* Newbie major-mode and elisp question
@ 2005-09-08 7:02 sj
2005-09-08 16:21 ` rgb
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: sj @ 2005-09-08 7:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
I'm writing my first major mode to run Nyquist in a buffer. Nyquist is an
extension of XLISP for audio synthesis and composition. Nyquist-mode is a
derivative of inferior-lisp mode, its working pretty well except for one
annoying side effect. Whenever I issue (nyquist-mode) to start a new
Nyquist process, whatever buffer I'm currently in gets switched to
fundamental-mode. I have isolated the problem to the
kill-all-local-variables statement. Is there some other way I should be
doing this?
(defun nyquist-mode ()
(interactive)
(if (nyquist-has-process-p)
;; If we are already live just switch to the nyquist buffer
(switch-to-buffer nyquist-buffer)
;; Else start a new Nyquist process.
(progn
;; Clean up any old nyquist process buffers
(if (get-buffer nyquist-buffer)
(kill-buffer nyquist-buffer))
(kill-all-local-variables)
(run-lisp nyquist-program)
(switch-to-buffer "*inferior-lisp*")
(rename-buffer nyquist-buffer)
(setq major-mode 'nyquist-mode)
(setq mode-name "Nyquist")
(setq inferior-lisp-buffer nyquist-buffer)
(lisp-load-file nyquist-start-file)
(use-local-map nyquist-map)
(run-hooks 'nyquist-hook)
)))
Some background:
There is only --one-- nyquist process at any time. The variable
nyquist-buffer holds the buffer name for the nyquist process (needed
because I ultimately need other non-nyquist lisp running)
nyquist-program contains the local invocation to run nyquist. Hopefully the
rest is self-explanatory.
--
Remove underscores to reply
_jones_57_@_swbell_._net
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Newbie major-mode and elisp question
2005-09-08 7:02 Newbie major-mode and elisp question sj
@ 2005-09-08 16:21 ` rgb
2005-09-08 17:12 ` Kevin Rodgers
2005-09-09 5:07 ` Stefan Monnier
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: rgb @ 2005-09-08 16:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
sj wrote:
> I'm writing my first major mode to run Nyquist in a buffer. Nyquist is an
> extension of XLISP for audio synthesis and composition. Nyquist-mode is a
> derivative of inferior-lisp mode, its working pretty well except for one
> annoying side effect. Whenever I issue (nyquist-mode) to start a new
> Nyquist process, whatever buffer I'm currently in gets switched to
> fundamental-mode. I have isolated the problem to the
> kill-all-local-variables statement. Is there some other way I should be
> doing this?
>
>
>
> (defun nyquist-mode ()
> (interactive)
> (if (nyquist-has-process-p)
> ;; If we are already live just switch to the nyquist buffer
> (switch-to-buffer nyquist-buffer)
> ;; Else start a new Nyquist process.
a progn isn't necessary here but doesn't hurt anything
> (progn
> ;; Clean up any old nyquist process buffers
> (if (get-buffer nyquist-buffer)
> (kill-buffer nyquist-buffer))
Simply delete this line. It's purpose is to allow a buffer's
mode to be changed without lingering artifacts from the old mode.
Since you are creating a derived mode, the mode from which
nyquist-mode derives is already doing the kill appropriately.
> (kill-all-local-variables)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Newbie major-mode and elisp question
2005-09-08 7:02 Newbie major-mode and elisp question sj
2005-09-08 16:21 ` rgb
@ 2005-09-08 17:12 ` Kevin Rodgers
2005-09-09 5:07 ` Stefan Monnier
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2005-09-08 17:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
sj wrote:
> I'm writing my first major mode to run Nyquist in a buffer. Nyquist is an
> extension of XLISP for audio synthesis and composition. Nyquist-mode
is a
> derivative of inferior-lisp mode, its working pretty well except for one
> annoying side effect. Whenever I issue (nyquist-mode) to start a new
> Nyquist process, whatever buffer I'm currently in gets switched to
> fundamental-mode. I have isolated the problem to the
> kill-all-local-variables statement. Is there some other way I should be
> doing this?
,----[ C-h f define-derived-mode RET ]
| define-derived-mode is a Lisp macro in `derived'.
| (define-derived-mode CHILD PARENT NAME &optional DOCSTRING &rest BODY)
|
| Create a new mode as a variant of an existing mode.
|
| The arguments to this command are as follow:
|
| CHILD: the name of the command for the derived mode.
| PARENT: the name of the command for the parent mode (e.g. `text-mode').
| NAME: a string which will appear in the status line (e.g.
"Hypertext")
| DOCSTRING: an optional documentation string--if you do not supply one,
| the function will attempt to invent something useful.
| BODY: forms to execute just before running the
| hooks for the new mode.
|
| Here is how you could define LaTeX-Thesis mode as a variant of LaTeX mode:
|
| (define-derived-mode LaTeX-thesis-mode LaTeX-mode "LaTeX-Thesis")
|
| You could then make new key bindings for `LaTeX-thesis-mode-map'
| without changing regular LaTeX mode. In this example, BODY is empty,
| and DOCSTRING is generated by default.
|
| On a more complicated level, the following command uses `sgml-mode' as
| the parent, and then sets the variable `case-fold-search' to nil:
|
| (define-derived-mode article-mode sgml-mode "Article"
| "Major mode for editing technical articles."
| (setq case-fold-search nil))
|
| Note that if the documentation string had been left out, it would have
| been generated automatically, with a reference to the keymap.
`----
--
Kevin Rodgers
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Newbie major-mode and elisp question
2005-09-08 7:02 Newbie major-mode and elisp question sj
2005-09-08 16:21 ` rgb
2005-09-08 17:12 ` Kevin Rodgers
@ 2005-09-09 5:07 ` Stefan Monnier
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-09-09 5:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
> I'm writing my first major mode to run Nyquist in a buffer. Nyquist is an
> extension of XLISP for audio synthesis and composition. Nyquist-mode is a
> derivative of inferior-lisp mode,
If so, it should look somewhat similar to inferior-lisp-mode.
Or probably even use define-derived-mode directly.
> (defun nyquist-mode ()
> (interactive)
> (if (nyquist-has-process-p)
> ;; If we are already live just switch to the nyquist buffer
> (switch-to-buffer nyquist-buffer)
> ;; Else start a new Nyquist process.
> (progn
> ;; Clean up any old nyquist process buffers
> (if (get-buffer nyquist-buffer)
> (kill-buffer nyquist-buffer))
> (kill-all-local-variables)
> (run-lisp nyquist-program)
> (switch-to-buffer "*inferior-lisp*")
> (rename-buffer nyquist-buffer)
> (setq major-mode 'nyquist-mode)
> (setq mode-name "Nyquist")
> (setq inferior-lisp-buffer nyquist-buffer)
> (lisp-load-file nyquist-start-file)
> (use-local-map nyquist-map)
> (run-hooks 'nyquist-hook)
> )))
Go read the Elisp manual, especially the part that talks about the coding
conventions to use for a major mode. A major mode should *not* start
a process or do a switch-to-buffer.
You want to define another function, like `run-nyquist' which may do things
like `run-lisp' or `switch-to-buffer' (though I'd recommend against using
that and advise to use pop-to-buffer instead) and which will use
`nyquist-mode', defined with define-derived-mode.
Stefan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
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