* Re: Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echo window [not found] <mailman.2365.1114076857.2895.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> @ 2005-04-21 9:54 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-21 13:21 ` Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echowindow Peter Tury 1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2005-04-21 9:54 UTC (permalink / raw) luca.spinacci@seleniacomms.com writes: > If I use M-x replace-regexp followed by > "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" <RET> "\1 " <RET> > the behaviour is correct - replacing any space > between '//' ed comment text > Ex. > //___Text... => //_Text... > where '_' is a space > > If I use the same > replace-regexp "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" "\1 " > in a function no replacing is done - Replaced 0 occurences - > > (defun comment-formatting(start end) > (interactive "*r") > (save-excursion > (save-restriction > (narrow-to-region start end) > (goto-char start) > (replace-regexp "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" "\1 ")))) > > So M-x comment-formatting has differnt behaviour. Why? It hasn't. Just use C-x ESC ESC after the manual replacement to get a peek at what this did. You'll notice that the backslashes in string syntax have to be doubled. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echowindow [not found] <mailman.2365.1114076857.2895.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2005-04-21 9:54 ` Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echo window David Kastrup @ 2005-04-21 13:21 ` Peter Tury 1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Peter Tury @ 2005-04-21 13:21 UTC (permalink / raw) Hi, consider this alternative: (defun comment-formatting(start end) (interactive "*r") (save-excursion (goto-char start) (while (search-forward "//" end t) (just-one-space)))) It inserts a SPC if needed. Hm? Br, P ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echo window @ 2005-04-21 9:35 luca.spinacci 2005-04-21 10:29 ` Peter Dyballa 0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread From: luca.spinacci @ 2005-04-21 9:35 UTC (permalink / raw) If I use M-x replace-regexp followed by "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" <RET> "\1 " <RET> the behaviour is correct - replacing any space between '//' ed comment text Ex. //___Text... => //_Text... where '_' is a space If I use the same replace-regexp "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" "\1 " in a function no replacing is done - Replaced 0 occurences - (defun comment-formatting(start end) (interactive "*r") (save-excursion (save-restriction (narrow-to-region start end) (goto-char start) (replace-regexp "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" "\1 ")))) So M-x comment-formatting has differnt behaviour. Why? Thanks in advance, Luca. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echo window 2005-04-21 9:35 Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echo window luca.spinacci @ 2005-04-21 10:29 ` Peter Dyballa 0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Peter Dyballa @ 2005-04-21 10:29 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: help-gnu-emacs Am 21.04.2005 um 11:35 schrieb luca.spinacci@seleniacomms.com: > If I use the same > replace-regexp "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" "\1 " > in a function no replacing is done - Replaced 0 occurences - > > (defun comment-formatting(start end) > (interactive "*r") > (save-excursion > (save-restriction > (narrow-to-region start end) > (goto-char start) > (replace-regexp "\(//\)[[:space:]] *" "\1 ")))) > > So M-x comment-formatting has differnt behaviour. Why? > The function's description says it's an interactive function, and ends with this recommendation: This function is usually the wrong thing to use in a Lisp program. What you probably want is a loop like this: (while (re-search-forward REGEXP nil t) (replace-match TO-STRING nil nil)) which will run faster and will not set the mark or print anything. I wonder why you make the REGEXP that complicated: "[[:space:]]*" is equivalent to "[[:space:]] *", isn't it? And you don't need to replace "\(//\)" with "\1" since "//" is *always* "//". This would be sufficient: (replace-regexp "//[[:space:]]*" "// "). Whenever there are two slashes followed by any amount of white space, replace it with two (other?) slashes and exactly one space. The \n mechanism is good when you're searching for an expression that is variable according to some law. Therefore you can't set a fixed replacement for it but have to "cite" it. I have learned basic and extended regular expressions for UNIX shell use and sed, awk ... The specialities with POSIX (as in Korn shell) or in Perl and Emacs I do not try to learn actively, they're some special cases, OK for programmers in those languages. So for me it's overkill to define special replace functions, I always find a way to do it interactively -- which helps to learn by practice. Therefore I have two keys bound to replace-string and to replace-regexp. I hit one of them, enter FROM, enter RET, enter TO, and a final RET. When I want to apply the change for the whole buffer, I go to its beginning. When I want to change the remainder of the buffer, I don't move that much. When I want to apply a change to some region, I mark it. Modern Emacsen have a history of replacements done. You can scroll in that and pick one FROM and one TO ... -- Greetings Pete Make it simple, as simple as possible but no simpler. (Albert Einstein) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2005-04-21 13:21 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <mailman.2365.1114076857.2895.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org> 2005-04-21 9:54 ` Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echo window David Kastrup 2005-04-21 13:21 ` Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echowindow Peter Tury 2005-04-21 9:35 Different behaviour between M-x replace-regexp in function and in echo window luca.spinacci 2005-04-21 10:29 ` Peter Dyballa
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