
(defun string-pixel-width (string)
"Return the width of STRING in pixels."
(if (zerop (length string))
0
;; Keeping a work buffer around is more efficient than creating a
;; new temporary buffer.
(with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create " *string-pixel-width*")
(delete-region (point-min) (point-max))
(insert string)
(car (buffer-text-pixel-size nil nil t)))))
;;;###autoload
(defun string-glyph-split (string)
"Split STRING into a list of strings representing separate glyphs.
This takes into account combining characters and grapheme clusters."
(let ((result nil)
(start 0)
comp)
(while (< start (length string))
(if (setq comp (find-composition-internal
start
;; Don't search backward in the string for the
;; start of the composition.
(min (length string) (1+ start))
string nil))
(progn
(push (substring string (car comp) (cadr comp)) result)
(setq start (cadr comp)))
(push (substring string start (1+ start)) result)
(setq start (1+ start))))
(nreverse result)))
;;;###autoload
(defun add-display-text-property (start end prop value
&optional object)
"Add display property PROP with VALUE to the text from START to END.
If any text in the region has a non-nil `display' property, those
properties are retained.
If OBJECT is non-nil, it should be a string or a buffer. If nil,
this defaults to the current buffer."
(let ((sub-start start)
(sub-end 0)
disp)
(while (< sub-end end)
(setq sub-end (next-single-property-change sub-start 'display object
(if (stringp object)
(min (length object) end)
(min end (point-max)))))
(if (not (setq disp (get-text-property sub-start 'display object)))
;; No old properties in this range.
(put-text-property sub-start sub-end 'display (list prop value))
;; We have old properties.
(let ((vector nil))
;; Make disp into a list.
(setq disp
(cond
((vectorp disp)
(setq vector t)
(seq-into disp 'list))
((not (consp (car disp)))
(list disp))
(t
disp)))
;; Remove any old instances.
(when-let ((old (assoc prop disp)))
(setq disp (delete old disp)))
(setq disp (cons (list prop value) disp))
(when vector
(setq disp (seq-into disp 'vector)))
;; Finally update the range.
(put-text-property sub-start sub-end 'display disp)))
(setq sub-start sub-end))))
;;;###autoload
(defun read-process-name (prompt)
"Query the user for a process and return the process object."
;; Currently supports only the PROCESS argument.
;; Must either return a list containing a process, or signal an error.
;; (Returning `nil' would mean the current buffer's process.)
(unless (fboundp 'process-list)
(error "Asynchronous subprocesses are not supported on this system"))
;; Local function to return cons of a complete-able name, and the
;; associated process object, for use with `completing-read'.
(cl-flet ((procitem
(p) (when (process-live-p p)
(let ((pid (process-id p))
(procname (process-name p))
(procbuf (process-buffer p)))
(and (eq (process-type p) 'real)
(cons (if procbuf
(format "%s (%s) in buffer %s"
procname pid
(buffer-name procbuf))
(format "%s (%s)" procname pid))
p))))))
;; Perform `completing-read' for a process.
(let* ((currproc (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)))
(proclist (or (process-list)
(error "No processes found")))
(collection (delq nil (mapcar #'procitem proclist)))
(selection (completing-read
(format-prompt prompt
(and currproc
(eq (process-type currproc) 'real)
(procitem currproc)))
collection nil :require-match nil nil
(car (seq-find (lambda (proc)
(eq currproc (cdr proc)))
collection))))
(process (and selection
(cdr (assoc selection collection)))))
(unless process
(error "No process selected"))
process)))
(defmacro with-buffer-unmodified-if-unchanged (&rest body)
"Like `progn', but change buffer-modified status only if buffer text changes.
If the buffer was unmodified before execution of BODY, and
buffer text after execution of BODY is identical to what it was
before, ensure that buffer is still marked unmodified afterwards.
For example, the following won't change the buffer's modification
status:
(with-buffer-unmodified-if-unchanged
(insert \"a\")
(delete-char -1))
Note that only changes in the raw byte sequence of the buffer text,
as stored in the internal representation, are monitored for the
purpose of detecting the lack of changes in buffer text. Any other
changes that are normally perceived as \"buffer modifications\", such
as changes in text properties, `buffer-file-coding-system', buffer
multibyteness, etc. -- will not be noticed, and the buffer will still
be marked unmodified, effectively ignoring those changes."
(declare (debug t) (indent 0))
(let ((hash (gensym))
(buffer (gensym)))
`(let ((,hash (and (not (buffer-modified-p))
(buffer-hash)))
(,buffer (current-buffer)))
(prog1
(progn
,@body)
;; If we didn't change anything in the buffer (and the buffer
;; was previously unmodified), then flip the modification status
;; back to "unchanged".
(when (and ,hash (buffer-live-p ,buffer))
(with-current-buffer ,buffer
(when (and (buffer-modified-p)
(equal ,hash (buffer-hash)))
(restore-buffer-modified-p nil))))))))
(provide 'subr-x)
;;; subr-x.el ends here
|