* New Context Menu [not found] <20210818120834.i3orh535tb2enpos.ref@Ergus> @ 2021-08-18 12:08 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 12:26 ` Eli Zaretskii ` (3 more replies) 0 siblings, 4 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-18 12:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-devel; +Cc: Juri Linkov Hi: I just tested the new context menu... It is very nice!! thanks Juri!! I have a couple of small issues that maybe you could help to face. When using emacs on xterm the interaction with the menu is a bit uncomfortable (like in X11... I know we xterm users don't use the mouse too much, but if it is not too complex maybe it may worth to add it at least as an option). The current implementation follows the X11 menu interaction pattern: Hold mouse-3 to keep the menu active and release mouse-3 to select an entry. Could we add an option to avoid this and have the same interaction behavior than in gui please?: mouse-3 activates the menu, a click over an option selects it and a click outside the menu hides the menu I know this may be something external to emacs itself; maybe it is how xterm menu behaves, but probably there is a way to go around this without excessive complexity. Maybe this is ask for too much, but I am wondering that once the context menu will be released with emacs 28, then a lot of packages will try to implement such a functionality in a hacky way with advises/hooks and so on and they won't get properly maintained. The other "issue" is maybe more a question: In case the user wants to bind the context menu without using the mouse how can be done? Will the context-menu appear in the current cursor (point) or in the current mouse arrow position? I know the context menu without mouse is a bit pointless; but for new users it may be very useful to not feel lost when starting (like exiting vim ;p) Thanks in advance, Ergus. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 12:08 ` New Context Menu Ergus @ 2021-08-18 12:26 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 12:43 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 14:04 ` Jean-Christophe Helary ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 12:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 14:08:34 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > > The current implementation follows the X11 menu interaction pattern: > Hold mouse-3 to keep the menu active and release mouse-3 to select an > entry. > > Could we add an option to avoid this and have the same interaction > behavior than in gui please?: mouse-3 activates the menu, a click over > an option selects it and a click outside the menu hides the menu > > I know this may be something external to emacs itself; maybe it is how > xterm menu behaves, but probably there is a way to go around this > without excessive complexity. I'm quite sure it's how the mouse support behaves, and has nothing to do with what Juri did. You should see the same behavior in any menu on that display. It works for me as you expect on the w32 console. > Maybe this is ask for too much, but I am wondering that once the context > menu will be released with emacs 28, then a lot of packages will try to > implement such a functionality in a hacky way with advises/hooks and so > on and they won't get properly maintained. I don't see how this can be worked around in a hook, because TTY menus are implemented entirely in C. > In case the user wants to bind the context menu without using the mouse > how can be done? Will the context-menu appear in the current cursor > (point) or in the current mouse arrow position? We could do something similar to what we do when the user presses F10 on a TTY frame. > I know the context menu without mouse is a bit pointless Why pointless? menus work on TTY frames without a mouse just fine, you can move and select using the keyboard. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 12:26 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 12:43 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 13:30 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 16:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-18 12:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 03:26:51PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 14:08:34 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> >> >> The current implementation follows the X11 menu interaction pattern: >> Hold mouse-3 to keep the menu active and release mouse-3 to select an >> entry. >> >> Could we add an option to avoid this and have the same interaction >> behavior than in gui please?: mouse-3 activates the menu, a click over >> an option selects it and a click outside the menu hides the menu >> >> I know this may be something external to emacs itself; maybe it is how >> xterm menu behaves, but probably there is a way to go around this >> without excessive complexity. > >I'm quite sure it's how the mouse support behaves, and has nothing to >do with what Juri did. You should see the same behavior in any menu >on that display. > >It works for me as you expect on the w32 console. > :( I supposed that. It will be hard to have such a functionality in xterm then. And no other terminal works completely fine with emacs for me. >> Maybe this is ask for too much, but I am wondering that once the context >> menu will be released with emacs 28, then a lot of packages will try to >> implement such a functionality in a hacky way with advises/hooks and so >> on and they won't get properly maintained. > >I don't see how this can be worked around in a hook, because TTY menus >are implemented entirely in C. > Users and external developers may try their best it this annoys them enough. >> In case the user wants to bind the context menu without using the mouse >> how can be done? Will the context-menu appear in the current cursor >> (point) or in the current mouse arrow position? > >We could do something similar to what we do when the user presses F10 >on a TTY frame. > On tty the F10 menu opens in the minibuffer. It would be better if we can just show the same menu than with the mouse instead, because it appears in place, closer to where the user is editing. And the experience is a bit more consistent IMHO. >> I know the context menu without mouse is a bit pointless > >Why pointless? menus work on TTY frames without a mouse just fine, you >can move and select using the keyboard. > But context menu it more mouse-oriented in general because it is a need specially for more mouse oriented users. Why to do something like F10 + arrow + arrow + Enter: when you can do just M-w? Or why to use arrows if just used the mouse to activate the menu? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 12:43 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-18 13:30 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 17:17 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 16:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 13:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 14:43:09 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > >> Maybe this is ask for too much, but I am wondering that once the context > >> menu will be released with emacs 28, then a lot of packages will try to > >> implement such a functionality in a hacky way with advises/hooks and so > >> on and they won't get properly maintained. > > > >I don't see how this can be worked around in a hook, because TTY menus > >are implemented entirely in C. > > > Users and external developers may try their best it this annoys them > enough. Yes, but there are limits to that. Like the speed of light, for example. > >> In case the user wants to bind the context menu without using the mouse > >> how can be done? Will the context-menu appear in the current cursor > >> (point) or in the current mouse arrow position? > > > >We could do something similar to what we do when the user presses F10 > >on a TTY frame. > > > On tty the F10 menu opens in the minibuffer. ??? It does not! I just tried. Are you trying in "emacs -Q"? > It would be better if we can just show the same menu than with the > mouse instead That's what F10 is supposed to do. > because it appears in place, closer to where the user is editing. If you want the menu to be dropped close to point, you need to tell the menu code where that is, it by default expects to get that from the event which triggered it, and that only works with mouse clicks, not with keyboard keys. In the implementation of F10, we use some trick to do something similar, but since that opens the menu-bar menu, the location of point is not very relevant, so we use something else. > >> I know the context menu without mouse is a bit pointless > > > >Why pointless? menus work on TTY frames without a mouse just fine, you > >can move and select using the keyboard. > > > But context menu it more mouse-oriented in general because it is a need > specially for more mouse oriented users. Why to do something like F10 + > arrow + arrow + Enter: when you can do just M-w? Because menus are self-explanatory, whereas M-w requires that you remember it? > Or why to use arrows if just used the mouse to activate the menu? Because you don't have a mouse to begin with? or because you don't want to move your fingers from the keyboard? The usual reasons, IOW. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 13:30 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 17:17 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 17:21 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-18 17:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 04:30:37PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 14:43:09 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> >> Maybe this is ask for too much, but I am wondering that once the context >> >> menu will be released with emacs 28, then a lot of packages will try to >> >> implement such a functionality in a hacky way with advises/hooks and so >> >> on and they won't get properly maintained. >> > >> >I don't see how this can be worked around in a hook, because TTY menus >> >are implemented entirely in C. >> > >> Users and external developers may try their best it this annoys them >> enough. > >Yes, but there are limits to that. Like the speed of light, for >example. > >> >> In case the user wants to bind the context menu without using the mouse >> >> how can be done? Will the context-menu appear in the current cursor >> >> (point) or in the current mouse arrow position? >> > >> >We could do something similar to what we do when the user presses F10 >> >on a TTY frame. >> > >> On tty the F10 menu opens in the minibuffer. > >??? It does not! I just tried. Are you trying in "emacs -Q"? > >> It would be better if we can just show the same menu than with the >> mouse instead > >That's what F10 is supposed to do. Ahh sorry, I tried that from a real TTY ;). Now I get your point. Yes, that's what I want. > >> because it appears in place, closer to where the user is editing. > >If you want the menu to be dropped close to point, you need to tell >the menu code where that is, it by default expects to get that from >the event which triggered it, and that only works with mouse clicks, >not with keyboard keys. In the implementation of F10, we use some >trick to do something similar, but since that opens the menu-bar menu, >the location of point is not very relevant, so we use something else. > Passing the point location shouldn't be too hard; maybe it only requires an extra condition when the "event" is not a "mouse event" use the point location. On tty some time ago that was an issue because the menu used to open always in the middle... but now it is fixed. >> >> I know the context menu without mouse is a bit pointless >> > >> >Why pointless? menus work on TTY frames without a mouse just fine, you >> >can move and select using the keyboard. >> > >> But context menu it more mouse-oriented in general because it is a need >> specially for more mouse oriented users. Why to do something like F10 + >> arrow + arrow + Enter: when you can do just M-w? > >Because menus are self-explanatory, whereas M-w requires that you >remember it? > >> Or why to use arrows if just used the mouse to activate the menu? > >Because you don't have a mouse to begin with? or because you don't >want to move your fingers from the keyboard? The usual reasons, IOW. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 17:17 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-18 17:21 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 17:32 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 17:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 19:17:53 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net > > >> On tty the F10 menu opens in the minibuffer. > > > >??? It does not! I just tried. Are you trying in "emacs -Q"? > > > >> It would be better if we can just show the same menu than with the > >> mouse instead > > > >That's what F10 is supposed to do. > > Ahh sorry, I tried that from a real TTY ;). Now I get your point. Yes, > that's what I want. Not sure what you mean by "real TTY". F10 should work on any TTY, whether real or emulated. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 17:21 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 17:32 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-18 17:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 08:21:25PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 19:17:53 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net >> >> >> On tty the F10 menu opens in the minibuffer. >> > >> >??? It does not! I just tried. Are you trying in "emacs -Q"? >> > >> >> It would be better if we can just show the same menu than with the >> >> mouse instead >> > >> >That's what F10 is supposed to do. >> >> Ahh sorry, I tried that from a real TTY ;). Now I get your point. Yes, >> that's what I want. > >Not sure what you mean by "real TTY". F10 should work on any TTY, >whether real or emulated. My bad, sorry. I had the menu bar disabled. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 12:43 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 13:30 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 16:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 18:10 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 18:58 ` Juri Linkov 1 sibling, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 16:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 14:43:09 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > >> Could we add an option to avoid this and have the same interaction > >> behavior than in gui please?: mouse-3 activates the menu, a click over > >> an option selects it and a click outside the menu hides the menu > >> > >> I know this may be something external to emacs itself; maybe it is how > >> xterm menu behaves, but probably there is a way to go around this > >> without excessive complexity. > > > >I'm quite sure it's how the mouse support behaves, and has nothing to > >do with what Juri did. You should see the same behavior in any menu > >on that display. > > > >It works for me as you expect on the w32 console. > > > :( I supposed that. It will be hard to have such a functionality in > xterm then. And no other terminal works completely fine with emacs for > me. Actually, I take that back. The reason for what you see is that the menu is popped by down-mouse-3, not by mouse-3. So if we can arrange for optionally doing this with mouse-3 (why isn't that the default, btw?), or if you could do that in your customizations, you should be able to have the behavior you want. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 16:50 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 18:10 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 18:17 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 18:58 ` Juri Linkov 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-18 18:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 07:50:42PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 14:43:09 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> >> Could we add an option to avoid this and have the same interaction >> >> behavior than in gui please?: mouse-3 activates the menu, a click over >> >> an option selects it and a click outside the menu hides the menu >> >> >> >> I know this may be something external to emacs itself; maybe it is how >> >> xterm menu behaves, but probably there is a way to go around this >> >> without excessive complexity. >> > >> >I'm quite sure it's how the mouse support behaves, and has nothing to >> >do with what Juri did. You should see the same behavior in any menu >> >on that display. >> > >> >It works for me as you expect on the w32 console. >> > >> :( I supposed that. It will be hard to have such a functionality in >> xterm then. And no other terminal works completely fine with emacs for >> me. > >Actually, I take that back. The reason for what you see is that the >menu is popped by down-mouse-3, not by mouse-3. So if we can arrange >for optionally doing this with mouse-3 (why isn't that the default, >btw?), or if you could do that in your customizations, you should be >able to have the behavior you want. > Indeed, I tried that and it works! Something as simple as: (global-unset-key [down-mouse-3]) (global-set-key [mouse-3] context-menu-entry) seems to work; but maybe Juri made the other one the default for some reason. Any way I agree that this behavior is more comfortable and probably should be the default. But at least this needs a custom or to be documented for new users. I would do something more or less like: (defcustom context-menu-mode-binding [down-mouse-3] "BLABLA") (...) (context-menu-mode (setq context-menu--old-mouse-3 (global-key-binding [mouse-3])) (setq context-menu--old-down-mouse-3 (global-key-binding [down-mouse-3])) (global-unset-key [mouse-3]) (global-unset-key [down-mouse-3]) (global-set-key context-menu-mode-binding context-menu-entry)) Apart from that, there is another issue with the "Paste" command in tty. Paste calls mouse-yank-primary, but in tty this commands calls gui-get-primary-selection and there is no selection because it tries to get the one on the primary selection not the one in the system (secoundary or clipboard) not the emacs kill-ring either. So I get: error("No selection is available") ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 18:10 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-18 18:17 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 19:23 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 18:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 20:10:52 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net > > >Actually, I take that back. The reason for what you see is that the > >menu is popped by down-mouse-3, not by mouse-3. So if we can arrange > >for optionally doing this with mouse-3 (why isn't that the default, > >btw?), or if you could do that in your customizations, you should be > >able to have the behavior you want. > > > Indeed, I tried that and it works! > > Something as simple as: > > (global-unset-key [down-mouse-3]) > (global-set-key [mouse-3] context-menu-entry) > > seems to work; but maybe Juri made the other one the default for some > reason. Juri? > Apart from that, there is another issue with the "Paste" command in tty. > > Paste calls mouse-yank-primary, but in tty this commands calls > gui-get-primary-selection and there is no selection because it tries to > get the one on the primary selection not the one in the system > (secoundary or clipboard) not the emacs kill-ring either. > > So I get: error("No selection is available") Which is the correct response. If you run on an xterm that supports pasting, you will get the result as on GUI frames. Why is this a problem? And how do you get "Paste" in the context menu, btw? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 18:17 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 19:23 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 19:28 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 19:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-18 19:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 09:17:04PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 20:10:52 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net >> >> >Actually, I take that back. The reason for what you see is that the >> >menu is popped by down-mouse-3, not by mouse-3. So if we can arrange >> >for optionally doing this with mouse-3 (why isn't that the default, >> >btw?), or if you could do that in your customizations, you should be >> >able to have the behavior you want. >> > >> Indeed, I tried that and it works! >> >> Something as simple as: >> >> (global-unset-key [down-mouse-3]) >> (global-set-key [mouse-3] context-menu-entry) >> >> seems to work; but maybe Juri made the other one the default for some >> reason. > >Juri? > >> Apart from that, there is another issue with the "Paste" command in tty. >> >> Paste calls mouse-yank-primary, but in tty this commands calls >> gui-get-primary-selection and there is no selection because it tries to >> get the one on the primary selection not the one in the system >> (secoundary or clipboard) not the emacs kill-ring either. >> >> So I get: error("No selection is available") > >Which is the correct response. If you run on an xterm that supports >pasting, you will get the result as on GUI frames. Why is this a >problem? > If within Emacs I "Copy" throw context-menu, then I expect I could paste the copied thing in the same way. I expect C-y not <mouse-2> action. And if I copy from the browser, the context's menu paste must do the same and take it from the clipboard right? That's what a normal "Paste" do. In my case I use the xclip.el package from Stefan, so, everything could go throw Yank in my case. But that's a different beast. >And how do you get "Paste" in the context menu, btw? It is just there... what do you mean? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 19:23 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-18 19:28 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 19:53 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 19:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 19:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 21:23:18 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net > > >And how do you get "Paste" in the context menu, btw? > > It is just there... what do you mean? That means your configuration should support pasting. Or maybe there's a bug in the condition, see mouse.el around line 400. I don't see "Paste" in the menu when I start a -nw session. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 19:28 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 19:53 ` Ergus 2021-08-19 6:31 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-18 19:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 10:28:53PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 21:23:18 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net >> >> >And how do you get "Paste" in the context menu, btw? >> >> It is just there... what do you mean? > >That means your configuration should support pasting. Or maybe >there's a bug in the condition, see mouse.el around line 400. I don't >see "Paste" in the menu when I start a -nw session. Once you Copy (or kill) at least once (Either with the menu or with M-w); then the "Paste" appears in the menu automatically the next time you press mouse-3... The problem is that such "Paste" does not Paste but returns the error I mentioned. I am with emacs -Q -nw. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 19:53 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-19 6:31 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 7:07 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 6:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 21:53:53 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net > > Once you Copy (or kill) at least once (Either with the menu or with > M-w); then the "Paste" appears in the menu automatically the next time > you press mouse-3... Yes. And that's what I was missing (you said "it's just there", which it isn't immediately after entering Emacs). > The problem is that such "Paste" does not Paste but returns the error I > mentioned. More accurately, the "Paste" menu item appears as soon as there's something on the kill-ring, but "Paste" doesn't yank that something, instead signaling an error because there's no selection. Juri, could you please look into this? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 6:31 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 7:07 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-19 7:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: Ergus, emacs-devel >> Once you Copy (or kill) at least once (Either with the menu or with >> M-w); then the "Paste" appears in the menu automatically the next time >> you press mouse-3... > > Yes. And that's what I was missing (you said "it's just there", which > it isn't immediately after entering Emacs). > >> The problem is that such "Paste" does not Paste but returns the error I >> mentioned. > > More accurately, the "Paste" menu item appears as soon as there's > something on the kill-ring, but "Paste" doesn't yank that something, > instead signaling an error because there's no selection. Probably it should be replaced with: diff --git a/lisp/mouse.el b/lisp/mouse.el index d2a5200d8d..c071fdefac 100644 --- a/lisp/mouse.el +++ b/lisp/mouse.el @@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ context-menu-region "\\[ns-copy-including-secondary]" "\\[kill-ring-save]"))) (define-key-after menu [paste] - `(menu-item "Paste" mouse-yank-primary + `(menu-item "Paste" mouse-yank-at-click :visible (funcall ',(lambda () (and (or ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 19:23 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 19:28 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 19:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 19:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 21:23:18 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net > > >> Paste calls mouse-yank-primary, but in tty this commands calls > >> gui-get-primary-selection and there is no selection because it tries to > >> get the one on the primary selection not the one in the system > >> (secoundary or clipboard) not the emacs kill-ring either. > >> > >> So I get: error("No selection is available") > > > >Which is the correct response. If you run on an xterm that supports > >pasting, you will get the result as on GUI frames. Why is this a > >problem? > > > If within Emacs I "Copy" throw context-menu, then I expect I could paste > the copied thing in the same way. I expect C-y not <mouse-2> action. > > And if I copy from the browser, the context's menu paste must do the > same and take it from the clipboard right? That's what a normal "Paste" > do. > > In my case I use the xclip.el package from Stefan, so, everything could > go throw Yank in my case. But that's a different beast. > > >And how do you get "Paste" in the context menu, btw? > > It is just there... what do you mean? Ahh, I see now. Yes, it's wrong to call mouse-yank-primary here, as that doesn't work on TTY frames. We should have a wrapper function that calls yank if the selection doesn't exist. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 16:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 18:10 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-18 18:58 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-18 19:12 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-18 18:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: Ergus, emacs-devel >> :( I supposed that. It will be hard to have such a functionality in >> xterm then. And no other terminal works completely fine with emacs for >> me. > > Actually, I take that back. The reason for what you see is that the > menu is popped by down-mouse-3, not by mouse-3. So if we can arrange > for optionally doing this with mouse-3 (why isn't that the default, > btw?), or if you could do that in your customizations, you should be > able to have the behavior you want. down-mouse-3 is used for convenience - you need only one click to select a menu item, not two. And removing the menu title has the advantage of reducing distraction. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 18:58 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-18 19:12 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 7:05 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 19:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com>, emacs-devel@gnu.org > Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2021 21:58:09 +0300 > > > Actually, I take that back. The reason for what you see is that the > > menu is popped by down-mouse-3, not by mouse-3. So if we can arrange > > for optionally doing this with mouse-3 (why isn't that the default, > > btw?), or if you could do that in your customizations, you should be > > able to have the behavior you want. > > down-mouse-3 is used for convenience - you need only one click > to select a menu item, not two. But that's different from other popup menus, for example C-mouse-3 and mouse-1 or mouse-3 on the mode-line's major/minor mode parts. > And removing the menu title has the advantage of reducing > distraction. Is this related to the douwn-mouse-3 vs mouse-3 issue? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 19:12 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 7:05 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 7:51 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-19 7:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel >> down-mouse-3 is used for convenience - you need only one click >> to select a menu item, not two. > > But that's different from other popup menus, for example C-mouse-3 and > mouse-1 or mouse-3 on the mode-line's major/minor mode parts. All menus were always bound to down-events C-down-mouse-1, S-down-mouse-1, C-down-mouse-2, C-down-mouse-3: (global-set-key [C-down-mouse-1] 'mouse-buffer-menu) (if (not (eq system-type 'ms-dos)) (global-set-key [S-down-mouse-1] 'mouse-appearance-menu)) ;; C-down-mouse-2 is bound in facemenu.el. (global-set-key [C-down-mouse-3] `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Menu Bar") ignore :filter (lambda (_) (if (zerop (or (frame-parameter nil 'menu-bar-lines) 0)) (mouse-menu-bar-map) (mouse-menu-major-mode-map))))) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 7:05 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-19 7:51 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 7:13 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 7:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org > Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2021 10:05:12 +0300 > > >> down-mouse-3 is used for convenience - you need only one click > >> to select a menu item, not two. > > > > But that's different from other popup menus, for example C-mouse-3 and > > mouse-1 or mouse-3 on the mode-line's major/minor mode parts. > > All menus were always bound to down-events > C-down-mouse-1, S-down-mouse-1, C-down-mouse-2, C-down-mouse-3: I'm talking about the _behavior_, not about the bindings. The behavior in the other cases is that releasing the mouse button doesn't pop down the menu in the other cases; with context menus, it does. That is sub-optimal UI, as users who don't expect that will see the menu flash momentarily and disappear, at least on TTY frames. We should fix this so the context menus behave like the other drop-down menus we have. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 7:51 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 7:13 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 11:26 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 7:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel >> All menus were always bound to down-events >> C-down-mouse-1, S-down-mouse-1, C-down-mouse-2, C-down-mouse-3: > > I'm talking about the _behavior_, not about the bindings. The > behavior in the other cases is that releasing the mouse button doesn't > pop down the menu in the other cases; with context menus, it does. > That is sub-optimal UI, as users who don't expect that will see the > menu flash momentarily and disappear, at least on TTY frames. We > should fix this so the context menus behave like the other drop-down > menus we have. I don't understand how the behavior of the context menu could be different from the behavior of the old binding [C-down-mouse-3] when both have the same implementation. Does it pop down for you if you click [C-down-mouse-3] that displays the local/global menu? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 7:13 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 11:26 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 11:41 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 12:26 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 11:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 10:13:59 +0300 > > > I'm talking about the _behavior_, not about the bindings. The > > behavior in the other cases is that releasing the mouse button doesn't > > pop down the menu in the other cases; with context menus, it does. > > That is sub-optimal UI, as users who don't expect that will see the > > menu flash momentarily and disappear, at least on TTY frames. We > > should fix this so the context menus behave like the other drop-down > > menus we have. > > I don't understand how the behavior of the context menu could be > different from the behavior of the old binding [C-down-mouse-3] > when both have the same implementation. I cannot say I understand that in detail, either, but the fact is it does. Maybe it's translation from C-down-mouse-3 to C-mouse-3? > Does it pop down for you if you click [C-down-mouse-3] that displays > the local/global menu? No. When I release the mouse button after clicking C-mouse-3, the menu stays displayed until I select a menu item (or dismiss the menu with the likes of C-g). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 11:26 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 11:41 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 16:44 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 12:26 ` Ergus 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 11:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel, juri > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 14:26:08 +0300 > From: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> > Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > > Does it pop down for you if you click [C-down-mouse-3] that displays > > the local/global menu? > > No. When I release the mouse button after clicking C-mouse-3, the > menu stays displayed until I select a menu item (or dismiss the menu > with the likes of C-g). Btw, something's changed in this regard since Emacs 27.2. In Emacs 27, mouse-1 and mouse-3 on the mode-line's major and minor mode names pop up a menu that stays displayed when I release the mouse button. In Emacs 28, these two menus pop down when the button is released. By contrast, C-mouse-3 in *scratch* pops up a menu that doesn't pop down when I release the button even in Emacs 28. I guess this has something to do with the bindings of down-mouse-N vs mouse-N, and the fact that Emacs ignores the down- events when they are not bound? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 11:41 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 16:44 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 16:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel >> > Does it pop down for you if you click [C-down-mouse-3] that displays >> > the local/global menu? >> >> No. When I release the mouse button after clicking C-mouse-3, the >> menu stays displayed until I select a menu item (or dismiss the menu >> with the likes of C-g). > > Btw, something's changed in this regard since Emacs 27.2. In Emacs > 27, mouse-1 and mouse-3 on the mode-line's major and minor mode names > pop up a menu that stays displayed when I release the mouse button. > In Emacs 28, these two menus pop down when the button is released. By > contrast, C-mouse-3 in *scratch* pops up a menu that doesn't pop down > when I release the button even in Emacs 28. > > I guess this has something to do with the bindings of down-mouse-N vs > mouse-N, and the fact that Emacs ignores the down- events when they > are not bound? There is a bug in xterm handling code, but I don't know exactly where. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 11:26 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 11:41 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 12:26 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 12:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-20 12:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: Juri Linkov, emacs-devel On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 02:26:08PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> >> Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 10:13:59 +0300 >> >> > I'm talking about the _behavior_, not about the bindings. The >> > behavior in the other cases is that releasing the mouse button doesn't >> > pop down the menu in the other cases; with context menus, it does. >> > That is sub-optimal UI, as users who don't expect that will see the >> > menu flash momentarily and disappear, at least on TTY frames. We >> > should fix this so the context menus behave like the other drop-down >> > menus we have. >> >> I don't understand how the behavior of the context menu could be >> different from the behavior of the old binding [C-down-mouse-3] >> when both have the same implementation. > >I cannot say I understand that in detail, either, but the fact is it >does. Maybe it's translation from C-down-mouse-3 to C-mouse-3? > No. C-down-mouse-3 is a modified mouse event; emacs gets it but not the equivalent up events (C-up-mouse-3 for example) but it gets somehow the up-mouse-3 event. For example: Try C-down-mouse-3 then Release Control and after that release the mouse button. You will see a similar issue. >> Does it pop down for you if you click [C-down-mouse-3] that displays >> the local/global menu? > >No. When I release the mouse button after clicking C-mouse-3, the >menu stays displayed until I select a menu item (or dismiss the menu >with the likes of C-g). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 12:26 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 12:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 12:59 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 13:03 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 12:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 14:26:05 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net>, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > >> I don't understand how the behavior of the context menu could be > >> different from the behavior of the old binding [C-down-mouse-3] > >> when both have the same implementation. > > > >I cannot say I understand that in detail, either, but the fact is it > >does. Maybe it's translation from C-down-mouse-3 to C-mouse-3? > > > No. C-down-mouse-3 is a modified mouse event; emacs gets it but not the > equivalent up events (C-up-mouse-3 for example) but it gets somehow the > up-mouse-3 event. There's no up-mouse-N events in Emacs, AFAIK. There's only down-mouse-N events and mouse-N events; the latter are generated when Emacs internally sees the Nth button pressed and released. > For example: > > Try C-down-mouse-3 then Release Control and after that release the mouse > button. You will see a similar issue. What issue is that? When you do what you describe, Emacs doesn't generate the C-mouse-3 event because it never sees the button released with the Ctrl modifier. This is expected and documented. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 12:36 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 12:59 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 13:03 ` Ergus 1 sibling, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-20 12:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 03:36:33PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 14:26:05 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net>, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> >> I don't understand how the behavior of the context menu could be >> >> different from the behavior of the old binding [C-down-mouse-3] >> >> when both have the same implementation. >> > >> >I cannot say I understand that in detail, either, but the fact is it >> >does. Maybe it's translation from C-down-mouse-3 to C-mouse-3? >> > >> No. C-down-mouse-3 is a modified mouse event; emacs gets it but not the >> equivalent up events (C-up-mouse-3 for example) but it gets somehow the >> up-mouse-3 event. > >There's no up-mouse-N events in Emacs, AFAIK. There's only >down-mouse-N events and mouse-N events; the latter are generated when >Emacs internally sees the Nth button pressed and released. > >> For example: >> >> Try C-down-mouse-3 then Release Control and after that release the mouse >> button. You will see a similar issue. > >What issue is that? > >When you do what you describe, Emacs doesn't generate the C-mouse-3 >event because it never sees the button released with the Ctrl >modifier. This is expected and documented. I know. But this is actually why menus behaves as Juri says with C-down-mouse-3 but not with down-mouse-3. Releasing the mouse button with Control hold seems not to generate any event. While releasing it without holding control generates an event. You can also see that in the menu, if you release the mouse button while control is hold, the current item is not selected. But with context menu when we release the mouse button the current item is actually selected because control is not hold. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 12:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 12:59 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 13:03 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 13:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-20 13:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 03:36:33PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 14:26:05 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net>, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> >> I don't understand how the behavior of the context menu could be >> >> different from the behavior of the old binding [C-down-mouse-3] >> >> when both have the same implementation. >> > >> >I cannot say I understand that in detail, either, but the fact is it >> >does. Maybe it's translation from C-down-mouse-3 to C-mouse-3? >> > >> No. C-down-mouse-3 is a modified mouse event; emacs gets it but not the >> equivalent up events (C-up-mouse-3 for example) but it gets somehow the >> up-mouse-3 event. > >There's no up-mouse-N events in Emacs, AFAIK. There's only >down-mouse-N events and mouse-N events; the latter are generated when >Emacs internally sees the Nth button pressed and released. > Maybe the problem is that mouse-N events are generated when we release the mouse-N key. But no C-mouse-N event is generated when Control is hold and mouse-N key released. If this is intended, then it is the reason why the context-menu behavior is different than other menus bound to modified mouse events. >> For example: >> >> Try C-down-mouse-3 then Release Control and after that release the mouse >> button. You will see a similar issue. > >What issue is that? > >When you do what you describe, Emacs doesn't generate the C-mouse-3 >event because it never sees the button released with the Ctrl >modifier. This is expected and documented. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 13:03 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 13:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 17:36 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 13:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 15:03:04 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net > > Maybe the problem is that mouse-N events are generated when we release > the mouse-N key. But no C-mouse-N event is generated when Control is > hold and mouse-N key released. I don't think this is true. > If this is intended, then it is the reason why the context-menu behavior > is different than other menus bound to modified mouse events. Are the bindings near the end of menu-bar.el relevant to this? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 13:34 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 17:36 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 18:05 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-20 17:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 04:34:08PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 15:03:04 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org, juri@linkov.net >> >> Maybe the problem is that mouse-N events are generated when we release >> the mouse-N key. But no C-mouse-N event is generated when Control is >> hold and mouse-N key released. > >I don't think this is true. > If I do: C-h k and press mouse-1 It shows 2 events: There were several key-sequences: <down-mouse-1> at that spot runs the command mouse-drag-region <mouse-1> at that spot runs the command mouse-set-point But: C-h k and press Control + mouse1 I only get: C-<down-mouse-1> at that spot runs the command mouse-buffer-menu (found in global-map), which is an interactive native compiled Lisp function in ‘mouse.el’. It is bound to C-<down-mouse-1>. (mouse-buffer-menu EVENT) There is not such event like C-<mouse-1> So this is actually the issue. >> If this is intended, then it is the reason why the context-menu behavior >> is different than other menus bound to modified mouse events. > >Are the bindings near the end of menu-bar.el relevant to this? > Maybe. There are mouse-X down-mouse-X S-mouse-X S-drag-mouse-X and C-down-mouse-X. But not any C-mouse-X So maybe this explains what I described above. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 17:36 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 18:05 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 18:08 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 18:15 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 18:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 19:36:37 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > >> Maybe the problem is that mouse-N events are generated when we release > >> the mouse-N key. But no C-mouse-N event is generated when Control is > >> hold and mouse-N key released. > > > >I don't think this is true. > > > If I do: > > C-h k and press mouse-1 With what toolkit? or was this on a TTY frame? The exact behavior depends on the internal details of how mouse clicks in menus are handled by the toolkit. It is not something that is the same across all Emacs configurations. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 18:05 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 18:08 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 19:07 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 18:15 ` Ergus 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-20 18:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 09:05:38PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 19:36:37 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> >> Maybe the problem is that mouse-N events are generated when we release >> >> the mouse-N key. But no C-mouse-N event is generated when Control is >> >> hold and mouse-N key released. >> > >> >I don't think this is true. >> > >> If I do: >> >> C-h k and press mouse-1 > >With what toolkit? or was this on a TTY frame? xterm, All the issues are with xterm. gui works fine for me. >The exact behavior >depends on the internal details of how mouse clicks in menus are >handled by the toolkit. It is not something that is the same across >all Emacs configurations. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 18:08 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 19:07 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-21 6:20 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 20:08:05 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > >> C-h k and press mouse-1 > > > >With what toolkit? or was this on a TTY frame? > > xterm, All the issues are with xterm. gui works fine for me. Then I don't understand the issue you are describing. I get the same response on GUI frames as you report for xterm, and I think the reason is clear: there's no binding for C-mouse-1, so Emacs shows only the (existing) binding for C-down-mouse-1. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 19:07 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-21 6:20 ` Ergus 2021-08-21 6:53 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-21 6:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: juri, emacs-devel On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 10:07:25PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 20:08:05 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> >> C-h k and press mouse-1 >> > >> >With what toolkit? or was this on a TTY frame? >> >> xterm, All the issues are with xterm. gui works fine for me. > >Then I don't understand the issue you are describing. I get the same >response on GUI frames as you report for xterm, and I think the reason >is clear: there's no binding for C-mouse-1, so Emacs shows only the >(existing) binding for C-down-mouse-1. I will try to explain myself: 1) In a gui clicking (fast) mouse-X produces 2 events <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> and emacs translates them to <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> -> <mouse-X> when they are fast enough. 2) In a gui, holding mouse-X produces 1 event <down-mouse-X> and after a small delay emacs processes the event, so releasing the button after that delay is seen as an independent event <mouse-X>. In this case there are two events and they are not merged as in 1. 3) In xterm, clicking (fast) mouse-X produces 2 events as well <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> but emacs does not translate them; that means that <down-mouse-X> is processed (shows the menu) and then <mouse-X> is also processes (hides the menu and selects). 4) In xterm, holding mouse-X and the releasing after a while is exactly the same as 3). So as I said before, in xterm emacs does not use such a delay on tui, it needs to be added or somehow provide a criteria to translate <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> into <mouse-X> when it is done fast enough. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-21 6:20 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-21 6:53 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-21 15:04 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-21 6:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri > Date: Sat, 21 Aug 2021 08:20:47 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > 1) In a gui clicking (fast) mouse-X produces 2 events <down-mouse-X> + > <mouse-X> and emacs translates them to <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> -> > <mouse-X> when they are fast enough. > > 2) In a gui, holding mouse-X produces 1 event <down-mouse-X> and after a > small delay emacs processes the event, so releasing the button after > that delay is seen as an independent event <mouse-X>. In this case there > are two events and they are not merged as in 1. > > 3) In xterm, clicking (fast) mouse-X produces 2 events as well > <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> but emacs does not translate them; that means > that <down-mouse-X> is processed (shows the menu) and then <mouse-X> is > also processes (hides the menu and selects). > > 4) In xterm, holding mouse-X and the releasing after a while is exactly > the same as 3). > > So as I said before, in xterm emacs does not use such a delay on tui, it > needs to be added or somehow provide a criteria to translate > <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> into <mouse-X> when it is done fast enough. And why are these differences a problem? You may be unaware of the terrible complexity and the hoops we jump through to display menus on TTY frames, and to process mouse events on such frames in general, but I can assure you those complexities are real. It is a small surprise that given that, there are differences in how these are presented to Emacs. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-21 6:53 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-21 15:04 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-21 15:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Sat, Aug 21, 2021 at 09:53:17AM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Sat, 21 Aug 2021 08:20:47 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> 1) In a gui clicking (fast) mouse-X produces 2 events <down-mouse-X> + >> <mouse-X> and emacs translates them to <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> -> >> <mouse-X> when they are fast enough. >> >> 2) In a gui, holding mouse-X produces 1 event <down-mouse-X> and after a >> small delay emacs processes the event, so releasing the button after >> that delay is seen as an independent event <mouse-X>. In this case there >> are two events and they are not merged as in 1. >> >> 3) In xterm, clicking (fast) mouse-X produces 2 events as well >> <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> but emacs does not translate them; that means >> that <down-mouse-X> is processed (shows the menu) and then <mouse-X> is >> also processes (hides the menu and selects). >> >> 4) In xterm, holding mouse-X and the releasing after a while is exactly >> the same as 3). >> >> So as I said before, in xterm emacs does not use such a delay on tui, it >> needs to be added or somehow provide a criteria to translate >> <down-mouse-X> + <mouse-X> into <mouse-X> when it is done fast enough. > >And why are these differences a problem? > This is why the menu disappears in tty but stays in gui with a click. That's it. >You may be unaware of the terrible complexity and the hoops we jump >through to display menus on TTY frames, and to process mouse events on >such frames in general, but I can assure you those complexities are >real. It is a small surprise that given that, there are differences >in how these are presented to Emacs. > I am aware about how xterm events are passed to the application; but not about the complexity emacs adds to it. Juri used down-mouse-X events because in gui right click provided both behaviors out of the box depending on the delay between the events. But on tty we have only the "old" X11 one because it ignores the delay. I don't know if such delay is something emacs handles internally or relies in some external gtx/gui feature? In ncurses there is the "mouseinterval" function; but probably emacs uses something like select right? xterm emits 2 events (what I used to call down/up events some emails ago there is not something like "click" or "mouse" event AFAIK), but is not aware of delays between them. But emacs follows more the X11 set of events: "down-mouse" and "mouse" (where a "mouse" event is actually a down+up events within a delay) Then the problem may be that emacs assumes the "up-mouse" event as mouse-event which should work fine in most of the cases, but not when both ("down-mouse" and "mouse" events) perform actions because it will be impossible to emit a "mouse" event without a previous "down-mouse" So there are two options here: 1) A proper fix for this: make xterm events behave as gui. So add a delay to translate the two events into one; if emacs handles this internally it may be possible... probably it does because it also recognizes double-clicks.... 2) Do a workaround: add a custom to bind context-menu to down-mouse-3 or mouse-3 so the xterm user will have one experience or the other (but not both as Juri liked.). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 18:05 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 18:08 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 18:15 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 23:15 ` Michael Welsh Duggan 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-20 18:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 09:05:38PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 19:36:37 +0200 >> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >> Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> >> Maybe the problem is that mouse-N events are generated when we release >> >> the mouse-N key. But no C-mouse-N event is generated when Control is >> >> hold and mouse-N key released. >> > >> >I don't think this is true. >> > >> If I do: >> >> C-h k and press mouse-1 > >With what toolkit? or was this on a TTY frame? I just tried on a gui and it has the same behavior. two events on one case and one on the other. But in gui there is some timing involved because releasing fast the button has a different behavior than when doing it slowly. Something that somehow does not happen in xterm. >The exact behavior >depends on the internal details of how mouse clicks in menus are >handled by the toolkit. It is not something that is the same across >all Emacs configurations. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 18:15 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 23:15 ` Michael Welsh Duggan 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Michael Welsh Duggan @ 2021-08-20 23:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-devel Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> writes: > On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 09:05:38PM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >>> Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 19:36:37 +0200 >>> From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> >>> Cc: juri@linkov.net, emacs-devel@gnu.org >>> >>> >> Maybe the problem is that mouse-N events are generated when we release >>> >> the mouse-N key. But no C-mouse-N event is generated when Control is >>> >> hold and mouse-N key released. >>> > >>> >I don't think this is true. >>> > >>> If I do: >>> >>> C-h k and press mouse-1 >> >> With what toolkit? or was this on a TTY frame? > > I just tried on a gui and it has the same behavior. two events on one > case and one on the other. But C-<mouse-1> does appear in the lossage report (C-h l). -- Michael Welsh Duggan (md5i@md5i.com) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 12:08 ` New Context Menu Ergus 2021-08-18 12:26 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-18 14:04 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 2021-08-18 16:38 ` Iñigo Serna 2021-08-19 7:01 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-27 6:21 ` New Context Menu and mouse-1 Juri Linkov 3 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Jean-Christophe Helary @ 2021-08-18 14:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: Juri Linkov, emacs-devel > On Aug 18, 2021, at 21:08, Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> wrote: > > Hi: > > I just tested the new context menu... It is very nice!! thanks Juri!! How is that context menu enabled ? My (macos) right click is only a buffer list and F10 has not changed. (working on a recent master build) -- Jean-Christophe Helary @brandelune https://mac4translators.blogspot.com https://sr.ht/~brandelune/omegat-as-a-book/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 14:04 ` Jean-Christophe Helary @ 2021-08-18 16:38 ` Iñigo Serna 2021-08-19 0:38 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Iñigo Serna @ 2021-08-18 16:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jean-Christophe Helary; +Cc: Ergus, emacs-devel, Juri Linkov Hi Jean-Christophe, On 18 August 2021 at 16:04 +02, Jean-Christophe Helary <lists@traduction-libre.org> wrote: > How is that context menu enabled ? > My (macos) right click is only a buffer list and F10 has not > changed. > (working on a recent master build) It's the new minor mode `context-menu-mode', that is disabled by default. From the NEWS file: *** New minor mode 'context-menu-mode' for context menus popped by 'mouse-3'. When this mode is enabled, clicking 'down-mouse-3' anywhere in the buffer pops up a menu whose contents depends on surrounding context near the mouse click. You can customize the order of the default sub-menus in the context menu by customizing the user option 'context-menu-functions'. Best regards, -- Iñigo Serna ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 16:38 ` Iñigo Serna @ 2021-08-19 0:38 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 2021-08-19 7:08 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Jean-Christophe Helary @ 2021-08-19 0:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Iñigo Serna; +Cc: Ergus, Juri Linkov, Emacs Devel > On Aug 19, 2021, at 1:38, Iñigo Serna <inigoserna@gmx.com> wrote: > > Hi Jean-Christophe, > > On 18 August 2021 at 16:04 +02, Jean-Christophe Helary <lists@traduction-libre.org> wrote: > >> How is that context menu enabled ? >> My (macos) right click is only a buffer list and F10 has not changed. >> (working on a recent master build) > > It's the new minor mode `context-menu-mode', that is disabled by default. Thank you Iñigo I realize that my "master" build was maybe a few days late. It's here now. > From the NEWS file: > > *** New minor mode 'context-menu-mode' for context menus popped by 'mouse-3'. > When this mode is enabled, clicking 'down-mouse-3' anywhere in the buffer > pops up a menu whose contents depends on surrounding context near the > mouse click. Right now, in an org file, I only have a nicely ordered buffer list grouped by buffer types. It's better looking than the previous "right-click". Is that what's expected ? -- Jean-Christophe Helary @brandelune https://mac4translators.blogspot.com https://sr.ht/~brandelune/omegat-as-a-book/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 0:38 ` Jean-Christophe Helary @ 2021-08-19 7:08 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 14:22 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-19 7:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jean-Christophe Helary; +Cc: Ergus, Iñigo Serna, Emacs Devel > Right now, in an org file, I only have a nicely ordered buffer list > grouped by buffer types. It's better looking than the previous > "right-click". Is that what's expected ? I suppose you are using org-mouse.el? It overrides mouse-3 with own context menu. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 7:08 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-19 14:22 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Jean-Christophe Helary @ 2021-08-19 14:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: Ergus, Iñigo Serna, Emacs Devel > On Aug 19, 2021, at 16:08, Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> wrote: > >> Right now, in an org file, I only have a nicely ordered buffer list >> grouped by buffer types. It's better looking than the previous >> "right-click". Is that what's expected ? > > I suppose you are using org-mouse.el? It overrides mouse-3 > with own context menu. For some reason it works now. Thank you for your work ! -- Jean-Christophe Helary @brandelune https://mac4translators.blogspot.com https://sr.ht/~brandelune/omegat-as-a-book/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-18 12:08 ` New Context Menu Ergus 2021-08-18 12:26 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 14:04 ` Jean-Christophe Helary @ 2021-08-19 7:01 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 8:03 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 13:57 ` Ergus 2021-08-27 6:21 ` New Context Menu and mouse-1 Juri Linkov 3 siblings, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-19 7:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel > The current implementation follows the X11 menu interaction pattern: > Hold mouse-3 to keep the menu active and release mouse-3 to select an > entry. > > Could we add an option to avoid this and have the same interaction > behavior than in gui please?: mouse-3 activates the menu, a click over > an option selects it and a click outside the menu hides the menu When you press down-mouse-1 and immediately release the mouse button, it has the same effect as if you clicked mouse-1: it displays the menu without selecting a menu item. So with the current win-win situation both scenarios are supported: 1. one click: down-mouse-1, select a menu item, release mouse-1; 2. two clicks: click mouse-1, select a menu item by clicking mouse-1 again. Both ways work on xterm as well - you can easily select a menu item with one click on xterm too. > In case the user wants to bind the context menu without using the mouse > how can be done? Will the context-menu appear in the current cursor > (point) or in the current mouse arrow position? This is possible, but the menu appears at the left top corner, as for example it appears on typing 'C-<f10>' that runs the command buffer-menu-open. Here is its implementation: (defun buffer-menu-open () "Start key navigation of the buffer menu. This is the keyboard interface to \\[mouse-buffer-menu]." (interactive) (popup-menu (mouse-buffer-menu-keymap) (posn-at-x-y 0 0 nil t))) We could do the same with: (popup-menu (context-menu-map) (posn-at-x-y 0 0 nil t)) Or do it much better: (popup-menu (context-menu-map) (point)) What would a good key to bind such command? Maybe 'S-<f10>'? But please note that currently when you select a menu item using the keyboard, many commands will fail with (error "Command must be bound to an event with parameters") ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 7:01 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-19 8:03 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 14:11 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 7:14 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 13:57 ` Ergus 1 sibling, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 8:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2021 10:01:10 +0300 > Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org > > What would a good key to bind such command? Maybe 'S-<f10>'? Probably. Or C-M-<f10>. > But please note that currently when you select a menu item > using the keyboard, many commands will fail with > > (error "Command must be bound to an event with parameters") Those commands should ideally be fixed to not signal such errors, because that's not good UI on TTY frames. Commands that cannot be fixed shouldn't appear in the context menus popped on TTY frames to begin with. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 8:03 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 14:11 ` Ergus 2021-08-19 15:48 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 7:14 ` Juri Linkov 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-19 14:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: Juri Linkov, emacs-devel On Thu, Aug 19, 2021 at 11:03:01AM +0300, Eli Zaretskii wrote: >> From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> >> Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2021 10:01:10 +0300 >> Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org >> >> What would a good key to bind such command? Maybe 'S-<f10>'? > >Probably. Or C-M-<f10>. > Hi Eli: There is the [menu] button. It is unused at least in xterm because it is not bound properly (I sent a message on yesterday). By default [menu] is bound to the same than M-x, so it is a good trade of to rebind it in the context-menu map, so by default the current behavior is not affected. But also, because it will provide the same behavior than other user interfaces around. In other terminals (urxvt) such button sends S-<f6>, that is not bound to anything either. And some others (gnome-terminal) intercept the binding before reaching emacs... so, I think is a good trade off with minimal impact. >> But please note that currently when you select a menu item >> using the keyboard, many commands will fail with >> >> (error "Command must be bound to an event with parameters") > >Those commands should ideally be fixed to not signal such errors, >because that's not good UI on TTY frames. Commands that cannot be >fixed shouldn't appear in the context menus popped on TTY frames to >begin with. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 14:11 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-19 15:48 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 16:34 ` Yuri Khan 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 15:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel, juri > Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2021 16:11:23 +0200 > From: Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> > Cc: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net>, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > >> What would a good key to bind such command? Maybe 'S-<f10>'? > > > >Probably. Or C-M-<f10>. > > > Hi Eli: > > There is the [menu] button. It is unused at least in xterm because > it is not bound properly (I sent a message on yesterday). > > By default [menu] is bound to the same than M-x, so it is a good trade > of to rebind it in the context-menu map, so by default the current > behavior is not affected. But also, because it will provide the same > behavior than other user interfaces around. > > In other terminals (urxvt) such button sends S-<f6>, that is not bound > to anything either. And some others (gnome-terminal) intercept the > binding before reaching emacs... so, I think is a good trade off with > minimal impact. It's okay to bind the <menu> key where it's available. But many terminals don't have it, so we should _also_ bind it to some common enough key to make it available to everyone. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 15:48 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 16:34 ` Yuri Khan 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Yuri Khan @ 2021-08-19 16:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: Ergus, Juri Linkov, Emacs developers On Thu, 19 Aug 2021 at 22:49, Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> wrote: > It's okay to bind the <menu> key where it's available. But many > terminals don't have it, so we should _also_ bind it to some common > enough key to make it available to everyone. The canonical answer to “some keyboards do not have <menu>” in the context of context menus has been Shift+F10 since 1995. But, of course, Some Terminals™ do not have even that. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 8:03 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 14:11 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 7:14 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 11:29 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 7:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel >> But please note that currently when you select a menu item >> using the keyboard, many commands will fail with >> >> (error "Command must be bound to an event with parameters") > > Those commands should ideally be fixed to not signal such errors, > because that's not good UI on TTY frames. Commands that cannot be > fixed shouldn't appear in the context menus popped on TTY frames to > begin with. What would be the best strategy for fixing these commands? This error is signaled for all commands that have (interactive "e"). Then such interactive spec should be removed from all commands used in the menu? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 7:14 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 11:29 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 16:49 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 11:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 10:14:54 +0300 > > >> But please note that currently when you select a menu item > >> using the keyboard, many commands will fail with > >> > >> (error "Command must be bound to an event with parameters") > > > > Those commands should ideally be fixed to not signal such errors, > > because that's not good UI on TTY frames. Commands that cannot be > > fixed shouldn't appear in the context menus popped on TTY frames to > > begin with. > > What would be the best strategy for fixing these commands? This error > is signaled for all commands that have (interactive "e"). Then such > interactive spec should be removed from all commands used in the menu? I guess so. Why does it make sense for commands invoked from the menus to have the "e" interactive spec? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 11:29 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 16:49 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 18:01 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 16:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel >> >> But please note that currently when you select a menu item >> >> using the keyboard, many commands will fail with >> >> >> >> (error "Command must be bound to an event with parameters") >> > >> > Those commands should ideally be fixed to not signal such errors, >> > because that's not good UI on TTY frames. Commands that cannot be >> > fixed shouldn't appear in the context menus popped on TTY frames to >> > begin with. >> >> What would be the best strategy for fixing these commands? This error >> is signaled for all commands that have (interactive "e"). Then such >> interactive spec should be removed from all commands used in the menu? > > I guess so. Why does it make sense for commands invoked from the > menus to have the "e" interactive spec? There are too many commands that have the "e" interactive spec. It would be much simpler not to signal an error for them, but produce a fake event where the clicked position is set to the position of point. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 16:49 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 18:01 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-23 7:33 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-20 18:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org > Date: Fri, 20 Aug 2021 19:49:03 +0300 > > >> What would be the best strategy for fixing these commands? This error > >> is signaled for all commands that have (interactive "e"). Then such > >> interactive spec should be removed from all commands used in the menu? > > > > I guess so. Why does it make sense for commands invoked from the > > menus to have the "e" interactive spec? > > There are too many commands that have the "e" interactive spec. > It would be much simpler not to signal an error for them, but produce > a fake event where the clicked position is set to the position of point. Feel free to work on that (I guess that needs changes on the C level?). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 18:01 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-23 7:33 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-23 11:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-23 7:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel >> >> What would be the best strategy for fixing these commands? This error >> >> is signaled for all commands that have (interactive "e"). Then such >> >> interactive spec should be removed from all commands used in the menu? >> > >> > I guess so. Why does it make sense for commands invoked from the >> > menus to have the "e" interactive spec? >> >> There are too many commands that have the "e" interactive spec. >> It would be much simpler not to signal an error for them, but produce >> a fake event where the clicked position is set to the position of point. > > Feel free to work on that (I guess that needs changes on the C > level?). Actually, I found out that no work is needed. When this restriction is removed from `call-interactively': if (next_event >= key_count) error ("%s must be bound to an event with parameters", (SYMBOLP (function) ? SSDATA (SYMBOL_NAME (function)) : "command")); then everything works fine thanks to the old decision to accept non-mouse events in event-start, event-end, event-click-count: (defun event-start (event) (if (consp event) (nth 1 event) (or (posn-at-point) (list (selected-window) (point) '(0 . 0) 0))) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-23 7:33 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-23 11:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-23 16:04 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-23 11:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org > Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2021 10:33:32 +0300 > > >> There are too many commands that have the "e" interactive spec. > >> It would be much simpler not to signal an error for them, but produce > >> a fake event where the clicked position is set to the position of point. > > > > Feel free to work on that (I guess that needs changes on the C > > level?). > > Actually, I found out that no work is needed. When this restriction > is removed from `call-interactively': > > if (next_event >= key_count) > error ("%s must be bound to an event with parameters", > (SYMBOLP (function) > ? SSDATA (SYMBOL_NAME (function)) > : "command")); > > then everything works fine thanks to the old decision to accept > non-mouse events in event-start, event-end, event-click-count: > > (defun event-start (event) > (if (consp event) (nth 1 event) > (or (posn-at-point) > (list (selected-window) (point) '(0 . 0) 0))) The question is: do we want to remove this unconditionally for all the commands that say (interactive "e") ? That sounds a backward-incompatible change to me. Should we perhaps condition that by some variable, which menu commands could bind when they want? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-23 11:36 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-23 16:04 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-23 16:35 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-23 16:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 299 bytes --] > The question is: do we want to remove this unconditionally for all the > commands that say (interactive "e") ? That sounds a > backward-incompatible change to me. > > Should we perhaps condition that by some variable, which menu commands > could bind when they want? So here is a new variable: [-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --] [-- Attachment #2: inhibit-event-check.patch --] [-- Type: text/x-diff, Size: 1091 bytes --] diff --git a/src/callint.c b/src/callint.c index 6f8a7f13f6..381a3443d2 100644 --- a/src/callint.c +++ b/src/callint.c @@ -606,7 +606,7 @@ DEFUN ("call-interactively", Fcall_interactively, Scall_interactively, 1, 3, 0, break; case 'e': /* The invoking event. */ - if (next_event >= key_count) + if (!inhibit_event_check && next_event >= key_count) error ("%s must be bound to an event with parameters", (SYMBOLP (function) ? SSDATA (SYMBOL_NAME (function)) @@ -900,6 +900,13 @@ syms_of_callint (void) a way to turn themselves off when a mouse command switches windows. */); Vmouse_leave_buffer_hook = Qnil; + DEFVAR_BOOL ("inhibit-event-check", inhibit_event_check, + doc: /* Non-nil means the interactive spec "e" doesn't check for events. +In this case `(interactive "e")' doesn't signal an error when no event +is produced. Then `event-start', `event-end', `event-click-count' +can create a new event. */); + inhibit_event_check = false; + defsubr (&Sinteractive); defsubr (&Scall_interactively); defsubr (&Sfuncall_interactively); ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-23 16:04 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-23 16:35 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-23 17:42 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-23 16:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Cc: spacibba@aol.com, emacs-devel@gnu.org > Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2021 19:04:39 +0300 > > > Should we perhaps condition that by some variable, which menu commands > > could bind when they want? > > So here is a new variable: Thanks. I'd prefer to call it inhibit-mouse-event-check. Also, do we want to consider it an internal variable (and name it and document is as such)? Otherwise, LGTM, but please add a NEWS entry. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-23 16:35 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-23 17:42 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-23 18:02 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-23 17:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: spacibba, emacs-devel >> > Should we perhaps condition that by some variable, which menu commands >> > could bind when they want? >> >> So here is a new variable: > > Thanks. I'd prefer to call it inhibit-mouse-event-check. Ok. > Also, do we want to consider it an internal variable (and name it and > document is as such)? It is like other inhibit-* variables. > Otherwise, LGTM, but please add a NEWS entry. Pushed with a NEWS entry. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-23 17:42 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-23 18:02 ` Ergus 2021-08-24 6:35 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-23 18:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel On Mon, Aug 23, 2021 at 08:42:52PM +0300, Juri Linkov wrote: >>> > Should we perhaps condition that by some variable, which menu commands >>> > could bind when they want? >>> >>> So here is a new variable: >> >> Thanks. I'd prefer to call it inhibit-mouse-event-check. > >Ok. > >> Also, do we want to consider it an internal variable (and name it and >> document is as such)? > >It is like other inhibit-* variables. > >> Otherwise, LGTM, but please add a NEWS entry. > >Pushed with a NEWS entry. > Hi Juri: I see you bound the menu to [S-f10] I am still asking about the issues with the menu key in xterm; in the other thread I showed this: lk201.el:35: (define-key map "\e[29~" [menu]) rxvt.el:67: (define-key map "\e[29~" [S-f6]) xterm.el:353: (define-key map "\e[29~" [print]) where "\e[29~" is the sequence the menu key sends. So maybe you could use [S-f6] instead? That will make it work out of the box in urxvt. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-23 18:02 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-24 6:35 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-24 8:00 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-24 6:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel > I am still asking about the issues with the menu key in xterm; in the > other thread I showed this: > > lk201.el:35: (define-key map "\e[29~" [menu]) > rxvt.el:67: (define-key map "\e[29~" [S-f6]) > xterm.el:353: (define-key map "\e[29~" [print]) > > where "\e[29~" is the sequence the menu key sends. So maybe you could > use [S-f6] instead? > > That will make it work out of the box in urxvt. I installed urxvt, and in urxvt started emacs -Q -nw -f xterm-mouse-mode -f context-menu-mode Then typed S-<f10>. It opened the Context menu with blue background where the selected item is red. Then using arrows and C-n/C-p navigated to "Paste" and typed RET, and it pasted a string at point. All other menu items are also working fine on urxvt. So it seems that your config is broken. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-24 6:35 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-24 8:00 ` Ergus 2021-08-24 11:44 ` Yuri Khan 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-24 8:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 09:35:07AM +0300, Juri Linkov wrote: >> I am still asking about the issues with the menu key in xterm; in the >> other thread I showed this: >> >> lk201.el:35: (define-key map "\e[29~" [menu]) >> rxvt.el:67: (define-key map "\e[29~" [S-f6]) >> xterm.el:353: (define-key map "\e[29~" [print]) >> >> where "\e[29~" is the sequence the menu key sends. So maybe you could >> use [S-f6] instead? >> >> That will make it work out of the box in urxvt. > >I installed urxvt, and in urxvt started >emacs -Q -nw -f xterm-mouse-mode -f context-menu-mode >Then typed S-<f10>. It opened the Context menu >with blue background where the selected item is red. >Then using arrows and C-n/C-p navigated to "Paste" >and typed RET, and it pasted a string at point. >All other menu items are also working fine on urxvt. >So it seems that your config is broken. Hi Juri: Maybe I miss explained myself. The idea to put it in [S-f6] is to make the context menu work with the [menu] button out of the box when available in urxvt (and on xterm if fixed). Of course S-<f10> works as expected. The point is that the menu key is the "right place" for it to make it more "similar" to other applications around. And such key is "under-utilized" by us at the moment. (Nobody even noticed it wrongly bound in xterm) Also because S-<f10> is menu-bar-open, that may be useful for some people, but S-<f6> is unused. SO as you say: it is a win win ;). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-24 8:00 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-24 11:44 ` Yuri Khan 2021-08-24 16:05 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Yuri Khan @ 2021-08-24 11:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, Emacs developers, Juri Linkov On Tue, 24 Aug 2021 at 15:01, Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> wrote: > >> lk201.el:35: (define-key map "\e[29~" [menu]) > >> rxvt.el:67: (define-key map "\e[29~" [S-f6]) > >> xterm.el:353: (define-key map "\e[29~" [print]) > >> > >> where "\e[29~" is the sequence the menu key sends. So maybe you could > >> use [S-f6] instead? > >> > >> That will make it work out of the box in urxvt. > > Maybe I miss explained myself. The idea to put it in [S-f6] is to make > the context menu work with the [menu] button out of the box when > available in urxvt (and on xterm if fixed). That would be wrong. Better: * Push for terminfo to include a string capability that indicates the sequence sent by the Menu key. Push for the terminfo database to include that capability for major terminal emulators. * Push for rxvt to change its Menu sequence to something different from Shift+F6, and submit that sequence to the terminfo database. * In rxvt.el, change \e[29~ to the new rxvt Menu sequence. Even better: * Use a terminal emulator that lets you distinguish all key combinations. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-24 11:44 ` Yuri Khan @ 2021-08-24 16:05 ` Ergus 2021-08-24 19:41 ` Yuri Khan 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-24 16:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yuri Khan; +Cc: Juri Linkov, Eli Zaretskii, Emacs developers On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 06:44:44PM +0700, Yuri Khan wrote: >On Tue, 24 Aug 2021 at 15:01, Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> wrote: > >> >> lk201.el:35: (define-key map "\e[29~" [menu]) >> >> rxvt.el:67: (define-key map "\e[29~" [S-f6]) >> >> xterm.el:353: (define-key map "\e[29~" [print]) >> >> >> >> where "\e[29~" is the sequence the menu key sends. So maybe you could >> >> use [S-f6] instead? >> >> >> >> That will make it work out of the box in urxvt. >> >> Maybe I miss explained myself. The idea to put it in [S-f6] is to make >> the context menu work with the [menu] button out of the box when >> available in urxvt (and on xterm if fixed). > >That would be wrong. Better: > It is not wrong actually. Because keys like [menu] require an alternative for those that don't have such a key. That's why in some emulators they are the same sequence than some other complex combinations like S-<f6> or C-S-<f6>; or some keys not present in our keyboards anymore (like <f15>) but can be emulated with combinations. They are intended to be more like shortcuts; and when not, we use to bind to another combination any way. See the vt220 or the vt100 specifications for example. >* Push for terminfo to include a string capability that indicates the >sequence sent by the Menu key. Push for the terminfo database to >include that capability for major terminal emulators. > I already discussed this with the xterm developer, but the current translation is direct and does not rely on tricks in the emulator side. Xterm actually can distinguish between them, but I can't force every emacs user to use xterm because it is very limited in many aspects. >* Push for rxvt to change its Menu sequence to something different >from Shift+F6, and submit that sequence to the terminfo database. > >* In rxvt.el, change \e[29~ to the new rxvt Menu sequence. > This is somehow like create a key sequence to distinguish between 2+2 and 4... Or modifying all the universe around just because we want pi to be 4 instead of 3,14. >Even better: > >* Use a terminal emulator that lets you distinguish all key combinations. Actually the recommended terminal emulator to work with emacs is xterm. It is the most compatible and actually was a topic of a previous discussion/question I did long time ago. xterm allows to distinguish between S-<f6> and the [menu] sequence, they are different. But urxvt and many others don't; so that will imply that in urxvt, the context menu will take at least 3 keys when bound to [S-f10]. Because binding to [menu] will also take [S-f6]. That's what I want to avoid. Also because S-<f10> is already taken. So again binding it to S-<f6> will solve all the issues with a simpler trick. 1) not replace the current S-<f10> binding, 2) take only one S-<f#> binding 3) make the [menu] key work in urxvt the same as with gui. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-24 16:05 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-24 19:41 ` Yuri Khan 2021-08-24 20:48 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Yuri Khan @ 2021-08-24 19:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, Emacs developers, Juri Linkov On Tue, 24 Aug 2021 at 23:06, Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> wrote: > It is not wrong actually. Because keys like [menu] require an > alternative for those that don't have such a key. That's why in some > emulators they are the same sequence than some other complex > combinations like S-<f6> or C-S-<f6>; or some keys not present in our > keyboards anymore (like <f15>) but can be emulated with combinations. The alternative for people who don’t have Menu is Shift+F10. Has been since Windows 95 and is adopted by GTK applications. And wxWidgets applications. And maybe other X toolkits as well. Shift+F6 is “go to previous pane” in Windows guidelines. Leave that for people who want an easier key than C-- C-x o. What I’m opposed to is doing things in an application to cover for a design flaw in a single terminal emulator. > >* Push for terminfo to include a string capability that indicates the > >sequence sent by the Menu key. Push for the terminfo database to > >include that capability for major terminal emulators. > > > I already discussed this with the xterm developer, but the current > translation is direct and does not rely on tricks in the emulator > side. Xterm actually can distinguish between them, but I can't force > every emacs user to use xterm because it is very limited in many > aspects. How is it direct? The evdev keycode <MENU> is 135. CSI 2 9 ~ is the VT220 sequence for F16; in evdev, <FK16> is 194. (F16 also somewhat explains rxvt’s Shift+F6, by pretending Shift+F<n> is F<10+n>. Still wrong, because there are 12 function keys! Also because one can build a keyboard that has both F16 and Menu, as USB HID Tables assign different codes to these.) > Actually the recommended terminal emulator to work with emacs is > xterm. It is the most compatible and actually was a topic of a previous > discussion/question I did long time ago. The most compatible with what? VT220? Not relevant nowadays. PC keyboard that most everybody has on their desk? No. > xterm allows to distinguish between S-<f6> and the [menu] sequence, they > are different. But urxvt and many others don't; so that will imply that > in urxvt, the context menu will take at least 3 keys when bound to > [S-f10]. Because binding to [menu] will also take [S-f6]. That's what I > want to avoid. Also because S-<f10> is already taken. To avoid having Menu take Shift+F6, get rxvt to use different sequences for Menu and Shift+F6. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-24 19:41 ` Yuri Khan @ 2021-08-24 20:48 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-24 20:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yuri Khan; +Cc: Juri Linkov, Eli Zaretskii, Emacs developers On Wed, Aug 25, 2021 at 02:41:56AM +0700, Yuri Khan wrote: >On Tue, 24 Aug 2021 at 23:06, Ergus <spacibba@aol.com> wrote: > >> It is not wrong actually. Because keys like [menu] require an >> alternative for those that don't have such a key. That's why in some >> emulators they are the same sequence than some other complex >> combinations like S-<f6> or C-S-<f6>; or some keys not present in our >> keyboards anymore (like <f15>) but can be emulated with combinations. > >The alternative for people who don’t have Menu is Shift+F10. Has been >since Windows 95 and is adopted by GTK applications. And wxWidgets >applications. And maybe other X toolkits as well. > >Shift+F6 is “go to previous pane” in Windows guidelines. Leave that >for people who want an easier key than C-- C-x o. > Shift+F6 is unbound by default. Any way I can live with that but rxvt will sacrifice an extra binding. >What I’m opposed to is doing things in an application to cover for a >design flaw in a single terminal emulator. > I don't care a design flaw while there is some design. Having [menu] bound in gui and see the same key as [print] in xterm is just inconsistent and a waste of a valuable key. >> >* Push for terminfo to include a string capability that indicates the >> >sequence sent by the Menu key. Push for the terminfo database to >> >include that capability for major terminal emulators. >> > >> I already discussed this with the xterm developer, but the current >> translation is direct and does not rely on tricks in the emulator >> side. Xterm actually can distinguish between them, but I can't force >> every emacs user to use xterm because it is very limited in many >> aspects. > >How is it direct? xev > The evdev keycode <MENU> is 135. CSI 2 9 ~ is the >VT220 sequence for F16; in evdev, <FK16> is 194. > >(F16 also somewhat explains rxvt’s Shift+F6, by pretending Shift+F<n> >is F<10+n>. Still wrong, because there are 12 function keys! Also >because one can build a keyboard that has both F16 and Menu, as USB >HID Tables assign different codes to these.) > >> Actually the recommended terminal emulator to work with emacs is >> xterm. It is the most compatible and actually was a topic of a previous >> discussion/question I did long time ago. > >The most compatible with what? VT220? Not relevant nowadays. > The most compatible with everything in emacs out of the box; tmux; fancy combinations and so on. Emacs gave me too many problems with bindings when I tried to use it in other terminal emulators. (and the list is veeery long) >PC keyboard that most everybody has on their desk? No. > Totally disagree here. >> xterm allows to distinguish between S-<f6> and the [menu] sequence, they >> are different. But urxvt and many others don't; so that will imply that >> in urxvt, the context menu will take at least 3 keys when bound to >> [S-f10]. Because binding to [menu] will also take [S-f6]. That's what I >> want to avoid. Also because S-<f10> is already taken. > >To avoid having Menu take Shift+F6, get rxvt to use different >sequences for Menu and Shift+F6. rxvt has many other worst compatibility issues than this and requires a lot of customization to work decently with emacs... so your explication of Shift+F<n> clarifies a lot. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 7:01 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 8:03 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-19 13:57 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 7:24 ` Juri Linkov 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-19 13:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: emacs-devel On Thu, Aug 19, 2021 at 10:01:10AM +0300, Juri Linkov wrote: >> The current implementation follows the X11 menu interaction pattern: >> Hold mouse-3 to keep the menu active and release mouse-3 to select an >> entry. >> >> Could we add an option to avoid this and have the same interaction >> behavior than in gui please?: mouse-3 activates the menu, a click over >> an option selects it and a click outside the menu hides the menu > >When you press down-mouse-1 and immediately release the mouse button, >it has the same effect as if you clicked mouse-1: it displays the menu >without selecting a menu item. So with the current win-win situation >both scenarios are supported: > >1. one click: down-mouse-1, select a menu item, release mouse-1; >2. two clicks: click mouse-1, select a menu item by clicking mouse-1 again. > > >Both ways work on xterm as well - you can easily select a menu item with >one click on xterm too. > Hi Juri: For me only 1. works now as you describe on xterm. Whenever I try 2. it doesn't work the menu disappears when I release the button either fast or slow. With the problem that releasing fast usually selects the first item (generally Undo). On gui it works as you describe. Maybe this is something deeper related with the menu API, I don't know... >> In case the user wants to bind the context menu without using the mouse >> how can be done? Will the context-menu appear in the current cursor >> (point) or in the current mouse arrow position? > >This is possible, but the menu appears at the left top corner, >as for example it appears on typing 'C-<f10>' that runs the command >buffer-menu-open. Here is its implementation: > > (defun buffer-menu-open () > "Start key navigation of the buffer menu. > This is the keyboard interface to \\[mouse-buffer-menu]." > (interactive) > (popup-menu (mouse-buffer-menu-keymap) > (posn-at-x-y 0 0 nil t))) > >We could do the same with: > > (popup-menu (context-menu-map) > (posn-at-x-y 0 0 nil t)) > >Or do it much better: > > (popup-menu (context-menu-map) > (point)) > >What would a good key to bind such command? Maybe 'S-<f10>'? > There is the menu key that nobody seems to use because since 2007 nobody noticed that it is not bound for xterm. Everywhere else (browsers, editors, explorers) the menu key has the same effect than right click, so if we want a binding, this is the right one. Sadly execute-extended-command is bound to [menu]; but the user may know that when context-menu is enabled, that binding is replaced for something standard... (or add a custom to set it). I just started another thread about [menu] not bound in xterm. >But please note that currently when you select a menu item >using the keyboard, many commands will fail with > > (error "Command must be bound to an event with parameters") > The dirty but functional solution for this may be to create a function/macro that emulates a full event. Because I don't know how difficult may be to modify the events api to distinguish when the mouse was used or use the point otherwise... ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-19 13:57 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 7:24 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 12:21 ` Ergus 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 7:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: emacs-devel >>1. one click: down-mouse-1, select a menu item, release mouse-1; >>2. two clicks: click mouse-1, select a menu item by clicking mouse-1 again. >> >>Both ways work on xterm as well - you can easily select a menu item with >>one click on xterm too. > > For me only 1. works now as you describe on xterm. > > Whenever I try 2. it doesn't work the menu disappears when I release the > button either fast or slow. With the problem that releasing fast usually > selects the first item (generally Undo). Do other menus work for you? What do you see when clicking C-<down-mouse-1> bound to mouse-buffer-menu, or S-<down-mouse-1> bound to mouse-appearance-menu, or C-<down-mouse-3> bound to mouse-menu-bar-map, etc. > There is the menu key that nobody seems to use because since 2007 nobody > noticed that it is not bound for xterm. Everywhere else (browsers, > editors, explorers) the menu key has the same effect than right click, > so if we want a binding, this is the right one. Sadly > execute-extended-command is bound to [menu]; but the user may know that > when context-menu is enabled, that binding is replaced for something > standard... (or add a custom to set it). Does this patch work for you? If yes, then we could create context-menu-mode-map active for context-menu-mode and add these keybindings to it. diff --git a/lisp/mouse.el b/lisp/mouse.el index d2a5200d8d..ecf95f11b5 100644 --- a/lisp/mouse.el +++ b/lisp/mouse.el @@ -454,8 +455,13 @@ context-menu-mode (setq context-menu--old-mouse-3 (global-key-binding [mouse-3])) (global-unset-key [mouse-3]) (setq context-menu--old-down-mouse-3 (global-key-binding [down-mouse-3])) - (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] context-menu-entry)) + (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] context-menu-entry) + (setq context-menu--old-menu (global-key-binding [menu])) + (global-set-key [menu] context-menu-entry)) (t + (when context-menu--old-menu + (global-set-key [menu] context-menu--old-menu) + (setq context-menu--old-menu nil)) (if (not context-menu--old-down-mouse-3) (global-unset-key [down-mouse-3]) (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] context-menu--old-down-mouse-3) ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 7:24 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 12:21 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 16:41 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus @ 2021-08-20 12:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: emacs-devel, Stefan Monnier On Fri, Aug 20, 2021 at 10:24:00AM +0300, Juri Linkov wrote: >>>1. one click: down-mouse-1, select a menu item, release mouse-1; >>>2. two clicks: click mouse-1, select a menu item by clicking mouse-1 again. >>> >>>Both ways work on xterm as well - you can easily select a menu item with >>>one click on xterm too. >> >> For me only 1. works now as you describe on xterm. >> >> Whenever I try 2. it doesn't work the menu disappears when I release the >> button either fast or slow. With the problem that releasing fast usually >> selects the first item (generally Undo). > >Do other menus work for you? What do you see when clicking >C-<down-mouse-1> bound to mouse-buffer-menu, or S-<down-mouse-1> >bound to mouse-appearance-menu, or C-<down-mouse-3> bound to >mouse-menu-bar-map, etc. > C-<down-mouse-1> and C-<down-mouse-3> Behave as you describe. S-<down-mouse-1> Does not work in xterm The issue is that context menu is bound to an "unmodified" mouse event. If you try this on xterm: (global-set-key [down-mouse-1] 'mouse-buffer-menu) or (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] 'mouse-buffer-menu) Then you should notice the same issue. Or when I press C-<down-mouse-1> (shows the menu), then release control, and after that, release the mouse button: same behavior (menu disappears and/or selects). So emacs is receiving the "up-mouse-1" as an event in xterm. That's the issue. >> There is the menu key that nobody seems to use because since 2007 nobody >> noticed that it is not bound for xterm. Everywhere else (browsers, >> editors, explorers) the menu key has the same effect than right click, >> so if we want a binding, this is the right one. Sadly >> execute-extended-command is bound to [menu]; but the user may know that >> when context-menu is enabled, that binding is replaced for something >> standard... (or add a custom to set it). > >Does this patch work for you? If yes, then we could create >context-menu-mode-map active for context-menu-mode >and add these keybindings to it. > >diff --git a/lisp/mouse.el b/lisp/mouse.el >index d2a5200d8d..ecf95f11b5 100644 >--- a/lisp/mouse.el >+++ b/lisp/mouse.el >@@ -454,8 +455,13 @@ context-menu-mode > (setq context-menu--old-mouse-3 (global-key-binding [mouse-3])) > (global-unset-key [mouse-3]) > (setq context-menu--old-down-mouse-3 (global-key-binding [down-mouse-3])) >- (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] context-menu-entry)) >+ (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] context-menu-entry) >+ (setq context-menu--old-menu (global-key-binding [menu])) >+ (global-set-key [menu] context-menu-entry)) > (t >+ (when context-menu--old-menu >+ (global-set-key [menu] context-menu--old-menu) >+ (setq context-menu--old-menu nil)) > (if (not context-menu--old-down-mouse-3) > (global-unset-key [down-mouse-3]) > (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] context-menu--old-down-mouse-3) We need to fix the [menu] issue in xterm first, because right now there is no [menu] key action. But I haven't receive any reply about that in the other thread; so I don't know if it is actually an issue or a design choice. Hopefully Stefan (who added the commit in 2007) will reply about this. Just a question: If the context-menu-mode is a minor mode. Why the bindings are not added in a context-menu-mode-map and avoids manually saving the -old commands? Is there an issue with that? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 12:21 ` Ergus @ 2021-08-20 16:41 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-21 4:33 ` Ergus via Emacs development discussions. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-20 16:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: Stefan Monnier, emacs-devel > The issue is that context menu is bound to an "unmodified" mouse > event. If you try this on xterm: > > (global-set-key [down-mouse-1] 'mouse-buffer-menu) > or > (global-set-key [down-mouse-3] 'mouse-buffer-menu) > > Then you should notice the same issue. > > Or when I press C-<down-mouse-1> (shows the menu), then release control, > and after that, release the mouse button: same behavior (menu disappears > and/or selects). So emacs is receiving the "up-mouse-1" as an event in > xterm. That's the issue. If the menu doesn't disappear with (global-set-key [C-down-mouse-1] 'mouse-buffer-menu) but disappears with (global-set-key [down-mouse-1] 'mouse-buffer-menu) this means there is a bug in low-level xterm handling code. BTW, while testing xterm for a short time, I found more bugs in xterm, e.g. clicking [M-down-mouse-1] fails in xterm with: Debugger entered--Lisp error: (wrong-type-argument stringp nil) encode-coding-string(nil utf-8-unix) #f(compiled-function (type data) "Copy DATA to the X selection using the OSC 52 escape sequence.\n\nTYPE specifies which selection to set; it must be either\n`PRIMARY' or `CLIPBOARD'. DATA must be a string.\n\nThis can be used as a `gui-set-selection' method for\nxterm-compatible terminal emulators. Then your system clipboard\nwill be updated whenever you copy a region of text in Emacs.\n\nIf the resulting OSC 52 sequence would be longer than\n`xterm-max-cut-length', then the TEXT is not sent to the system\nclipboard.\n\nThis function either sends a raw OSC 52 sequence or wraps the OSC\n52 in a Device Control String sequence. This way, it will work\non a bare terminal emulators as well as inside the screen\nprogram. When inside the screen program, this function also\nchops long DCS s equences into multiple smaller ones to avoid\nhitting screen's max DCS length." #<bytecode -0x1b4ad63ac0b5ef21>)(SECONDARY nil) apply(#f(compiled-function (type data) "Copy DATA to the X selection using the OSC 52 escape sequence.\n\nTYPE specifies which selection to set; it must be either\n`PRIMARY' or `CLIPBOARD'. DATA must be a string.\n\nThis can be used as a `gui-set-selection' method for\nxterm-compatible terminal emulators. Then your system clipboard\nwill be updated whenever you copy a region of text in Emacs.\n\nIf the resulting OSC 52 sequence would be longer than\n`xterm-max-cut-length', then the TEXT is not sent to the system\nclipboard.\n\nThis function either sends a raw OSC 52 sequence or wraps the OSC\n52 in a Device Control String sequence. This way, it will work\non a bare terminal emulators as well as inside the screen\nprogram. When inside the screen program, this function also\nchops long DCS sequences into multiple smaller ones to avoid\nhitting screen's max DCS length." #<bytecode -0x1b4ad63ac0b5ef21>) (SECONDARY nil)) #f(compiled-function (&rest args) #<bytecode 0x19ad559537b92ff3>)(SECONDARY nil) apply(#f(compiled-function (&rest args) #<bytecode 0x19ad559537b92ff3>) (SECONDARY nil)) gui-backend-set-selection(SECONDARY nil) gui-set-selection(SECONDARY nil) mouse-drag-secondary((M-down-mouse-1 (#<window 1 on *scratch*> 153 (42 . 10) 16176 nil 153 (41 . 3) nil (35 . 7) (1 . 0)))) funcall-interactively(mouse-drag-secondary (M-down-mouse-1 (#<window 1 on *scratch*> 153 (42 . 10) 16176 nil 153 (41 . 3) nil (35 . 7) (1 . 0)))) command-execute(mouse-drag-secondary) > Just a question: > > If the context-menu-mode is a minor mode. Why the bindings are not added > in a context-menu-mode-map and avoids manually saving the -old commands? > > Is there an issue with that? Thanks for the idea, this should work. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-20 16:41 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-21 4:33 ` Ergus via Emacs development discussions. 2021-08-22 8:56 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Ergus via Emacs development discussions. @ 2021-08-21 4:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: Stefan Monnier, emacs-devel [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 357 bytes --] >> Just a question: >> >> If the context-menu-mode is a minor mode. Why the bindings are not added >> in a context-menu-mode-map and avoids manually saving the -old commands? >> >> Is there an issue with that? > >Thanks for the idea, this should work. > Please check the attached patch. It works for me and simplifies the current code for the bindings. [-- Attachment #2: context-map.patch --] [-- Type: text/plain, Size: 2112 bytes --] diff --git a/lisp/mouse.el b/lisp/mouse.el index 3441a4787e..86427a02c6 100644 --- a/lisp/mouse.el +++ b/lisp/mouse.el @@ -440,42 +440,22 @@ context-menu-entry `(menu-item ,(purecopy "Context Menu") ignore :filter (lambda (_) (context-menu-map)))) -(defvar context-menu--saved-bindings nil - "Alist of bindings to restore when `context-menu-mode' is disabled.") - -(defun context-menu--bind-mouse (click-sym down-sym) - "Enable `context-menu-mode' mouse bindings. -CLICK-SYM and DOWN-SYM are the mouse click and down key symbols to use." - (let ((click (vector click-sym)) - (down (vector down-sym))) - (push (cons click-sym (global-key-binding click)) - context-menu--saved-bindings) - (global-unset-key click) - (push (cons down-sym (global-key-binding down)) - context-menu--saved-bindings) - (global-set-key down context-menu-entry))) - -(defun context-menu--restore-bindings () - "Restore saved `context-menu-mode' bindings." - (pcase-dolist (`(,sym . ,binding) context-menu--saved-bindings) - (let ((key (vector sym))) - (if binding - (global-set-key key binding) - (global-unset-key key))))) +(defvar context-menu-mode-map + (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap))) + (define-key map [mouse-3] nil) + (define-key map [down-mouse-3] context-menu-entry) + (when (featurep 'ns) + (define-key map [C-mouse-1] nil) + (define-key map [C-down-mouse-1] context-menu-entry)) + map) + "Context-menu-mode map.") (define-minor-mode context-menu-mode "Toggle Context Menu mode. When Context Menu mode is enabled, clicking the mouse button down-mouse-3 activates the menu whose contents depends on its surrounding context." - :global t :group 'mouse - (if context-menu-mode - (progn - (setq context-menu--saved-bindings nil) - (context-menu--bind-mouse 'mouse-3 'down-mouse-3) - (when (featurep 'ns) - (context-menu--bind-mouse 'C-mouse-1 'C-down-mouse-1))) - (context-menu--restore-bindings))) + :global t :group 'mouse) \f ;; Commands that operate on windows. ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu 2021-08-21 4:33 ` Ergus via Emacs development discussions. @ 2021-08-22 8:56 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-22 8:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Ergus; +Cc: Stefan Monnier, emacs-devel >>> If the context-menu-mode is a minor mode. Why the bindings are not added >>> in a context-menu-mode-map and avoids manually saving the -old commands? >>> >>> Is there an issue with that? >> >>Thanks for the idea, this should work. > > Please check the attached patch. It works for me and simplifies the > current code for the bindings. Thanks, pushed now. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-18 12:08 ` New Context Menu Ergus ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2021-08-19 7:01 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-27 6:21 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-27 6:55 ` Eli Zaretskii 3 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-27 6:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-devel Other apps support the following optimal mouse gesture: 1. Press down-mouse-1 and move the mouse to select the region; 2. Without releasing mouse-1, click mouse-3 to pop up the context menu; 3. Release mouse-1 on the menu item "Cut", thus deleting the region. This allows selecting and deleting the region with just 2 mouse clicks. The same works almost perfectly in Emacs with a single snag: while dragging mouse-1, visually it looks like the region is selected, but really the region don't get selected until mouse-1 is released and calls 'mouse-set-region' bound to [drag-mouse-1]. But while using the above gesture, [drag-mouse-1] (mouse-set-region) is never invoked: <down-mouse-1> ;; mouse-drag-region <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command <down-mouse-3> <cut> ;; kill-region I have no idea how this could be fixed. Maybe mouse--drag-set-mark-and-point should set the real region when called from lambda bound to [mouse-movement] by set-transient-map in mouse-drag-track? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-27 6:21 ` New Context Menu and mouse-1 Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-27 6:55 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-27 17:03 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-27 6:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: emacs-devel > From: Juri Linkov <juri@linkov.net> > Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2021 09:21:21 +0300 > > Other apps support the following optimal mouse gesture: > > 1. Press down-mouse-1 and move the mouse to select the region; > 2. Without releasing mouse-1, click mouse-3 to pop up the context menu; > 3. Release mouse-1 on the menu item "Cut", thus deleting the region. > > This allows selecting and deleting the region with just 2 mouse clicks. > The same works almost perfectly in Emacs with a single snag: > while dragging mouse-1, visually it looks like the region is selected, > but really the region don't get selected until mouse-1 is released > and calls 'mouse-set-region' bound to [drag-mouse-1]. > > But while using the above gesture, [drag-mouse-1] (mouse-set-region) is > never invoked: > > <down-mouse-1> ;; mouse-drag-region > <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command > <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command > <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command > <down-mouse-3> <cut> ;; kill-region > > I have no idea how this could be fixed. Why do you need mouse-set-region to be invoked? And if you do, why cannot the command bound to down-mouse-3 do that? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-27 6:55 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2021-08-27 17:03 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-27 22:01 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-27 17:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel >> <down-mouse-1> ;; mouse-drag-region >> <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command >> <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command >> <mouse-movement> ;; anonymous-command >> <down-mouse-3> <cut> ;; kill-region >> >> I have no idea how this could be fixed. > > Why do you need mouse-set-region to be invoked? And if you do, why > cannot the command bound to down-mouse-3 do that? There should be no need to invoke mouse-set-region, because <mouse-movement> already sets the region. And indeed, the minimal change that fixes this problem is just removing these lines: diff --git a/lisp/mouse.el b/lisp/mouse.el index 7d3ed9a0e4..933ad5181e 100644 --- a/lisp/mouse.el +++ b/lisp/mouse.el @@ -1578,9 +1578,7 @@ mouse-drag-track map) t (lambda () (setq track-mouse old-track-mouse) - (setq auto-hscroll-mode auto-hscroll-mode-saved) - (deactivate-mark) - (pop-mark))))) + (setq auto-hscroll-mode auto-hscroll-mode-saved))))) (defun mouse--drag-set-mark-and-point (start click click-count) (let* ((range (mouse-start-end start click click-count)) Then everything works fine: the aforementioned case and the normal using mouse-1 to select a region. ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-27 17:03 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-27 22:01 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-08-28 18:52 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-29 16:53 ` Juri Linkov 0 siblings, 2 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2021-08-27 22:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel > diff --git a/lisp/mouse.el b/lisp/mouse.el > index 7d3ed9a0e4..933ad5181e 100644 > --- a/lisp/mouse.el > +++ b/lisp/mouse.el > @@ -1578,9 +1578,7 @@ mouse-drag-track > map) > t (lambda () > (setq track-mouse old-track-mouse) > - (setq auto-hscroll-mode auto-hscroll-mode-saved) > - (deactivate-mark) > - (pop-mark))))) > + (setq auto-hscroll-mode auto-hscroll-mode-saved))))) > > (defun mouse--drag-set-mark-and-point (start click click-count) > (let* ((range (mouse-start-end start click click-count)) > > Then everything works fine: the aforementioned case > and the normal using mouse-1 to select a region. Note that this changes conceptually what `mouse-drag-track` does. Instead of only giving visual feedback during a drag, it actually does select the region (whereas in the current code, the region selection is actually performed by the binding of `drag-mouse-1` to `mouse-set-region`). So the above will lead to `mouse-set-region` being called when the region has already been set (at least in terminals that provide `mouse-movement` events). I'm not sure if it can introduce problems, but it would deserve a comment about the fact that the region selection is performed "redundantly" here and in `mouse-set-region` and why it's done this way. From what I remember about the last time I worked in this code, it's a somewhat messy area. BTW, maybe another way to look at the problem is to say that invoking the context-menu should not exit the transient map (but this may come with its own set of problems, of course). Related to this, I wonder if `down-mouse-1` .. move .. `down-mouse-3`, `up-mouse-3` ... `up-mouse-1` would and/or should generate a `drag-mouse-1` event. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-27 22:01 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2021-08-28 18:52 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-29 16:53 ` Juri Linkov 1 sibling, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-28 18:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel >> - (deactivate-mark) >> - (pop-mark))))) > > Note that this changes conceptually what `mouse-drag-track` does. > Instead of only giving visual feedback during a drag, it actually does > select the region (whereas in the current code, the region selection is > actually performed by the binding of `drag-mouse-1` to `mouse-set-region`). > > So the above will lead to `mouse-set-region` being called when the > region has already been set (at least in terminals that provide > `mouse-movement` events). > > I'm not sure if it can introduce problems, but it would deserve > a comment about the fact that the region selection is performed > "redundantly" here and in `mouse-set-region` and why it's done this way. With more testing I noticed that after pushing the mark twice it requires more C-u C-SPC to get back to the original mark. Maybe push-mark could be optimized to not push the mark to the same position that is already at the top of the mark-ring. Hmm, interesting that it intentionally let-binds history-delete-duplicates to nil. > From what I remember about the last time I worked in this code, it's > a somewhat messy area. Indeed, this code looks overcomplicated. I tried to implement extending the existing region with S-mouse-1 based on existing code, but this is not a simple task due to code complexity. > BTW, maybe another way to look at the problem is to say that > invoking the context-menu should not exit the transient map (but this > may come with its own set of problems, of course). > > Related to this, I wonder if `down-mouse-1` .. move .. `down-mouse-3`, > `up-mouse-3` ... `up-mouse-1` would and/or should generate > a `drag-mouse-1` event. Actually, the existing event sequence without the final `drag-mouse-1` is exactly what is needed, because `drag-mouse-1` is intended to finalize the region selection, but there may be nothing to select at this time after `up-mouse-3` invoked "Cut" or "Clear" from the context menu. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-27 22:01 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-08-28 18:52 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-29 16:53 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-30 7:22 ` Juri Linkov 1 sibling, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-29 16:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel > BTW, maybe another way to look at the problem is to say that > invoking the context-menu should not exit the transient map (but this > may come with its own set of problems, of course). The problem is that not to exit the transient map it's not possible to check for some known events, because e.g. selecting "Cut" produces 'cut', and other such symbols. So the other way around would be to check for the known events and then deactivate the mark. This is necessary because otherwise simply clicking mouse-1 will activate the mark and leave it active afterwards. diff --git a/lisp/mouse.el b/lisp/mouse.el index 7d3ed9a0e4..e97352cdf8 100644 --- a/lisp/mouse.el +++ b/lisp/mouse.el @@ -1579,8 +1579,9 @@ mouse-drag-track t (lambda () (setq track-mouse old-track-mouse) (setq auto-hscroll-mode auto-hscroll-mode-saved) - (deactivate-mark) - (pop-mark))))) + (when (memq (car-safe last-input-event) '(mouse-1 drag-mouse-1)) + (deactivate-mark) + (pop-mark)))))) This still exits the transient map in both cases, and I don't know how not to exit the transient map only for events from the context-menu. ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-29 16:53 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-30 7:22 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-30 12:54 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 78+ messages in thread From: Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-30 7:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel >> BTW, maybe another way to look at the problem is to say that >> invoking the context-menu should not exit the transient map (but this >> may come with its own set of problems, of course). > > + (when (memq (car-safe last-input-event) '(mouse-1 drag-mouse-1)) > + (deactivate-mark) > + (pop-mark)))))) Or rather + (unless (and context-menu-mode + (eq (car-safe (aref (this-command-keys-vector) 0)) + 'down-mouse-3)) + (deactivate-mark) + (pop-mark)))))) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
* Re: New Context Menu and mouse-1 2021-08-30 7:22 ` Juri Linkov @ 2021-08-30 12:54 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 0 replies; 78+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2021-08-30 12:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Juri Linkov; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel Juri Linkov [2021-08-30 10:22:01] wrote: >>> BTW, maybe another way to look at the problem is to say that >>> invoking the context-menu should not exit the transient map (but this >>> may come with its own set of problems, of course). >> >> + (when (memq (car-safe last-input-event) '(mouse-1 drag-mouse-1)) >> + (deactivate-mark) >> + (pop-mark)))))) > > Or rather > > + (unless (and context-menu-mode > + (eq (car-safe (aref (this-command-keys-vector) 0)) > + 'down-mouse-3)) > + (deactivate-mark) > + (pop-mark)))))) This looks "honest and safe". If you can add a comment explaining why we have this ad-hoc hack there, then I think it's quite acceptable (given that we're unable to figure out what is The Right Way). Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 78+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2021-08-30 12:54 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 78+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <20210818120834.i3orh535tb2enpos.ref@Ergus> 2021-08-18 12:08 ` New Context Menu Ergus 2021-08-18 12:26 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 12:43 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 13:30 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 17:17 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 17:21 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 17:32 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 16:50 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 18:10 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 18:17 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 19:23 ` Ergus 2021-08-18 19:28 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 19:53 ` Ergus 2021-08-19 6:31 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 7:07 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-18 19:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-18 18:58 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-18 19:12 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 7:05 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 7:51 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 7:13 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 11:26 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 11:41 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 16:44 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 12:26 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 12:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 12:59 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 13:03 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 13:34 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 17:36 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 18:05 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 18:08 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 19:07 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-21 6:20 ` Ergus 2021-08-21 6:53 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-21 15:04 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 18:15 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 23:15 ` Michael Welsh Duggan 2021-08-18 14:04 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 2021-08-18 16:38 ` Iñigo Serna 2021-08-19 0:38 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 2021-08-19 7:08 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 14:22 ` Jean-Christophe Helary 2021-08-19 7:01 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-19 8:03 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 14:11 ` Ergus 2021-08-19 15:48 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-19 16:34 ` Yuri Khan 2021-08-20 7:14 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 11:29 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-20 16:49 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 18:01 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-23 7:33 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-23 11:36 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-23 16:04 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-23 16:35 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-23 17:42 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-23 18:02 ` Ergus 2021-08-24 6:35 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-24 8:00 ` Ergus 2021-08-24 11:44 ` Yuri Khan 2021-08-24 16:05 ` Ergus 2021-08-24 19:41 ` Yuri Khan 2021-08-24 20:48 ` Ergus 2021-08-19 13:57 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 7:24 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-20 12:21 ` Ergus 2021-08-20 16:41 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-21 4:33 ` Ergus via Emacs development discussions. 2021-08-22 8:56 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-27 6:21 ` New Context Menu and mouse-1 Juri Linkov 2021-08-27 6:55 ` Eli Zaretskii 2021-08-27 17:03 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-27 22:01 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-08-28 18:52 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-29 16:53 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-30 7:22 ` Juri Linkov 2021-08-30 12:54 ` Stefan Monnier
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