* [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-04-07 17:33 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-08 6:45 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-04-07 17:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
I would like to see a face property `raise' with the same semantics as
the display property `raise'. At least, I would like to see that such a
property is considered a good idea.
A face in Emacs is a named collection of graphical attributes (see
<info:(elisp)Faces>).
There are a couple of advantages of faces versus display properties
(`image' and STRING don't really relate well to the other display
properties), I'll demonstrate them with an example `subscript-face':
1. With faces, you have a nice mechanism which abstracts the logical
property "being a subscript" from some physical properties (e.g.,
"baseline raised by 0.3ex", "font-size 80%", ...)
2. Users can use the usual way to customize things.
3. There is a standard mechanism to "merge" faces. Packagages which
use text properties have to define their own merging code.
4. Since faces are named, packages can easily remove the faces from a
text region. If a package A uses text properties, it's much more
difficult just to remove the properties where A is the owner.
5. There is a package which can set faces according to the syntactical
structure of the code/text: font-lock. We could easily define
font-lock keywords for super- and subscripts.
(I know that the font-lock.el in the Emacs development version has
the variable `font-lock-extra-managed-props' which you might think
might be used to set display properties, but it doesn't help
too much due to 3 and 4 above.)
- Christoph
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-04-07 17:33 Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-04-08 6:45 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-04-08 6:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
I would like to see a face property `raise' with the same semantics as
the display property `raise'.
I don't think so. Raising is not a matter of how something is displayed,
but where it is displayed.
Some unsophisticated text formatters treated superscript as if it
were a font, but more sophisticated ones don't.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* RE: [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-04-08 17:52 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-08 18:54 ` Kai Großjohann
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-04-08 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
> I would like to see a face property `raise' with the same semantics as
> the display property `raise'.
> I don't think so. Raising is not a matter of how something is
> displayed, but where it is displayed.
Where something is displayed (at least relatively, and that's what
`raise' is about) is a special case of how something is displayed.
The question of face (style-class like in HTML/CSS would be a better
name) vs display property is determined by the following:
* display property: determines the display style of ONE SPECIFIC
buffer part,
* face property: assigns a style class to a buffer part. By
customizing the face, you determine the display style of all buffer
parts having this style class.
In my previous mail, I've given you an example where face properties are
much better (super-/subscripts: after all, you want to raise subscripts
consistently by e.g. 5 pixels), a face for footnote numberings would be
another example. (I also gave 5 general reasons.)
I've yet to see an example where display properties are useful for
`raise', except for some Emacs painting package. (But even that example
would not invalidate my examples, i.e., a face property `raise' would
still be useful.)
Looking how things are done outside the Emacs world would also be
useful: let's assume HTML wouldn't have a SUP element. Then everyone
would advice you to use
<SPAN class="SUP">superscript</SPAN>
and define
SPAN.SUP { vertical-align: super; font-size: smaller; }
instead using
<SPAN style="vertical-align: super; font-size: smaller;">
superscript
</SPAN>
for every superscript. In Emacs, the recommendation (using the class
attribute) corresponds to setting a face, the non-recommendation (using
the style attribute) corresponds to setting display properties.
> Some unsophisticated text formatters treated superscript as if it
> were a font, but more sophisticated ones don't.
I don't know where this is related to the question whether a face
property `raise' would be useful.
- Christoph
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-04-08 17:52 Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-04-08 18:54 ` Kai Großjohann
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Kai Großjohann @ 2003-04-08 18:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
"Wedler, Christoph" <christoph.wedler@sap.com> writes:
> > I would like to see a face property `raise' with the same semantics as
> > the display property `raise'.
>
> > I don't think so. Raising is not a matter of how something is
> > displayed, but where it is displayed.
>
> Where something is displayed (at least relatively, and that's what
> `raise' is about) is a special case of how something is displayed.
It seems to me that it ought to be possible to affix `round-scripts'
to all four corners of a symbol. For example, one would like the
effect of the TeX snippet $a^1_2$ to be possible in Emacs, too.
So I agree with Richard that it is about "where", and much less about
"how". ({Super,sub,...}scripts are usually smaller, so that the size
could be added to "how".)
The TeX snippet shows a with a superscript 1 and a subscript 2.
--
A preposition is not a good thing to end a sentence with.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* RE: [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-04-09 18:06 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-09 18:50 ` Kai Großjohann
2003-04-10 6:23 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-04-09 18:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
Kai Grossjohann wrote:
> "Wedler, Christoph" <christoph.wedler@sap.com> writes:
>> > I would like to see a face property `raise' with the same
>> > semantics as the display property `raise'.
>>
>> > I don't think so. Raising is not a matter of how something is
>> > displayed, but where it is displayed.
>>
>> Where something is displayed (at least relatively, and that's what
>> `raise' is about) is a special case of how something is displayed.
> [...] So I agree with Richard that it is about "where", and much less
> about "how". ({Super,sub,...}scripts are usually smaller, so that
> the size could be added to "how".)
Hm, my point[1] was that the where-vs-how distinction is not only
unclear[2], it's also not the right distinction to decide which property
should be a display property and which a face property (the property
`image' is clearly "how" and should be made a face property if I follow
Richards reasoning).
IMHO, the right distinction is:
1. If the value of a property is specific for ONE PART of the buffer,
it is useful to have this property as a DISPLAY property.
2. If the value of a property is the same for a CLASS of characters in
the buffer, it is useful to have this property as a FACE property.
Example for 1: absolute positions (one kind of "where") are specific to
one part of the buffer and are therefore useful for a display property
(e.g., :align-to).
Example for 1: most images shouldn't be displayed more than once in a
buffer, i.e., there are specific to one part of the buffer => the image
property is correctly a display property (images don't have to do
anything with "where", don't they? ...but clearly with "how"!). (To
support images as icons, one could imagine `image' as a face property,
too.)
Example for 2: property `raise' (I have already provided 2-3 examples:
super-/subscripts and footnote numbers). If you have an example where
it is useful to assign this property to one specific part of the buffer
(and want a display property for this), that fine for me, but please
make `raise' a face property, since it is mostly used for a CLASS of
characters.
- Christoph
[1] unfortunately, only the intro of my message was cited, not part of
the rest of the 45 lines...
[2] relative-"where" can be seen as a specific "how". Kai, of course,
if R (relative-"where") is a subset of W ("where") and H ("how"), and x
(property raise) is an element of R, then x might be more about W than
H, but it remains the fact that x is also an element of H.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-04-09 18:06 Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-04-09 18:50 ` Kai Großjohann
2003-04-10 6:23 ` Richard Stallman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Kai Großjohann @ 2003-04-09 18:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
"Wedler, Christoph" <christoph.wedler@sap.com> writes:
> Example for 2: property `raise' (I have already provided 2-3 examples:
> super-/subscripts and footnote numbers). If you have an example where
> it is useful to assign this property to one specific part of the buffer
> (and want a display property for this), that fine for me, but please
> make `raise' a face property, since it is mostly used for a CLASS of
> characters.
I think I'm sorry for speaking up, I probably said something bogus.
At least now, I have no idea what I've been talking about...
I apologize.
--
A preposition is not a good thing to end a sentence with.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-04-09 18:06 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-09 18:50 ` Kai Großjohann
@ 2003-04-10 6:23 ` Richard Stallman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-04-10 6:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: kai.grossjohann
It sounds like the main reason you would rather use a face
is so that you could specify a symbol and define the symbol's
meaning elsewhere. Currently that can be done for the face
property but not for the display property.
Is that ability to refer to a symbol whose meaning is
defined elsewhere the real issue?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* RE: [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-04-10 18:48 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-10 23:14 ` Kevin Rodgers
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-04-10 18:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: kai.grossjohann
rms@gnu.org writes:
> It sounds like the main reason you would rather use a face
> is so that you could specify a symbol and define the symbol's
> meaning elsewhere. Currently that can be done for the face
> property but not for the display property.
> Is that ability to refer to a symbol whose meaning is
> defined elsewhere the real issue?
Exactly. (And we have this symbol already: the symbol naming a face.)
What we like to have in Emacs is:
1. the ability to assign various properties (let's use the simple name
for the moment) to text (parts)
2. the ability to define "abstract" properties and assign one ore more
of them to text (parts). Each abstract property represents a list of
(concrete) properties (with their values).
If you read this you might think that the properties which can be
assigned directly via 1 and those which can be assigned indirectly via 2
should be basically the same.
I would agree. And this is how things work in HTML/CSS.
In fact, there is already a property which can be assigned via 1 and 2
in Emacs:
1. the font-size can be assigned via the display property `height'
2. the font-size can be assigned via the font of a face
(Emacs new font selection mechanism is already an important step in
the right direction: the font is not a useful property, the
font-size, font-family, etc are useful properties, a font is just
used for the physical representation of a couple of properties.)
Some properties might not be useful to assign indirectly => you provide
them as display properties only.
Some or indeed all properties which are currently just face properties
are probably also useful for direct assignment => you could make them
display properties, too (e.g., color, etc).
In conclusion: Emacs already has abstraction mechanism, it is just
called a bit strangely (face) and presented as standing beside the
display properties.
- Christoph
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-04-10 18:48 Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-04-10 23:14 ` Kevin Rodgers
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2003-04-10 23:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
Wedler, Christoph wrote:
> 2. the ability to define "abstract" properties and assign one ore more
> of them to text (parts). Each abstract property represents a list of
> (concrete) properties (with their values).
Isn't that what the `category' property provides?
--
<a href="mailto:<kevin.rodgers@ihs.com>">Kevin Rodgers</a>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* RE: [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-04-11 19:34 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-13 11:22 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-04-11 19:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
Kevin Rodgers wrote:
> Wedler, Christoph wrote:
>> 2. the ability to define "abstract" properties and assign one ore more
>> of them to text (parts). Each abstract property represents a list of
>> (concrete) properties (with their values).
> Isn't that what the `category' property provides?
It looks like. I wouldn't have guessed that Emacs introduces two
abstraction mechanism, which
- work completely different (categories: simple symbol, face: list of
face names with some merging algorithm),
- work for a different set of properties
I think the error started when Emacs tried to define groups of different
properties:
1. there are properties called text properties like `invisible',
2. there are properties called face attributes, which you have to
specify together in the text property `face' (you can specify
abstractions = the face name, and concrete properties = the face
attributes here),
3. there are properties called display specs, which you have to specify
together in the text property `display',
4. there are properties called space properties, which you have to
specify together in the display spec `space', which you have to
specify together with other display specs in the text property
`display'.
This doesn't make anything clearer, it just leads to confusion that you
have to set/get/change different properties differently. Additionally,
there is no clear distrinction which group you should choose for a new
property.
The distinction is probably not along the lines:
- how => face property
- where => display property
if <info:(elisp)Display Property> starts with
The `display' text property (or overlay property) is used to insert
images into text, and also control other aspects of how text displays.
Therefore, some properties are defined twice:
- you can specify the text size via 2 (:height) and 3 (height)
- you can specify the space width via 3 (space-width) and 4 (:width)
and I could somehow understand that you want to avoid a similar
situation for the `raise' property...
A fix would be:
A. Don't define different groups of different properties: make all
properties text properties (or group all special = non-user-defined
text properties together)
B. Just provide one abstraction mechanism for all special properties
with the ability to merge the abstract properties (like face
merging).
I would use faces as the abstraction mechanism because
- there is a way how user can customize the face properties
- there is a package (font-lock) which can set the the abstract
properties automatically
To categories: I'm not sure whether they help me resetting "my"
properties if the is a function like `remove-yank-excluded-properties'
in subr.el...
- Christoph
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-04-11 19:34 [Feature request] face property `raise' Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-04-13 11:22 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-04-13 11:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
A. Don't define different groups of different properties: make all
properties text properties (or group all special = non-user-defined
text properties together)
B. Just provide one abstraction mechanism for all special properties
with the ability to merge the abstract properties (like face
merging).
That is an interesting idea. Could you try writing a precise
spec for what it would look like?
One complication will be how to extend face customization to handle an
unbounded set of properties. Right now there is a fixed set of face
attributes.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* RE: [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-04-29 18:19 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-13 1:47 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-04-29 18:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
rms@gnu.org writes:
> A. Don't define different groups of different properties: make all
> properties text properties (or group all special = non-user-defined
> text properties together)
> B. Just provide one abstraction mechanism for all special properties
> with the ability to merge the abstract properties (like face
> merging).
> That is an interesting idea. Could you try writing a precise
> spec for what it would look like?
> One complication will be how to extend face customization to handle an
> unbounded set of properties. Right now there is a fixed set of face
> attributes.
OK, below you find some ideas / a draft about this. It lists potential
problems and possible options how to solve them. Comments welcome.
1. the general mechanism: properties, face merging, priorities of
overlay/text properties, null-value problem
2. property names for built-in properties (used by the display engine),
3. backward compatiblity issues (what to do with the current
properties, especially the properties display/face/category?)
4. face customization
5. implementation
1. GENERAL IDEA ----------------------
The general idea is as follows:
* All properties are "direct" text/overlay properties (as opposed to
the current display specs, face attributes etc)
* One special property (`face') specifies a list of faces (i.e.,
symbols naming the faces). A face serves as an abstraction
mechanism, i.e., defines values for some properties.
As opposed to the current behaviour (new in Emacs-21?), you cannot
specify individual properties with the text property `face', because
this is not needed: face attributes are normal "direct" text/overlay
properties.
Questions considered below:
- face/property merging: a property is defined directly and/or in
more than one face -- which one to choose?
- how does the face/property merging relate with properties
specified by overlays?
- can a face specify the face property? => see 4
* One special property (`mouse-face) defines additional
properties to use when the mouse is "near" the characters with the
`mouse-face property.
A value for the same property can be specified directly and indirectly
via faces. For each character, the value can be specified by a text
property and by a property of overlays which apply to that character.
The question is: what is the "final" value for that property?
Before we discuss that, let's look at the 3 kind of values for a
property:
* Absolute values, like :height 120
* Relative values, like :height 1.2
* not specified = "null value". There are three posibilities how this
can be specified:
i. not specified is different to any specified value. In this
case, `get-text-property' and friends must allow to
distinguish this, i.e., this function must have an optional
DEFAULT argument.
ii. nil = not specified. In this case, we must have specific
FALSE values for boolean properties like :underline (and even
some non-booleans like `image'), e.g., :none.
iii. :null (or some other value) = not specified. In this case
`get-text-property' and friends must return that value if a
properties is not specified
Option ii is IMHO the best and most Emacs-like (there are only a few
boolean-like properties), i would also be OK.
The algorithm which determines the "final" property value to apply for a
given character is as follows.
-----------
final_property (charpos, prop) =
let value1 = if mouse_over (charpos)
then mouse_property (charpos, prop)
else <unspecified>,
value2 = specified_prop (charpos, prop),
value3 = face_property ('default, prop),
value4 = built_in_prop_value (prop)
in
value1 * value2 * value3 * value4
mouse_property (charpos, prop) =
let mouse_face = specified_prop (charpos, 'mouse-face)
in
if mouse_face.specified
then face_property (mouse_face, prop)
else <unspecified>
specified_prop (charpos, prop) =
let values = map (lambda (overlay) =>
object_property (overlay, prop),
overlays_in_priority_order_at (charpos));
in
-- overlay props -- text props
reduce ((*), values) * object_property (charpos, prop)
object_property (charpos_or_overlay, prop) =
let values = map (lambda (face) =>
face_property (face, prop),
direct_property (charpos_or_overlay, 'face))
in
direct_property (charpos_or_overlay, prop) *
reduce ((*), values)
direct_property : built_in
face_property : built_in
value1 * value2 = -- combining values
if value1.absolutep then
value1
elseif value1.unspecifiedp then
value2
elseif (value2.unspecifiedp) then
value1
elseif (value2.absolutep) then
combine_to_absolute_value (value1, value2)
else
combine_to_relative_value (value1, value2)
-----------
Example: let's assume the following line in a buffer
FFFTTTOOOOOTTTFFF
All characters in the line have the following text properties:
- mouse-face = highlight which defines background = green
- face = dark which defines background = grey
The characters TTTOOOOOTTT have the following text properties:
- background = orange
There is an overlay over the OOOOO with the properties:
- face = selection which defines background = yellow
Then we'll see the following background colors:
- if the mouse is over the line, the complete line has a green
background,
- otherwise, the OOOOOs have a yellow background, both TTTs have a
orange background, the rest a grey background
This shows:
- the most important distinction is mouse vs not mouse,
- then: overlay (high prio..low prio) vs text property
- then: direct property vs face properties
2. PROPERTY NAMES -----------
There are properties used by the display engine (built-in properties)
and properties not used by the display engine (user properties).
I see two possibilities for a naming convention for built-in properties
(I do not discuss the individual names of the properties in this mail):
a. :prop-name, i.e. a symbol starting with a colon,
b. prop-name, i.e., another symbol
Currently, text/overlay properties use a, face attribute use b, display
properties use a and space properties (grouped in the display spec
`space') use b.
I would suggest to use b:
- Advantage: more backward compatible (see 3 below),
- Advantage: a package-specific property might become a built-in
property in a future release (e.g., fontified)
- Disadvantage: potential naming conflict of future built-in properties
with user properties (this is already the case in Emacs)
3. BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY -----------
Of course, if things change in this area, we have the problem of old
ELisp coding. The individual problems with possible option:
a. The display property. The options:
i. obsolete, ignore it
ii. obsolete, use it (lower prio than the new direct properties,
but higher than indirect properties via faces)
b. direct face attributes in the face property:
i. setting such a value for the face property is not allowed
(signals an error)
ii. obsolete, such list elements in the value of the face property
are ignored.
iii. obsolete, use it (with prio as it is now)
c. category attribute
i. obsolete, ignore it
ii. obsolete, use the symbol as an additional face (with lowest
prio)
d. changed names of properties: if we use naming convention 1b, we
would be more backward compatible
e. ...
The first options are cleaner and will lead to a faster display engine
and probably easier to implement, the latter options are more backward
compatible.
4. FACE CUSTOMIZATION -----------
If faces serve as a general abstraction mechanism, it must be possible
to customize the corresponding face properties:
- built-in properties can have special support like provided now for
all face attributes
- user properties are stored in an alist/plist (symbol |-> sexpr) and
customized like any variable having such an alist/plist as :type.
We could use the face attribute `face' for the face inherit mechanism.
5. IMPLEMENTATION -----------
Sorry, I cannot say anything here, how much of the current coding can be
reused / has to be rewritten...
- Christoph
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-04-29 18:19 Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-05-13 1:47 ` Richard Stallman
2003-05-13 2:22 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-13 14:13 ` Stefan Monnier
0 siblings, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-05-13 1:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
Please forgive me for taking a long time to look at this proposal.
It is not that I am not interested.
As opposed to the current behaviour (new in Emacs-21?), you cannot
specify individual properties with the text property `face', because
this is not needed: face attributes are normal "direct" text/overlay
properties.
That would be an incompatible change. For the sake of not breaking
applications, let's not change this one thing.
Questions considered below:
- face/property merging: a property is defined directly and/or in
more than one face -- which one to choose?
This issue exists in the current design, and we resolved it by saying
that faces are specified in some order. The specification of any given
property wins.
- how does the face/property merging relate with properties
specified by overlays?
Overlays come before text properties, same as now.
The ordering among properties is controlled by the priority.
iii. :null (or some other value) = not specified. In this case
`get-text-property' and friends must return that value if a
properties is not specified
In the current design, the value :unspecified means aface attribute is
unspecified. I think that is essentially your option 3.
I think we should use alists, so that the absence of a property
in an alist is clearly distinct from specifying nil.
I see two possibilities for a naming convention for built-in properties
(I do not discuss the individual names of the properties in this mail):
a. :prop-name, i.e. a symbol starting with a colon,
b. prop-name, i.e., another symbol
Currently, text/overlay properties use a, face attribute use b, display
properties use a and space properties (grouped in the display spec
`space') use b.
Yes, it is rather inconsistent.
I would suggest to use b:
I agree; the backward-compatibility issue is decisive.
However, we could recognize the existing face attribute
keywords as properties too.
a. The display property. The options:
i. obsolete, ignore it
I think that is ok. The display property is not used in very much
code.
b. direct face attributes in the face property:
iii. obsolete, use it (with prio as it is now)
That would be necessary.
c. category attribute
ii. obsolete, use the symbol as an additional face (with lowest
prio)
That would be necessary.
Meanwhile, there is an important implementation efficiency issue here.
The display code currently checks for just a few properties, and that
makes it efficient. Clean though this new design is, we may need
to stay with the old design if we cannot make the new one efficient.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-13 1:47 ` Richard Stallman
@ 2003-05-13 2:22 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-14 21:05 ` Richard Stallman
2003-05-13 14:13 ` Stefan Monnier
1 sibling, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Miles Bader @ 2003-05-13 2:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> writes:
> c. category attribute
>
> ii. obsolete, use the symbol as an additional face (with lowest
> prio)
>
> That would be necessary.
Absolutely.
I'm not sure why it was suggested to be marked `obsolete' anyway --
`category' is a general abstraction mechanism for text properties
(and overlays), not an ad-hoc display-related property. Removing it
would reduce functionality, and making it not work for faces would
make them an annoying special case, which is obviously something to
avoid if possible.
-Miles
--
[|nurgle|] ddt- demonic? so quake will have an evil kinda setting? one that
will make every christian in the world foamm at the mouth?
[iddt] nurg, that's the goal
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-13 1:47 ` Richard Stallman
2003-05-13 2:22 ` Miles Bader
@ 2003-05-13 14:13 ` Stefan Monnier
2003-05-14 21:04 ` Richard Stallman
1 sibling, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-05-13 14:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
> As opposed to the current behaviour (new in Emacs-21?), you cannot
> specify individual properties with the text property `face', because
> this is not needed: face attributes are normal "direct" text/overlay
> properties.
>
> That would be an incompatible change. For the sake of not breaking
> applications, let's not change this one thing.
[...]
> a. The display property. The options:
>
> i. obsolete, ignore it
>
> I think that is ok. The display property is not used in very much code.
AFAIK, the display property is used in more code than the "directly
specify face properties (rather than a face) in the `face' property".
As a matter of fact I don't know any code which uses this last trick,
so it's funny that you'd want to preserve it while at the same time
being willing to kill the `display' property.
Stefan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* RE: [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-05-13 17:17 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-13 21:23 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-14 21:04 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-05-13 17:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
Richard Stallman wrote:
> iii. :null (or some other value) = not specified. In this case
> `get-text-property' and friends must return that value if a
> properties is not specified
> In the current design, the value :unspecified means aface attribute is
> unspecified. I think that is essentially your option 3.
That's true then for face properties. If this is generally true, this
would mean:
- overlay A from S to E with high prio, mouse-face: nil
- overlay B from S to E with low prio, mouse-face: some-face
=> there is no highlighting when the mouse is in the region S to E
Is this the case? Or is there highlighting (nil would be the null value for
mouse-face).
> I see two possibilities for a naming convention for built-in properties
> (I do not discuss the individual names of the properties in this mail):
> [...] b. prop-name, i.e., another symbol
> I would suggest to use b:
I agree.
> I agree; the backward-compatibility issue is decisive.
> However, we could recognize the existing face attribute
> keywords as properties too.
> a. The display property. The options:
> i. obsolete, ignore it
> I think that is ok. The display property is not used in very much
> code.
Stefan is probably right that this is might not be true anymore...
> b. direct face attributes in the face property:
> iii. obsolete, use it (with prio as it is now)
> That would be necessary.
Sure, if backward-compatibility is an important issue...
> c. category attribute
> ii. obsolete, use the symbol as an additional face (with lowest
> prio)
> That would be necessary.
Same as above (backward-compatibility).
> Meanwhile, there is an important implementation efficiency issue here.
> The display code currently checks for just a few properties, and that
> makes it efficient.
It depends -- let's look at an example with overlays both defining
the display property:
- overlay A from S to E with high prio, display: (D1 a1 D2 a2)
- overlay B from S to E with low prio, display: (D1 b1 D3 b3)
What's the "combined" display property?
a. (D1 a1 D2 a2) ?
b. (D1 a1 D2 a2 D3 b3)
I assume the answer is a. But, if we see the properties Dx as
independent properties, b would be the correct answer. (A similar
example could be constructed with face attributes in the property
`face' -- what's the answer there?)
> Clean though this new design is, we may need to stay with the old
> design if we cannot make the new one efficient.
Without extra checks for backward-compatibility properties ('category'
etc) and if the above answer is b, there don't need to be a difference
with the efficiency. Otherwise, there might be...
- Christoph
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-13 17:17 Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-05-13 21:23 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-14 21:04 ` Richard Stallman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Miles Bader @ 2003-05-13 21:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
On Tue, May 13, 2003 at 07:17:53PM +0200, Wedler, Christoph wrote:
> > c. category attribute
> > ii. obsolete, use the symbol as an additional face (with lowest
> > prio)
> > That would be necessary.
>
> Same as above (backward-compatibility).
Your code is not a replacement for category -- category does much more.
So why do you keep saying it's necessary only for `backward-compatibility'?
> Without extra checks for backward-compatibility properties ('category'
> etc) and if the above answer is b, there don't need to be a difference
> with the efficiency. Otherwise, there might be...
Do you have any evidence or reasoning to support this conclusion?
It sounds like your change would end up checking for many more properties...
-Miles
--
Next to fried food, the South has suffered most from oratory.
-- Walter Hines Page
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* RE: [Feature request] face property `raise'
@ 2003-05-14 17:45 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-14 20:57 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-15 15:42 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Wedler, Christoph @ 2003-05-14 17:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
Miles Bader wrote:
> Your code is not a replacement for category -- category does much more.
What does it more?
> So why do you keep saying it's necessary only for `backward-compatibility'?
Maybe an answer to your previous mail helps.
> I'm not sure why it was suggested to be marked `obsolete' anyway --
> `category' is a general abstraction mechanism for text properties
> (and overlays), not an ad-hoc display-related property. [...]
Hmm, half my proposal was about using just one abstraction mechanism for
all properties: faces. (The other half was about not trying to group
properties into direct text/overlay props, display specs, face
attributes, etc...)
>> Without extra checks for backward-compatibility properties ('category'
>> etc) and if the above answer is b, there don't need to be a difference
>> with the efficiency. Otherwise, there might be...
> Do you have any evidence or reasoning to support this conclusion? It
> sounds like your change would end up checking for many more
> properties...
Yes. The "if the above answer is b" means that Emacs merges each
display spec individually, i.e., the same as the corresponding direct
properties would be merged with my approach. In other words, the number
of direct text/overlay props, display specs, face attributes, etc which
Emacs would have to check now are not less than the number of direct
properties to check with my approach.
In order not to discuss hypothetical things, I checked the merging of
display properties: the answer is a. Of course, that's faster, but this
kind of merging is a bit limited. In other words, the more efficient
implementation depends on the current semantics, which is a bit confusing.
(defun dp ()
(interactive)
(insert "MMM M1M M2M M3M M4M MMM")
(let ((ol (make-overlay (- (point) 11) (- (point) 4))))
(overlay-put ol 'display '(raise 1.5))
(put-text-property (- (point) 15) (- (point) 8)
'display '(height (+ 2)))
(put-text-property (- (point) 19) (- (point) 16)
'display '((raise 1.5) (height (+ 2))))))
With Emacs, only M1M is higher and raised, M3M is only raised.
In my approach, where `height' and `raise' are direct properties, M3M
would also be higher and raised (with my approach, the code would look
different, of course: no property `display' stuff).
- Christoph
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-14 17:45 Wedler, Christoph
@ 2003-05-14 20:57 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-15 15:42 ` Richard Stallman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Miles Bader @ 2003-05-14 20:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
On Wed, May 14, 2003 at 07:45:40PM +0200, Wedler, Christoph wrote:
> > Your code is not a replacement for category -- category does much more.
>
> What does it more?
>
> > I'm not sure why it was suggested to be marked `obsolete' anyway --
> > `category' is a general abstraction mechanism for text properties
> > (and overlays), not an ad-hoc display-related property. [...]
>
> Hmm, half my proposal was about using just one abstraction mechanism for
> all properties: faces. (The other half was about not trying to group
> properties into direct text/overlay props, display specs, face
> attributes, etc...)
[note that I didn't read earlier messages in this thread, as it took a
while to notice that you had started proprosing sweeping changes to emacs
internals; the message to which I first responded is the first one I
noticed, so I don't have much sense of the actual implementation you're
proposing, merely the effects of it that you were discussing with richard]
`category' works with any property at all, so as a user, I can add a
category text property called `foo' and then add a property `blargh' to
the symbol `foo', and it will be inherited via the category property.
It doesn't make much sense to call this a face, since has no connection
whatsoever to faces or display, and isn't even anything emacs understands
at all, it's purely for user use (perhaps for internal book-keeping). So
you're suggesting that I never-the-less use the face property to inherit
this?
If I swallow my discomfort at using faces for something that's not
face-related, where do I add my `blargh' property so that it will be
inherited?
[For reference, I'm talking about something like the following:
(put-text-property BEG END 'category 'foo)
(put 'foo 'blargh 'woggawoggawogga)
where `blargh' is a random user property]
> > Do you have any evidence or reasoning to support this conclusion? It
> > sounds like your change would end up checking for many more
> > properties...
>
> Yes. The "if the above answer is b" means that Emacs merges each
> display spec individually, i.e., the same as the corresponding direct
> properties would be merged with my approach. In other words, the number
> of direct text/overlay props, display specs, face attributes, etc which
> Emacs would have to check now are not less than the number of direct
> properties to check with my approach.
The thing is that, if I understand what's going on, you _add_ the
possibility of many more direct properties that currently exist. E.g.,
individual face attributes are now possible direct properties. The result
is that while checking for YOUR_NEW_PROPS+OLD_PROPS is surely more
expensive than checking _just_ YOUR_NEW_PROPS, it's (1) decidely more
expensive (in terms of number-of-checks; I don't know real terms) than
just OLD_PROPS, and (2) really only marginally more expensive than just
YOUR_NEW_PROPS.
Please correct me if I'm misunderstanding what you're proposing.
-Miles
--
"I distrust a research person who is always obviously busy on a task."
--Robert Frosch, VP, GM Research
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-13 14:13 ` Stefan Monnier
@ 2003-05-14 21:04 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-05-14 21:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
>
> I think that is ok. The display property is not used in very much code.
AFAIK, the display property is used in more code than the "directly
specify face properties (rather than a face) in the `face' property".
I don't know numbers of uses for direct face attributes, but I have
written code that does it.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-13 17:17 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-13 21:23 ` Miles Bader
@ 2003-05-14 21:04 ` Richard Stallman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-05-14 21:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
> I think that is ok. The display property is not used in very much
> code.
Stefan is probably right that this is might not be true anymore...
I found 34 uses in the Emacs code--so I guess he is right.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-13 2:22 ` Miles Bader
@ 2003-05-14 21:05 ` Richard Stallman
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-05-14 21:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: emacs-devel
I'm not sure why it was suggested to be marked `obsolete' anyway --
`category' is a general abstraction mechanism for text properties
(and overlays), not an ad-hoc display-related property.
The proposed new mechanism would also be a general abstraction
mechanism; you could use it fairly easily to get the same results
as you now get with `category'.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Feature request] face property `raise'
2003-05-14 17:45 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-14 20:57 ` Miles Bader
@ 2003-05-15 15:42 ` Richard Stallman
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2003-05-15 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: miles
In other words, the number
of direct text/overlay props, display specs, face attributes, etc which
Emacs would have to check now are not less than the number of direct
properties to check with my approach.
That is true, but it isn't really the point. Emacs can efficiently
check many face attributes because it does not have to go looking for
them in a list of other things. By contrast, Gerd found that the
number of different text properties that the redisplay code needs to
look for was crucial to the efficiency of redisplay.
Perhaps someone could find a more efficient way of handling numbers
of text properties. I don't know.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2003-05-15 15:42 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 23+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2003-04-11 19:34 [Feature request] face property `raise' Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-13 11:22 ` Richard Stallman
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2003-05-14 17:45 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-14 20:57 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-15 15:42 ` Richard Stallman
2003-05-13 17:17 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-13 21:23 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-14 21:04 ` Richard Stallman
2003-04-29 18:19 Wedler, Christoph
2003-05-13 1:47 ` Richard Stallman
2003-05-13 2:22 ` Miles Bader
2003-05-14 21:05 ` Richard Stallman
2003-05-13 14:13 ` Stefan Monnier
2003-05-14 21:04 ` Richard Stallman
2003-04-10 18:48 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-10 23:14 ` Kevin Rodgers
2003-04-09 18:06 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-09 18:50 ` Kai Großjohann
2003-04-10 6:23 ` Richard Stallman
2003-04-08 17:52 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-08 18:54 ` Kai Großjohann
2003-04-07 17:33 Wedler, Christoph
2003-04-08 6:45 ` Richard Stallman
Code repositories for project(s) associated with this public inbox
https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/emacs.git
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for read-only IMAP folder(s) and NNTP newsgroup(s).