* comment-kill and the state of the world @ 2003-10-16 17:54 Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-16 19:11 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-16 17:54 UTC (permalink / raw) Why in the world does comment-kill reindent the affected line? Do other people also feel this is a bug? Maybe it cannot be changed for compatibility reasons, but then another command should be created with the desired behaviour. Look at newcomment.el, one gets the general feeling of unfinished business :-) GNU Emacs 21.2.1 -- Wer Schoenheit angeschaut mit Augen, hat dem Tode schon Anheim gegeben. Von Platen. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-16 17:54 comment-kill and the state of the world Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-16 19:11 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-17 16:37 ` Ian Zimmerman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-16 19:11 UTC (permalink / raw) > Why in the world does comment-kill reindent the affected line? No idea. You're the first person I know who uses this command. > Do other people also feel this is a bug? Maybe it cannot be changed for > compatibility reasons, but then another command should be created with the > desired behaviour. I don't think compatibility is a big problem. When I re-wrote it in newcomment.el, I just preserved the old behavior to reduce the risk of people complaining that "the new code is broken". > Look at newcomment.el, one gets the general feeling of unfinished > business :-) Thanks for the support. But please make it more specific, so I get a chance of fixing or at least defending my code. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-16 19:11 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-17 16:37 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-17 20:01 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-17 16:37 UTC (permalink / raw) Ian> Why in the world does comment-kill reindent the affected line? Stefan> No idea. You're the first person I know who uses this command. Ah, but you get the same thing with comment-dwim with an argument on a line with an existing comment. Is that any better? Ian> Look at newcomment.el, one gets the general feeling of unfinished Ian> business :-) Stefan> Thanks for the support. But please make it more specific, so I Stefan> get a chance of fixing or at least defending my code. It comes down to comment-dwim. It really tries to do too much. The different situations should be separated, and then common patterns will emerge to make into subroutines. Right now, comment-dwim calls comment-indent if not a blank line, but inserts a comment itself on a blank one. The two braches are quite different, use different customization variables, etc. And, let me repeat myself, the reindent in comment-kill is a bug. -- Wer Schoenheit angeschaut mit Augen, hat dem Tode schon Anheim gegeben. Von Platen. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-17 16:37 ` Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-17 20:01 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-18 17:42 ` Ian Zimmerman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-17 20:01 UTC (permalink / raw) > Ah, but you get the same thing with comment-dwim with an argument on a > line with an existing comment. Is that any better? The command throuh which you reach the code is not very relevant. > It comes down to comment-dwim. It really tries to do too much. The > different situations should be separated, and then common patterns will > emerge to make into subroutines. Huh? They are separate. You can call comment-indent or comment-region or uncomment-region or comment-kill directly. It's just that after many years of using those commands (they were there in Emacs-18 already), it appeared that most of their combined functionality could be provided with a single key binding. Feel free not to use it or to criticize it constructively. > Right now, comment-dwim calls comment-indent if not a blank line, but > inserts a comment itself on a blank one. The two braches are quite > different, use different customization variables, etc. They don't use the same settings because experience indicates that they should behave differently. For example, in Lisp, comment-indent should use a single `;' whereas when inserting a comment on a blank line to be indented at the same level as code, it should use `;;'. Also in one circumstance a space might be desired but not in the other, ... The way to customize those could be improved. It is currently mostly due to historical baggage. For example, the number of spaces to put after the comment marker in comment-indent can only be specified directly in `comment-start', whereas comments on their own line specify it with `comment-add' (which incidentally cannot remove space from `comment-start'). Suggestions are welcome, but don't forget that supporting people's current settings (embedded in packages written in 1997, for example) is important. > And, let me repeat myself, the reindent in comment-kill is a bug. You can repeat it all you want here, but it will only get heard by the powers that be if you post it via M-x report-emacs-bug. I'd tend to agree, BTW, after thinking about it a bit more. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-17 20:01 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-18 17:42 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-19 23:14 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-18 17:42 UTC (permalink / raw) Ian> Ah, but you get the same thing with comment-dwim with an argument Ian> on a line with an existing comment. Is that any better? Stefan> The command throuh which you reach the code is not very Stefan> relevant. I don't understand. Are you saying people delete comments by hand with, say, M-; C-p C-p C-k ? Or is there some other way I don't know about? Ian> It comes down to comment-dwim. It really tries to do too much. Ian> The different situations should be separated, and then common Ian> patterns will emerge to make into subroutines. Stefan> Huh? They are separate. You can call comment-indent or Stefan> comment-region or uncomment-region or comment-kill directly. Yes. But comment-dwim does more than just dispatch to them. If you call them directly, you lose the benefit of that additional code, whatever it is. Stefan> It's just that after many years of using those commands (they Stefan> were there in Emacs-18 already), it appeared that most of their Stefan> combined functionality could be provided with a single key Stefan> binding. Feel free not to use it or to criticize it Stefan> constructively. How am I not being constructive? I am driven by desire to improve the code. I feel that comment-dwim, unless changed into a dispatch routine and nothing else, is a bad idea and getting rid of it would be an improvement. Maybe I should clarify: my point of view is not an end user's one, but a Lisp programmer's one, specifically one writing a major mode for a programing language. I'd like to use the existing generic comment code, but I find its complexity gets in the way. Ian> Right now, comment-dwim calls comment-indent if not a blank line, Ian> but inserts a comment itself on a blank one. The two braches are Ian> quite different, use different customization variables, etc. Stefan> They don't use the same settings because experience indicates Stefan> that they should behave differently. For example, in Lisp, Stefan> comment-indent should use a single `;' whereas when inserting a Stefan> comment on a blank line to be indented at the same level as Stefan> code, it should use `;;'. Also in one circumstance a space Stefan> might be desired but not in the other, ... First, comment-indent already tests for an empty line. Why not add the special code there, rather than in comment-dwim? Second, do you have any advice for me when I _want_ them to behave the same? (Perhaps with the exception of indentation, but comment-indent-function should take care of that). Just ignoring comment-dwim doesn't solve it because comment-region also uses the "other" settings. Stefan> The way to customize those could be improved. It is currently Stefan> mostly due to historical baggage. For example, the number of Stefan> spaces to put after the comment marker in comment-indent can Stefan> only be specified directly in `comment-start', whereas comments Stefan> on their own line specify it with `comment-add' (which Stefan> incidentally cannot remove space from `comment-start'). Stefan> Suggestions are welcome, but don't forget that supporting Stefan> people's current settings (embedded in packages written in 1997, Stefan> for example) is important. Isn't that exactly what I wrote in my first post? And you seemed to indicate it wans't as important as I thought. Ian> And, let me repeat myself, the reindent in comment-kill is a bug. Stefan> You can repeat it all you want here, but it will only get heard Stefan> by the powers that be if you post it via M-x report-emacs-bug. Stefan> I'd tend to agree, BTW, after thinking about it a bit more. OK. But please, let's stop the acrimonious tone. Again, all I want is to improve Emacs. BTW, another bug is that comment-indent uses (indent-according-to-mode) to position the comment when comment-indent-function returns nil. That makes no sense when there's preceding code on the line (which is always, now that comment-dwim handles the empty case itself). Fortunately, this is easy to work around, I just make sure my comment-indent-function _never_ returns nil. -- Wer Schoenheit angeschaut mit Augen, hat dem Tode schon Anheim gegeben. Von Platen. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-18 17:42 ` Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-19 23:14 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-23 22:01 ` Ian Zimmerman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-19 23:14 UTC (permalink / raw) Ian> Ah, but you get the same thing with comment-dwim with an argument Ian> on a line with an existing comment. Is that any better? Stefan> The command throuh which you reach the code is not very Stefan> relevant. > I don't understand. Are you saying people delete comments by hand with, > say, M-; C-p C-p C-k ? Or is there some other way I don't know about? Looks like I don't understand either. You complained about a behavior of comment-kill and I replied that I had no idea why the behavior was like that and that I didn't know anybody who used comment-kill. Then you said "but the same applies to comment-dwim", at which point I tried to clear up the fact that my earlier answer applied to the comment-kill function as much as the command. Ian> It comes down to comment-dwim. It really tries to do too much. Ian> The different situations should be separated, and then common Ian> patterns will emerge to make into subroutines. Stefan> Huh? They are separate. You can call comment-indent or Stefan> comment-region or uncomment-region or comment-kill directly. > Yes. But comment-dwim does more than just dispatch to them. If you > call them directly, you lose the benefit of that additional code, > whatever it is. The only non-dispatch part of the code is the part that inserts a comment on an empty line. Are you saying that we should move that code out into its own function? That'd be fine by me. > How am I not being constructive? I am driven by desire to improve the > code. I feel that comment-dwim, unless changed into a dispatch routine > and nothing else, is a bad idea and getting rid of it would be an > improvement. I'm sorry, I felt you were not being constructive, whereas what is going on is just that I have difficulty understand what you want. `comment-dwim' is meant to be just a dispatch function, so if there's a part that isn't and that you need it to be, it should be easy to fix. > Maybe I should clarify: my point of view is not an end user's one, but a > Lisp programmer's one, specifically one writing a major mode for a > programing language. I'd like to use the existing generic comment code, > but I find its complexity gets in the way. Can you say precisely which part? > First, comment-indent already tests for an empty line. Why not add the > special code there, rather than in comment-dwim? History. `comment-indent' (or more specifically indent-for-comment) in Emacs-20 inserted a comment at `comment-column' when called on an empty line. I did not dare to change this behavior. > Second, do you have any advice for me when I _want_ them to behave the same? Which difference are you referring to ? Since I have trouble understanding your problems, please try to be very precise and concrete. > (Perhaps with the exception of indentation, but comment-indent-function > should take care of that). Just ignoring comment-dwim doesn't solve it > because comment-region also uses the "other" settings. Stefan> The way to customize those could be improved. It is currently Stefan> mostly due to historical baggage. For example, the number of Stefan> spaces to put after the comment marker in comment-indent can Stefan> only be specified directly in `comment-start', whereas comments Stefan> on their own line specify it with `comment-add' (which Stefan> incidentally cannot remove space from `comment-start'). Stefan> Suggestions are welcome, but don't forget that supporting Stefan> people's current settings (embedded in packages written in 1997, Stefan> for example) is important. > Isn't that exactly what I wrote in my first post? And you seemed to > indicate it wans't as important as I thought. It's important for things that are used. I don't think the behavior of comment-kill is that important, I expect that we can convince RMS to change it. OTOH, changing the way comment-indent and comment-region are configured by elisp packages is a lot more difficult because the elisp packages might not be maintained any more and those functions are used heavily, so backward compatibility is a lot more constraining. > BTW, another bug is that comment-indent uses (indent-according-to-mode) > to position the comment when comment-indent-function returns nil. That > makes no sense when there's preceding code on the line Indeed, that's a clear bug. Does the patch below fix it for you ? > (which is always, now that comment-dwim handles the empty case itself). It's not always: comment-indent can still be called directly by the user, and (more importantly), it is called by comment-indent-new-line, i.e. by the auto-fill code. > Fortunately, this is easy to work around, I just make sure my > comment-indent-function _never_ returns nil. The nil return value is new in Emacs-21, and obviously not well-tested yet. Thanks for your report, Stefan Index: newcomment.el =================================================================== RCS file: /cvsroot/emacs/emacs/lisp/newcomment.el,v retrieving revision 1.68 diff -u -u -b -r1.68 newcomment.el --- newcomment.el 1 Sep 2003 15:45:13 -0000 1.68 +++ newcomment.el 19 Oct 2003 23:07:20 -0000 @@ -501,6 +501,10 @@ (goto-char begpos) ;; Compute desired indent. (setq indent (save-excursion (funcall comment-indent-function))) + ;; If `indent' is nil and there's code before the comment, we can't + ;; use `indent-according-to-mode', so we default to comment-column. + (unless (or indent (save-excursion (skip-chars-backward " \t") (bolp))) + (setq indent comment-column)) (if (not indent) ;; comment-indent-function refuses: delegate to line-indent. (indent-according-to-mode) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-19 23:14 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-23 22:01 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-24 15:41 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-23 22:01 UTC (permalink / raw) Ian> Ah, but you get the same thing with comment-dwim with an argument Ian> on a line with an existing comment. Is that any better? Stefan> The command throuh which you reach the code is not very Stefan> relevant. Ian> I don't understand. Are you saying people delete comments by hand Ian> with, say, M-; C-p C-p C-k ? Or is there some other way I don't Ian> know about? Stefan> Looks like I don't understand either. You complained about a Stefan> behavior of comment-kill and I replied that I had no idea why Stefan> the behavior was like that and that I didn't know anybody who Stefan> used comment-kill. Then you said "but the same applies to Stefan> comment-dwim", at which point I tried to clear up the fact that Stefan> my earlier answer applied to the comment-kill function as much Stefan> as the command. So, how _do_ people kill their comments? Ian> It comes down to comment-dwim. It really tries to do too much. Ian> The different situations should be separated, and then common Ian> patterns will emerge to make into subroutines. Stefan> Huh? They are separate. You can call comment-indent or Stefan> comment-region or uncomment-region or comment-kill directly. Ian> Yes. But comment-dwim does more than just dispatch to them. If Ian> you call them directly, you lose the benefit of that additional Ian> code, whatever it is. Stefan> The only non-dispatch part of the code is the part that inserts Stefan> a comment on an empty line. Are you saying that we should move Stefan> that code out into its own function? That'd be fine by me. I think it should be moved to comment-indent. Ian> Second, do you have any advice for me when I _want_ them to behave Ian> the same? Stefan> Which difference are you referring to ? Since I have trouble Stefan> understanding your problems, please try to be very precise and Stefan> concrete. Let's say the language's comment delimiters look like this: {- -} . I can configure comment-dwim to leave appropriate amount of whitespace and put the point in the right place, so the situation after an empty comment is inserted looks like this: {- | -} . But that won't affect non-empty lines, because that is handled by comment-indent. And vice versa. Ian> BTW, another bug is that comment-indent uses Ian> (indent-according-to-mode) to position the comment when Ian> comment-indent-function returns nil. That makes no sense when Ian> there's preceding code on the line Stefan> Indeed, that's a clear bug. Does the patch below fix it for you Stefan> ? Yes. Ian> (which is always, now that comment-dwim handles the empty case Ian> itself). Stefan> It's not always: comment-indent can still be called directly by Stefan> the user, and (more importantly), it is called by Stefan> comment-indent-new-line, i.e. by the auto-fill code. Ok, good point. -- Wer Schoenheit angeschaut mit Augen, hat dem Tode schon Anheim gegeben. Von Platen. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-23 22:01 ` Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-24 15:41 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-24 17:17 ` Ian Zimmerman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-24 15:41 UTC (permalink / raw) > So, how _do_ people kill their comments? Using standard editing commands, I guess. I myself tend to use C-k, I think. Stefan> The only non-dispatch part of the code is the part that inserts Stefan> a comment on an empty line. Are you saying that we should move Stefan> that code out into its own function? That'd be fine by me. > I think it should be moved to comment-indent. There are two parts: 1 - move the code out of comment-dwim so that comment-dwim is really just a dispatch function. 2 - move the code into comment-indent. Part 1 can be done safely and easily without any objection. Part 2 means changing the behavior of the comment-indent command (which does not bother me but might bother RMS or other users, so you'd have to report it as a bug or feature request). `comment-indent' is also used as a function called from comment-indent-new-line and that code (and its interaction with comment-indent) is pretty delicate, so the patch would have to be written carefully a thoroughly tested, which I have no intent to do unless there's a good reason for it (but feel free to do it). If the merge into comment-indent is well done it could definitely be a good thing (and who knows, it might clean things up). Could you explain why you'd want the code to be moved into comment-indent? Ian> Second, do you have any advice for me when I _want_ them to behave Ian> the same? Stefan> Which difference are you referring to ? Since I have trouble Stefan> understanding your problems, please try to be very precise and Stefan> concrete. > Let's say the language's comment delimiters look like this: {- -} . I > can configure comment-dwim to leave appropriate amount of whitespace and > put the point in the right place, so the situation after an empty > comment is inserted looks like this: {- | -} . But that won't affect > non-empty lines, because that is handled by comment-indent. And vice > versa. By "configure comment-dwim", I assume you mean "configure comment-padding". Note that if you "configure comment-dwim" by changing comment-end and comment-start instead (by setting them to "{- " and " -}" for example), it will work the same way for comment-indent. Sometimes you want it to behave the same in both case, sometimes you want it to behave differently, which is why there are two ways to configure the spacing. Admittedly, the `comment-padding' way is easier and very different from the other, so it's pretty ugly, but that's the way it worked in Emacs-20, so I had to support it in Emacs-21. RMS would probably accept a patch for a new config option something like `comment-padding-foo' which would be used for comments on non-empty lines and could be set to nil to mean use the same value as `comment-padding'. You'd have to come up with a good name for the variable, tho. It's just that the need hasn't come up yet because configuring comment-start and comment-end works as well in all the actual cases I've come across. Ian> BTW, another bug is that comment-indent uses Ian> (indent-according-to-mode) to position the comment when Ian> comment-indent-function returns nil. That makes no sense when Ian> there's preceding code on the line Stefan> Indeed, that's a clear bug. Does the patch below fix it for you Stefan> ? > Yes. Thank you. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-24 15:41 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-24 17:17 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-24 19:48 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-24 17:17 UTC (permalink / raw) Stefan> Could you explain why you'd want the code to be moved into Stefan> comment-indent? The next part of the thread/post. Ian> Second, do you have any advice for me when I _want_ them to behave Ian> the same? Stefan> Which difference are you referring to ? Since I have trouble Stefan> understanding your problems, please try to be very precise and Stefan> concrete. Ian> Let's say the language's comment delimiters look like this: {- -} . Ian> I can configure comment-dwim to leave appropriate amount of Ian> whitespace and put the point in the right place, so the situation Ian> after an empty comment is inserted looks like this: {- | -} . But Ian> that won't affect non-empty lines, because that is handled by Ian> comment-indent. And vice versa. Stefan> By "configure comment-dwim", I assume you mean "configure Stefan> comment-padding". Stefan> Note that if you "configure comment-dwim" by changing Stefan> comment-end and comment-start instead (by setting them to "{- " Stefan> and " -}" for example), it will work the same way for Stefan> comment-indent. I'd tried that. comment-indent then leaves point in the wrong place (right before the second hyphen). Stefan> Sometimes you want it to behave the same in both case, sometimes Stefan> you want it to behave differently, which is why there are two Stefan> ways to configure the spacing. Admittedly, the Stefan> `comment-padding' way is easier and very different from the Stefan> other, so it's pretty ugly, but that's the way it worked in Stefan> Emacs-20, so I had to support it in Emacs-21. RMS would Stefan> probably accept a patch for a new config option something like Stefan> `comment-padding-foo' which would be used for comments on Stefan> non-empty lines and could be set to nil to mean use the same Stefan> value as `comment-padding'. You'd have to come up with a good Stefan> name for the variable, tho. It's just that the need hasn't come Stefan> up yet because configuring comment-start and comment-end works Stefan> as well in all the actual cases I've come across. I think it's just sound engineering. Even if the two branches can be made to behave the same now, the more they change the harder it will be to achieve that. I'll see what I can do regarding the name :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-24 17:17 ` Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-24 19:48 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-30 23:59 ` Ian Zimmerman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-24 19:48 UTC (permalink / raw) Stefan> Note that if you "configure comment-dwim" by changing Stefan> comment-end and comment-start instead (by setting them to "{- " Stefan> and " -}" for example), it will work the same way for Stefan> comment-indent. > I'd tried that. comment-indent then leaves point in the wrong place > (right before the second hyphen). But that's the case as well if you call `comment-indent' with a pre-existing comment, right? So it's an unrelated bug which comment-padding-foo would not fix (one I remember fixing a while back, but probably only in Emacs-CVS). What was happening is that comment-indent skips the comment starter and the leading spaces to get to the actual content of the comment, but with an empty comment, that tends to leave you right before the commend-end which is not what you want when there's padding. Stefan> Sometimes you want it to behave the same in both case, sometimes Stefan> you want it to behave differently, which is why there are two Stefan> ways to configure the spacing. Admittedly, the Stefan> `comment-padding' way is easier and very different from the Stefan> other, so it's pretty ugly, but that's the way it worked in Stefan> Emacs-20, so I had to support it in Emacs-21. RMS would Stefan> probably accept a patch for a new config option something like Stefan> `comment-padding-foo' which would be used for comments on Stefan> non-empty lines and could be set to nil to mean use the same Stefan> value as `comment-padding'. You'd have to come up with a good Stefan> name for the variable, tho. It's just that the need hasn't come Stefan> up yet because configuring comment-start and comment-end works Stefan> as well in all the actual cases I've come across. > I think it's just sound engineering. Believe me I haven't met many people who hate redundancy as much as I do. > Even if the two branches can be made to behave the same now, the more they > change the harder it will be to achieve that. Feel free to write the patch for it. It already took significant effort to get things as they are, such that it all works the way all the major modes expect it, including using various combinations of comment-start, comment-end, block-comment-start, block-comment-end, comment-multi-line, various ways to call auto-fill, ... And don't forget to come up with a good argument to convince RMS that it's worth it to change the behavior of comment-indent (he happens to like code duplication, as odd as it sounds to most of us). A new pair of eyes will surely help to simplify the code, tho. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: comment-kill and the state of the world 2003-10-24 19:48 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2003-10-30 23:59 ` Ian Zimmerman 0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Ian Zimmerman @ 2003-10-30 23:59 UTC (permalink / raw) Ian> I'd tried that. comment-indent then leaves point in the wrong Ian> place (right before the second hyphen). Stefan> But that's the case as well if you call `comment-indent' with a Stefan> pre-existing comment, right? So it's an unrelated bug which Stefan> comment-padding-foo would not fix (one I remember fixing a while Stefan> back, but probably only in Emacs-CVS). What was happening is Stefan> that comment-indent skips the comment starter and the leading Stefan> spaces to get to the actual content of the comment, but with an Stefan> empty comment, that tends to leave you right before the Stefan> commend-end which is not what you want when there's padding. Ian> Even if the two branches can be made to behave the same now, the Ian> more they change the harder it will be to achieve that. Stefan> Feel free to write the patch for it. It already took Stefan> significant effort to get things as they are, such that it all Stefan> works the way all the major modes expect it, including using Stefan> various combinations of comment-start, comment-end, Stefan> block-comment-start, block-comment-end, comment-multi-line, Stefan> various ways to call auto-fill, ... Stefan> And don't forget to come up with a good argument to convince RMS Stefan> that it's worth it to change the behavior of comment-indent (he Stefan> happens to like code duplication, as odd as it sounds to most of Stefan> us). Stefan> A new pair of eyes will surely help to simplify the code, tho. OK, looks like there's hope :-) -- "Rap music is our punishment for neglecting music education." An anonymous teacher ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2003-10-30 23:59 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 11+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2003-10-16 17:54 comment-kill and the state of the world Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-16 19:11 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-17 16:37 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-17 20:01 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-18 17:42 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-19 23:14 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-23 22:01 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-24 15:41 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-24 17:17 ` Ian Zimmerman 2003-10-24 19:48 ` Stefan Monnier 2003-10-30 23:59 ` Ian Zimmerman
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